This documents will discuss various offenses outlined in the Indian Penal Code of 1860 where there are distinct sections addressing attempts and successful commission. In some cases, these sections stipulate different punishments for the attempt and the actual crime, such as Section 391 dealing with dacoity. On the other hand, there are sections, like Section 124A concerning sedition, where both the attempt and commission lead to the same punishment. Furthermore, certain offenses, such as murder and attempt to murder, are addressed separately in Section 300 and Section 307, respectively. Similarly, attempt to commit culpable homicide is covered in Section 308, and the attempt to commit suicide is addressed in Section 309. For other offenses not explicitly defined in the IPC, Section 511 provides a framework to determine appropriate punishments.
'The Transition from Preparation to Attempt in Criminal Offenses'
There is often confusion between the stages of preparation and attempt in the commission of a crime, mainly because they follow each other in the process. Attempt to commit an offense carries a specific punishment, but in contrast, punishment for preparation is only provided in exceptional cases. For example:
These offenses are so serious that it is crucial to apprehend and penalize individuals at the preparatory stage to prevent harm.
Mere preparations typically do not pose an immediate threat to someone's safety. Moreover, objects collected or actions taken in preparation may have various non-criminal purposes. For instance, someone may legally purchase a firearm for personal security, and this intent is not inherently criminal. It becomes an attempt when that person pulls out the gun and aims it at an individual with the intent to kill, but fails to do so. In this case, the act would be considered an attempt to commit murder, as the gun was acquired as preparation for the crime. Consequently, it is often the attempt and preparation for an offense that are subject to punishment.
To differentiate between a person being at the attempt stage versus merely at the preparation stage, courts have established the following principles through their legal rulings:
By applying these tests, courts can determine whether an act constitutes an attempt to commit an offense or is merely in preparation. If it falls into the former category, punishment is imposed, while no punishment is imposed for acts in the latter category.
Section 307 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, deals with "Attempt to Murder." This section is outlined as follows:
"Whoever does any act with such intention or knowledge, and under such circumstances that, if he by that act caused death, he would be guilty of murder, shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to ten years, and shall also be liable to fine; and, if hurt is caused to any person by such act, the offender shall be liable either to imprisonment for life, or to such punishment as is hereinbefore mentioned.
Attempts by Life Convicts: When any person offending under this section is under sentence of imprisonment for life, he may, if hurt is caused, be punished with death."
Essential elements of "Attempt to Murder" include the following:
Of these elements, intention and knowledge are the most critical. The Madhya Pradesh High Court emphasized that intention and knowledge should be determined based on the "totality of circumstances" rather than solely on the consequences of the act. In other words, the intended injury may not be identical to the injury that ultimately occurs.
For instance, in the case of Liyakat Mian v. State of Bihar, the accused shot the victim at close range, and although the victim survived, the accused would have been charged with murder if the victim had not survived. This act of shooting from close quarters reasonably established that the accused had the knowledge that it was likely to cause death, and he was consequently liable under Section 307 of the IPC.
Furthermore, in the case of Om Prakash v. State of Punjab, the Supreme Court upheld the conviction of the appellant under Section 307. The court ruled that to establish an attempt to murder, it is not necessary that the last or penultimate act be the one considered; rather, a continuous series of acts can collectively constitute an attempt. In this case, the husband consistently subjected his wife to a systematic course of starvation, which was interrupted by an unexpected event before he could achieve his goal of killing her. The Supreme Court held that the ongoing efforts to starve his wife were sufficient to establish an offense of attempted murder under Section 307. The court rejected the appellant's argument that the very last act of starvation should be considered the attempt, stating that a series of acts, when combined with the appellant's knowledge and intent that these acts would lead to his wife's death, made him and his actions liable under Section 307 of the IPC.
Under Section 307 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), there are three potential categories of punishment:
The Supreme Court, in an appeal against the decision of the Allahabad High Court, outlined several factors that should be considered when determining the appropriate sentence for the accused.
These factors include:
In this specific case, the circumstances fell into the second category of punishment, which is life imprisonment. The injury inflicted by a gunshot was severe, particularly since it affected a vital part of the body, the head. Three individuals, with the intent to kill three family members, entered the accused's home and opened fire, resulting in the death of a pregnant woman and her stillborn child, while the other two family members survived. Taking these factors into account, the Supreme Court did not overturn the sentence of "life imprisonment" and deemed it appropriate.
Murder v. Culpable Homicide not amounting to Murder-Every murder is culpable homicide, but every culpable homicide is not murder. Culpable homicide is a wider term where the act under consideration have caused death but the person performing such act had no explicit intention to cause death, whereas in murder, the accused has a knowledge as well as an intent to cause death.
