BNS 100 — Culpable homicide.

Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023

Statutory text

100. Whoever  causes  death  by  doing  an  act  with  the  intention  of
causing death, or with the intention of causing such bodily injury as is likely
to cause death, or with the knowledge that he is likely by such act to cause
death, commits the offence of culpable homicide.
Illustrations.
(a)  A  lays  sticks  and  turf  over  a  pit,  with  the  intention  of  thereby
causing  death,  or  with  the  knowledge  that  death  is  likely  to  be  thereby
caused. Z, believing the ground to be firm, treads on it, falls in and is killed.
A has committed the offence of culpable homicide.
(b) A knows Z to be behind a bush. B does not know it. A, intending
to cause, or knowing it to be likely to cause Z’s death, induces B to fire at

the bush. B fires and kills Z. Here B may be guilty of no offence; but A has
committed the offence of culpable homicide.
(c) A, by shooting at a fowl with intent to kill and steal it, kills B, who
is behind a bush; A not knowing that he was there. Here, although A was
doing an unlawful act, he was not guilty of culpable homicide, as he did not
intend to kill B, or to cause death by doing an act that he knew was likely
to cause death.
Explanation 1.—A person who causes bodily injury to another who is
labouring  under  a  disorder,  disease  or  bodily  infirmity,  and  thereby
accelerates  the  death  of  that  other,  shall  be  deemed  to  have  caused  his
death.
Explanation 2.—Where death is caused by bodily injury, the person
who causes such bodily injury shall be deemed to have caused the death,
although by resorting to proper remedies and skilful treatment the death
might have been prevented.
Explanation 3.—The causing of the death of a child in the mother’s
womb is not homicide. But it may amount to culpable homicide to cause
the death of a living child, if any part of that child has been brought forth,
though the child may not have breathed or been completely born.
Murder.

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