Volume 9, Issue 1, April 2021
Articles

Richhpal Singh Meena v. Ghasi: Past Eclipse of India’s Substantive Criminal Law in Contemporary Operation

Jaideep Singh Lalli
Final Year Law Student, Reading for B.A. LL.B. (Hons.) at the University Institute of Legal Studies, Panjab University, Chandigarh

Published 2021-10-18

How to Cite

Lalli , J. S. . (2021). Richhpal Singh Meena v. Ghasi: Past Eclipse of India’s Substantive Criminal Law in Contemporary Operation. Kathmandu School of Law Review, 9(1), 1–10. https://doi.org/10.46985/kslr.v9i1.2172

Abstract

The Indian Supreme Court’s verdict in Richhpal Singh Meena v. Ghasi is a marked peripeteia in the legal position on the applicability of offences under the two sub-chapters of Chapter XVI of the IPC in the heads of sections dealing with ‘Offences Affecting Life’ and ‘Hurt’. In essence, this ruling declared that scenarios that end with death of the victim will mandatorily have to be only covered by the sub-chapter ‘Offences Affecting Life’, making ‘actus reus of fatal results’ the determinant for choosing the offence for which the accused is to be convicted. After providing a factual frame of reference, this paper recapitulates the key elements of the Court’s reasoning in arriving at this principle. The main thrust of the paper lies in its analysis of the Court’s faulty neologisms and legally inconsistent alterations in the yardsticks that govern which cases fall under either of the two heads. This paper argues that the Court’s ratio decidendi and the principles it has evolved represent nothing short of insouciance towards decades of clarificatory precedent and that they are ex facie since Richhpal’s ruling engenders injustice in situations where the intention is to only cause hurt, but death results regardless of the intention transpired. As a judgment made in 2014, this ruling continues to breed iniquitous convictions even to this day. It is this examination of the judgment’s myopia for the past and its eclipse on the present delivery of justice that represents the central thesis of this paper.

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References

  1. Richhpal Singh Meena v. Ghasi, Supreme Court of India, 2014, B SCC 918. (“Richhpal Singh Meena case”)
  2. Indian Penal Code, 1860, India, s. 302, punishment for murder.
  3. Ibid, s. 323, punishment for voluntarily causing hurt.
  4. Ibid, s. 325, punishment for voluntarily causing grievous hurt.
  5. Ibid, s. 34, acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention.
  6. Ghasi v. State, Rajasthan High Court, Criminal Appeal No. 403 of 1997.
  7. Richhpal Singh Meena Case (n 1).
  8. ‘Richhpal Singh Meena v. Ghasi’, The Practical Lawyer, available at www.supremecourtcases.com/index2.php?option=com_content&itemid=99999999&do_pdf=1&id=46285, accessed on 13 June 2020.
  9. Section. 304Bof the IPC was excluded from consideration by the Supreme Court of India for it was not concerned with its discussion.
  10. Indian Penal Code, 1860, India, s. 300, murder.
  11. Ibid, s. 299, culpable homicide.
  12. Ibid, s. 304, punishment for culpable homicide not amounting to murder.
  13. Ibid, s. 304A, causing death by negligence.
  14. Rajwant Singh v. State of Kerala, Supreme Court of India, 1966, AIR 1874; Virsa Singh v. State of Punjab, Supreme Court of India, 1958, AIR 465; Abdul Waheed Khan v. State of AP, Supreme Court of India, 2002, 7 SCC 175.
  15. Indian Penal Code, 1860, India, s. 320, grievous hurt.
  16. Indian Penal Code (Amendment) Act, 1870, India, s. 12.
  17. V I Vibhute, PSA Pillai’s Criminal Law, LexisNexis, Gurgaon, 13th edition, 2019, p. 663; for explication of what culpable rashness and negligence involve, see Emperor v. Abdul Latif, Lahore High Court, 1944, AIR 163; SN Hussain v. State of AP, Supreme Court of India, 1972, AIR 685; State of Himachal Pradesh v. Mohinder Singh, Himachal Pradesh High Court, 1989, 2 Crimes 159; Ravi Kapur v. State of Rajasthan, Supreme Court of India, 2012, AIR 2986.
  18. Empress of India v. Idu Beg, Allahabad High Court, 1881, SCC OnLine All 103.
  19. Bhalachandra Waman Pathe v. State of Maharashtra, Supreme Court of India, 1968, AIR 1319.
  20. The Allahabad High Court’s illuminating exposition in the Idu Beg case was recently cited with approval by the Andhra Pradesh High Court in PPC Mohan Rao v. State of Andhra Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh High Court, 2020, SCC OnLine AP 550.
  21. Public Prosecutor v. Muttiah, Andhra Pradesh High Court, 1961, AIR 79.
  22. Urmese v, State of Kerela, Kerala High Court, 1960, AIR 197.
  23. Anil Kumar v. State of Rajasthan, Rajasthan High Court, 2012, SCC OnLine Raj 2123.
  24. Mahindar Singh v. Emperor, Lahore High Court, 1924, SCC OnLine Lah 358.
  25. Empress of India v. O’Brien, Allahabad High Court, 1880, SCC OnLine All 109.
  26. Since willful infliction has been held to be the privation of s. 304A’s application, proving why the section still applies would be abhorrent jurisprudentially; see Pitala Yadagiri v. State of Andhra Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh High Court, 1991, 2 Crimes 359; Shiv Dev Singh v. State (Delhi), Delhi High Court, 1995, Cr LJ 2142.
  27. Imprisonment of two years or fine or both.
  28. Mehtab Singh v. State of Haryana, Punjab & Haryana High Court, 2019, SCC OnLine P&H 1025.
  29. Raghubir Singh v. State of Uttar Pradesh, Allahabad High Court, 2015, SCC OnLine All 5590.
  30. See Govindaswamy v. State of Kerala, Supreme Court of India, 2016, 16 SCC 295.
  31. See Pashupati Nath Jha v. State of Bihar, Patna High Court, 2014, SCC OnLine Pat 5568; Manoj v. State of Uttarakhand, Uttarakhand High Court, 2019, SCC OnLine Utt 1449; Shiv Bahadur Ram v. State of UP, Allahabad High Court, 2019, SCC OnLine All 4377; Dhanpal v. State (NCT Delhi), Supreme Court of India, 2020, SCC OnLine SC 421.