Hence, if without the intention to kill someone, as can be derived from the facts and circumstances of the case, a person does such act which leads to death of the victim, then such person would be liable for culpable homicide not amounting to murder under Section 304 of IPC.
Attempt to commit culpable homicide. Whoever does any act with such intention or knowledge and under such circumstances that, if he by that act caused death, he would be guilty of culpable homicide not amounting to murder, shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to three years, or with fine, or with both; and, if hurt is caused to any person by such act, shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to seven years, or with fine, or with both.
Ingredients: Following ingredients can be derived from the bare wordings of this section:
In State v. Vimal Singh, the Delhi District Court set down the following essentials to be considered as ingredients for constituting offense under Section 308 of IPC:
Nature of Offense: Offense under 308 of IPC is cognizable (arrest can be made without a warrant because of the serious nature of the offense), non-bailable (bail cannot be granted as a matter of right, a bail application can be put and it is upto Court's discretion whether to grant bail or not), non-compoundable (cannot he withdrawn by the complainant, has to be decided by tha Court and the parties cannot mutually decided upon the case) and triable by the Court of Sessions(as per Section 209 of Code of Criminal Procedure, the Magistrate refers these cases to the Session Courts, that have jurisdiction over cases that carry an imprisonment exceeding 7 years, life imprisonment or death).
The punishment envisaged under the said section is Simple Imprisonment upto 3 years with or without a fine if jo hurt is caused and if hurt is caused, then it is extended to Simple Imprisonment upto 7 years with or without a fine.
Decisive factors to consider intent: The type of weapon used, how it was used, the crime's motivation, the intensity of the blow, and the portion of the body where the harm was inflicted are all factors considered to evaluate the accused's intent under this provision.
In Ali Zaman v. State, the Supreme Court held that where a revolver used by the accused party did not lead to death of any person from complainant's side, then the accused would be liable under Section 308 of IPC, but if death of any one person was caused, the accused would be liable under Section 304 of IPC, i.e., Culpable Homicide not amounting to murder.
Section 309 of IPC has been reproduced below:
Attempt to commit suicide: Whoever attempts to commit suicide and does any act towards the commission of such offence, shall he punished with simple imprisonment for a term which may extend to one year [or with fine, or with both]."
Ingredient(s) and exception(s): There is only one ingredient that can be drawn from this section, i.e., attempt or an act to attempt the commission of suicide. Another ingredient as is essential to constitute criminal offense is the intention, hence, if a person without intending to take his life, topples off a roof or consumes overdose of a medicine by mistake or in an intoxicated state, he would not be liable under this section.
Also, an exception is provided in such cases where a man out of his grief due to loss of near and dear one, a family discord or some sort of distraction, decides to take away his life but fails in the same, in such cases the man deserves 'consolation instead of punishment' as was held by the Madras High Court in Queen Emperor v. Ramakka.
The interesting fact is that only the failed commission attracts the provisions of IPC, if the person succeeds, suicide is no offense under IPC. For Example, a person jumps off the roof of a building with an intention to end his life and for some reason fails in the same, the surviving person would be liable as an offender under Section 309 of IPC.
Valuable Life of a Person: This section envisages the principle that the State protects the lives of men as it is valuable to it and men themselves should be prevented from ending such valuable lives by suicide.
The punishment for attempt to commit suicide provided under this section is upto 1 year of simple imprisonment with or without a fine.
The Mental Healthcare Act of 2017 has diluted the rigrousness of law relating to "attempt to suicide". Section 115 of the Act says:
The act has by presuming "severe stress" on part of the person who attempted on his life, has not either explicitly repealed section 309 of the IPC or made it applicable to all attempts of suicide. A person who attempts on his life is presumed to be under "severe stress" and therefore he will not be prosecuted and punished for the offence of attempt to commit suicide. Further, it puts the Government under legal obligation to treat and rehabilitate him so that the risk of recurrence of attempt to commit suicide is reduced. It seems that a person who attempts on his life happens to be a person with no "severe stress" cannot be kept out of the penal orbit of section 309. The Government is neither bound to take care of such person nor to treat and rehabilitate him.
Are Hunger Strikes under Section 309?- The Court often used to face a dilemma as to whether hunger strike would constitute an attempt to suicide. The Courts have now set a simplifying principle based upon invention that if the strike was with intention to end the striker's life, it would be attemptt under Section 309 and if thr answer is in negative, then it would not constitute attempt under this section. A landmark case is that of Ramsundar Dubey v. State, where a worker of Mental Hospital at Bareilly was suspended and was subjected to discrimination by the authorities.
