CrPC 174 — Police to enquire and report on suicide, etc

Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973

Statutory text

(1) When the officer in charge of a police station or some
other police officer specially  empowered by the State Government in that behalf receives information that a person
has committed suicide, or has been killed by another or by an animal or by machinery or by an accident, or has died
under  circumstances  raising  a  reasonable  suspicion  that  some  other  person  has  committed  an  offence,  he  shall
immediately  give  intimation  thereof  to  the  nearest  Executive  Magistrate  empowered  to  hold  inquests,  and,  unless
otherwise directed by any rule prescribed by the State Government, or by any general or special order of the District

or Sub-divisional Magistrate, shall proceed to the place where the body of such deceased person is, and there, in the
presence of two or  more  respectable  inhabitants of  the  neighbourhood, shall  make  an investigation, and draw  up a
report of the apparent cause of death, describing such wounds, fractures, bruises, and other marks of injury as may
be found on the body, and stating in what manner, or by what weapon or instrument (if any); such marks appear to have been inflicted.
(2) The  report  shall  be  signed  by  such  police  officer  and  other  persons,  or  by  so  many  of  them  as concur  therein,  and  shall  be  forthwith  forwarded  to  the  District  Magistrate  or  the  Sub-divisional Magistrate.
(3)

[When—
(i) the case involves suicide by a woman within seven years of her marriage; or
(ii) the  case  relates  to  the  death  of  a  woman  within  seven  years  of  her  marriage  in  any
circumstances raising a reasonable suspicion that some other person committed an offence in relation
to such woman; or
(iii) the case relates to the death of a woman within seven years of her marriage and any relative of
the woman has made a request in this behalf; or
(iv) there is any doubt regarding the cause of death; or
(v) the police officer for any other reason considers it expedient so to do,
he  shall], subject to  such  rules  as  the  State  Government  may  prescribe  in this  behalf, forward the  body,
with a view to its being examined, to the nearest Civil Surgeon, or other qualified medical man appointed
in this behalf by the State Government, if the state of the weather and the distance admit of its being so forwarded without risk of such putrefaction on the road as would render such examination useless.
(4) The  following  Magistrates  are  empowered  to  hold  inquests,  namely,  any  District  Magistrate  or Sub-divisional Magistrate and any other Executive Magistrate specially empowered in this behalf by the State Government or the District Magistrate.

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