IPC 300 vs BNS 300
● Retained in BNSMurder
Section 300 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, defines murder, which is a form of culpable homicide with specific conditions making it more serious than regular culpable homicide. Murder is committed when death is caused with the intention of causing death or bodily injury likely to cause death, under certain specified circumstances.
Key points:
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Applies to anyone who intentionally causes death or bodily injury known to be likely to cause death, fulfilling one of the conditions for murder.
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Differentiates murder from culpable homicide not amounting to murder (IPC 304) based on intent, knowledge, and circumstances.
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Punishment: Death penalty or life imprisonment, and fine, depending on severity and judicial discretion.
Example: A person stabbing another multiple times with the intention to kill falls under IPC 300. This law ensures severe legal consequences for intentional acts resulting in death under aggravating circumstances.
Murder
Section 300 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, mirrors IPC 300. It defines murder as a culpable homicide committed under circumstances warranting more severe punishment.
Key points:
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Covers cases where death results from intentional or knowingly dangerous acts fulfilling conditions of murder.
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Establishes distinction from lesser forms of culpable homicide based on intent, knowledge, and circumstances.
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Punishment: Death penalty or life imprisonment, and fine, consistent with IPC 300.
Example: A person deliberately poisoning another, knowing it will likely cause death, is liable under BNS 300. This ensures strict accountability and protection of life against deliberate and heinous acts.
What changed?
This provision was carried over to the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita with substantially the same wording — the section was renumbered from IPC IPC 300 to BNS BNS 300.