To protest against the same, the work laid down near Gandhi Statue of Bareilly and started to fast, but there was no such express declaration that he would fast to death. The District an Sessions Court refused to accept the admissibility of his defence that he was consuming lemon water twice a day, so as to continue his fasts. But the Allahabad High Court held that the accused is not liable under Section 309 of IPC as the evidence is sufficient enough to defend him against liability under the said section.
The Court held that if a person expressly declares that he'd fast unto death and then refuses all the nourishment offered to him thereafter, then he would be held liable for attempt to commit suicide under Section 309 of IPC.
Section 511 of IPC can be reproduced below:
"Punishment for attempting to commit offences punishable with imprisonment for life or other imprisonment."Whoever attempts to commit an offence punishable by this Code with [imprisonment for life] or imprisonment, or to cause such an offence to be committed, and in such attempt does any act towards the commission of the offence, shall, where no express provision is made by this Code for the punishment of such attempt, be punished with [imprisonment of any description provided for the offence, for a term which may extend to one-half of the imprisonment for life or, as the case may be, one-half of the longest term of imprisonment provided for that offence], or with such fine as is provided for the offence, or with both."
Ingredients: The basic ingredients that can be derived from the bare wordings are:
Attempt as has already been defined is the act done for the commission of an offense, which fell short of the actual intent of successful commission. The actus rea and mens rea both are present, and attempt is when the actus rea, if it were not prevented, would have led to successful commission of that offence and would have achieved the mens rea.
The punishment for such an attempt would extend upto half the imprisonment for life or upto half the term of longest term of imprisonment proposed in case if the offense had been successfully committed, with or without a fine.
Illustration: A person attempts to commit a theft but fails in commission, the bare acts provides for illustration that a person has opened a box for stealing jewels but there were no jewels in the box, such person would be liable for half the quantum on punishment provided under Section 379 of IPC, i.e., 1.5 years of imprisonment of either description or fine or both. No express provision has been provided under the code for attempt to theft, hence, the accused would be liable for half the term of imprisonment as he would have been given if he were successful in the commission of that offense.
An illustrative case where the accused was punished for attempt to commit cheating under Section 511 of IPC was Abhayanand Mishra v. State of Bihar. In this case, the accused prepared a fake application and sent it to the concerned University, along with some fake graduation and teaching-experience related documents attached to the application. As a response, the University also issued him an admission card, but for some reasons he failed to get the card and further sit in the examination. The Supreme Court held that the moment he dispatched his application to the University, he was made liable to be punished under Section 511 of IPC, for an attempt to commit cheating.
Exceptions: The exceptions to this section is served by those sections providing for express provisions for punishment of attempts of certain offenses, as has already been described above. Another exception is attempt to offenses under the local laws or special laws is not punishable by IPC, this section only envisages those attempts of offenses that have been envisaged in the IPC and other acts like Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, Arms Act, etc. as was held in Mohammed Akram v. State of Assam. Also, offenses punishable with only fine have not been covered under this Section.
In State of UP v. Ram Charan, the Allahabad High Court held that attempt is intentional act towards the commission of an offense, had it not been prevented by circumstances independent of volition of the offender, it would have not failed in successful commission. In this case, the accused was transporting wheat from one block to another in a ferry boat in contravention to clause 3 of UP Wheat (Restriction of Movement) Order, 1949.
His boat was stopped midstream and he was prosecuted under the said act. The High Court held that the act amounted to attempt to transport wheat in contravention to the concerned provisions, had he not been interrupted, he would have have successful transported wheat in a way contravening the legal provisions of the order. Hence, and attempt has been made and the accused has to be punished as per Section 511 of IPC.
There are 4 stages towards the commission of a crime, and attempt falls at the penultimate stage. Attempt is often confused with preparation but the courts by evolving above said tests, have tried to simplify such complex task of drawing a distinctive line between attempt and preparation. Still, the stage of crime is to be decided upon facts and circumstances of each case, which can be a confusing task. If the offense is found to be an attempt, then it is punished according to the IPC.
The IPC has specifically provided for attempt to murder, attempt to commit culpable homicide not amounting to murder, attempt to commit suicide in different specific section, and those offenses whose attempt is not provided for specifically, are to be dealt with by Section 511 of IPC. Also, a few other offenses carry punishment for commission and attempt within the same section, rather than falling under Section 511 of IPC.
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1. What is the difference between attempt and preparation in the stages of a crime? |
2. What are the various tests used to differentiate between attempt and preparation? |
3. What does Section 307 of IPC state about attempt to murder? |
4. What does Section 309 of IPC state about attempt to commit suicide? |
5. What does Section 511 of IPC state about punishment for attempts to commit a crime? |
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