IPC 71 — Limit of punishment of offence made up of several offences

Indian Penal Code, 1860

Statutory text

Where anything  which is  an offence is made up of parts, any of which parts is  itself an  offence, the  offender shall not be punished with the punishment  of more than one of such his offences, unless it be so expressly provided.
[Where anything  is an  offence  falling  within  two  or  more separate definitions  of any  law in force for the time being by which offences are defined or punished, or where several acts, of which one or more than one would by itself

or themselves  constitute an  offence, constitute,  when  combined,  a different offence, the offender  shall not be punished with a more severe punishment than the  Court which  tries him  could award  for  any  one  of  such offences].
Illustrations (a) A  gives Z  fifty strokes  with a  stick.  Here  A  may  have committed the  offence of  voluntarily causing  hurt to Z by the whole beating, and  also by  each of  the blows  which  make  up  the  whole beating. If  A were  liable to  punishment for every blow, he might be imprisoned for  fifty years,  one for each blow. But he is liable only to one punishment for the whole beating.
(b) But,  if,  while  A  is  beating  Z,  Y  interferes,  and  A
intentionally strikes  Y, here,  as the  blow given to Y is no part of the  act  whereby A voluntarily causes hurt to Z, A is liable  to  one punishment  for voluntarily causing hurt to Z, and to another for  the blow given to Y.

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