Introduction IPC
Introduction IPC
The substantive law gives legal The Procedural Law gives the
rules and procedure by which substantive law
Punishments for the offence is enforced.
• The Indian Penal Code,1860 • The Code Criminal
Procedure,1973
• The Code of Civil Procedure,1908
• The Indian Evidence Act,1872
Hierarchy of Courts in India
Supreme Court
High Court
• Objective
• Basis
• Types
UNIT – 6 SPECIFIC CRIMES
• Offences affecting the public : Against
state
• Against public peace: Unlawful assembly,
Rioting, Affray
• Against public administration: Bribery,
Personation.
• Offences against administration of justice
giving and fabricating false statement.
• Offences against persons:
Homicide(Murder, Culpable Homicide,
Negligent)
• Kidnapping
• Abduction
• Sexual Assault
• Rape
• Stalking
• Voyeurism
UNIT – 7
• Law of Attempt
UNIT – 1
What is Crime?
Its not possible to derive the legal Definition of crime,
Russell To define Crime is a task which is so far has not been
accomplished by any other writer.
Kenney’s outline of criminal law
The Definition of crime is a great matter difficulty.
Lord Atkin By examining what acts at any particular period are
declared by the state to be crimes, and only common nature they
will be found to possess is that they are prohibited by the state and
those who commit them are punished.
Definition of Crime
Sir William Blackstone He gave as
An Act committed or Omitted in the violation of Public law forbidding
or commanding it.
Sergeant Stephen A crime is A violation of right considered in
reference to the evil tendency of such violation as regards the
community at large
Concluded that it is an Harm or Injury to the community.
Similarly immoral acts like ingratitude, Hard- Heartedness,
insensitivity to the sufferings of others have been not crimes.
Section 40 of IPC states about OFFENCE.
Halsbury’s law of England ‘A crime is an unlawful act or default
which is an offence against the public and renders the person
guilty of the act or default liable to the legal punishment’.
There must be some external consequences or harm to social
interest
The harm must be prohibited by penal law
There must be conduct ie Intentional or Reckless Act or inaction
Action that brings the prohibited.
There must be ‘ Mensrea or Criminal Intent’.
There must be concurrence of Mensrea and Conduct.
There must be Causal relation between the legally prohibited
harm and the voluntary misconduct.
There must be legally prescribed Punishment.
History of IPC
The Indian Penal Code indirectly owes its origin to
Jeremy Bentham, who is a well-known jurist on the
subject of law reforms. The basic premise of the
substantive law Code is very much influenced by the
British law.
Lord Macaulay was the President of 1st Indian Law
commission in 1834
There was no criminal law in Ancient society.
A tooth for a tooth, An eye for an eye, A life for a life
was the forerunner of Criminal Justice.
History of criminal law can be studied under three
heads namely
Ancient Hindu criminal law
Elements of Crime
ActusReus
Mens Rea
Actus Reus and Mensrea
There must be a wrongful Act.
Actus Non Facit Reum Nisi Mens Sit Rea meaning ‘ An Act does not
make one guilty unless the mind is also legally blameworthy ’
It becomes criminal only when the act does it with requisite guilty
mind.
Actus Reus represent the physical aspect of Crime. It may be with
reference to place, Time, Consent, State of mind of the victim.
Place : In the offence of criminal trespass house breaking The Actus
Reus is in respect of place.
Time: In the offence lurking house trespass or House breaking by
night in order to commit an offence the actus reus is in both time and
place.
Person : In kidnapping and Abduction of a minor Girl etc the Actus
reus in respect of Person
Consent : In Rape Non – Consent is the Actus Reus.
Mensrea represent mental aspect.
Stages Of Crime
No
Intention - An intent to cause an offence. punishmen
Preparation – Preparation for the execution of crime. t in this two
stages.
Attempt - An attempt is made.
Offence Completed – Offence is completed.
Strict Liability in IPC
The principle of criminal liability as the act itself is not criminal
unless it is accompanied by a guilty mind.
Strict Liability is liability for which mens rea i.e. guilt mind does
not have to be proven in relation to one or more elements
comprising the act.
A person be held liable criminally even if that man has not
intended a particular act which has been prohibited by law.
In case of offences of strict liability, the element of mens rea is
presumed, and it need not be proved.
R v Queen, a man who was in love with a girl, eloped with her,
he did not know at that time that she was underage, but since
the law in England punished such an act, the court did not see
the intention but instead directly imposed the principle of strict
liability and he was charged for the same.
VICARIOUS LIABILITY
Under the concept of vicarious liability, one person is held
responsible for the wrong committed by the other. The doctrine
of vicarious liability is also known by the name of joint liability.
Under criminal law also one person can become liable for the act
of the other if he is a party to the offense.
A person may be held liable as the principal offender, even
though the Actus reus was committed by some other person.
The person committing the act on the instruction of the other will
not be considered as innocent and will also be held liable.
A driver of a car which goes and robs a bank will also be liable
even though the driver did not get out of the car.
Section 34, 149, 154,155,156,268,269,499.