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The Vīramitrodaya on the Right of Private Defence

from PART FOUR - TECHNICAL STUDIES OF HINDU LAW

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2013

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Summary

After a chapter “On Punishments,” in which all kinds of general principles about punishments are set out, the Indian Penal Code sets forth another chapter to “General Exceptions” to criminal liability. The commentators of the Code arrange the 31 sections of this chapter IV under seven headings: judicial acts (ss. 77.78), mistake of fact (ss. 76.79), accident (s. 79), absence of criminal intent (ss. 81–86.92–94), consent (ss. 87–90), trifling acts (s. 95), and private defence (ss. 96–106).

The treatment of the last item in this enumeration starts as follows (s. 96):

Nothing is an offense which is done in the exercise of the right of private defence.

And in the following sections the extent and the limitations of this exception to criminal liability are dealt with in detail.

This is the situation as created under British influence by the Indian Penal Code, i.e., Act XLV of 1860. But the Indian people did not await the interference of British jurists to recognize the right of private defence. Anybody who has studied criminal law in the ancient and medieval texts of Hindu law will have met this principle adopted unreservedly.

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Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2012

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