Pardon may be the exercise of mercy or clemency by the President and Governors. The pardoning power is a wide discretionary power of the state to relax the severity of legal punishment and to reduce the gravity and consequences of governmental action. Under Article 72, Constitution of India, the President has been vested with powers to grant pardon, reprieve, respite, or remission of punishment.
A pardon serves as a waiver of punishment for those convicted of federal crimes for which they have been sentenced. The following are the pardoning powers of the President:
Pardon: A pardon is executive clemency granted by the President to a convict with the power to commute or extinguish. Unlike a commutation, a pardon does not change the conviction, but rather, it forgives, or absolves the sentence and removes the punishment.
Commutation: Commutation is applied to criminal sentences, while executive clemency is applied to civil cases. Commutation extends the mercy of the court by substituting a lesser penalty for the major one. On the other hand, clemency sets aside the sentence without any substitution of the sentence. In a broad sense, commutation and clemency both mean reprieve or pardon.
Remission: Remission of the sentence is a way of reducing a sentence of a convict without changing its character. It means that an act deficient in form but having complete substance is better than nothing.
Respite: It denotes awarding a lesser sentence in place of one originally awarded due to some special fact, such as the physical disability of a convict or the pregnancy of a woman offender.
Reprieve: Respite in dictionary terms is "Affording temporary relief." It implies a stay of the execution of a sentence (especially that of death) for a temporary period. Its purpose is to enable the convict to have time to seek pardon or commutation from the President.
There have some difference between the scope of the pardoning power of the President and the pardoning power of the Governor. Some of them are