The Indian Penal Code: Mistake as Defense
Within the framework of criminal law, justification and excuse serve as
benchmarks for both dictating and prohibiting behavior in general and
determining guilt or innocence in a given instance. They play a crucial role in
both defining the specifics of crimes and ensuring that they are applied with
morality. It is not hyperbole to say that a morally sound system of criminal
laws requires a morally sound knowledge and application of justification and
excuse.
General or affirmative defenses are arguably the most explicit way that the
criminal code expresses reason and excuse. When used in this way, justification
and excuse offer a defense that absolves a performer of guilt even when they
have engaged in all relevant behavior and have a state of mind.
Four Distinctions between claims of justification and of Excuse Warrant
Emphasis
First, justifications are always made. They apply to everyone who is aware of
the conditions that make the alleged legal infraction acceptable. When someone
is in a position to defend himself from unlawful action, they can legitimately
intervene on behalf of the victim who is being threatened. On the other hand,
excuses are private and unique to the particular person entangled in the complex
web of events.
This restriction results from the necessary component of involuntariness in
behavior that is excused. Excuses are sometimes interpreted to allow
intervention on behalf of "relatives or other people close to the actor" in case
they face immediate danger. The actor's intervention on behalf of this small
group of individuals in danger may have been sufficiently involuntary to be
justified.
Second, justification claims depend, in different ways, on the assessment that
the justified behavior advances the greater good (or lesser evil) and the
weighing of interests. It is not apparent that excuses require a balance of
interests. However, indirectly, evaluating the relationship between harm
incurred and harm averted could help us determine if the wrongdoing was
sufficiently involuntary to be forgiven.
Perjury committed with the intention of preventing serious bodily harm would
probably be forgiven, while murdering multiple people in order to prevent minor
injuries to oneself would probably not. The evaluation of the actor's
capitulation to outside forces gets more exacting as the distance between the
competing objectives grows. This subtle consideration of competing interests
clarifies the normative foundation for labeling certain behaviors as
"involuntary."
Third, there are many kinds of criminal law principles from which justification
and excuse claims originate. Justifications rely on standards that are aimed at
the general public and which make exceptions to the criminal law's restrictions.
Excuses are not the same. Excuses originate from guidelines that not to the
general public, but to jurors, judges, and legal authorities who evaluate the
responsibility of individuals who unjustly break the law.
A specific infraction being excused does not change the legal ban. Acknowledging
an error in law as a justification does not alter the law; in the event that the
justified party left the courtroom and recommitted the offense, he would
undoubtedly be found guilty. Recognizing insanity, involuntary intoxication, or
personal necessity does not change the rules prohibiting the behaviors that are
justified under these conditions.
When someone breaks the law expecting an explanation (for example, because he
didn't know the law or because he was being threatened), that expectation itself
makes a strong case against absolving him of responsibility. The presumption of
an explanation and the alleged involuntariness of excused behavior are at odds.
Last but not least, justification defenses center on the act rather than the
actor; they absolve otherwise illegal behavior if they serve society or are
otherwise deemed to be socially beneficial. Excuse defenses center on the actor
rather than the act; they absolve an actor of responsibility even in cases when
their actions may have caused harm to society since they do not view the actor
as being at fault. If a mother trespasses into a store to take tools to rescue
her son who is trapped in a house fire, she would be justified and therefore not
need an excuse; if her son's kidnapper begs her to rob the store in exchange for
her son's safe return, she would be excused but not justified.
Mistake as a General Exception
"The act done by a person bound, or by mistake of fact believing himself bound,
by law," according to Section 76 of THE INDIAN PENAL CODE: Nothing that is done
by someone who considers themselves to be bound by law, either in good faith or
due to a factual error rather than a legal error, is considered an offense.
For instance, an officer A has not committed a crime if he fires a mob at the
direction of his superior officer and in compliance with the law. "Act done by a
person justified, or by mistake of fact believing himself justified, by law,"
according to Section 79 of THE INDIAN PENAL CODE.
Nothing that is done by someone who is justified by the law, or who, in good
faith but due to a factual error rather than a legal error, thinks they are
justified by the law in doing so, is considered an offense.
For instance, A witnesses Z doing what looks to A to be a murder.In the process
of using the legal authority granted to anybody to catch murderers in the act, A
uses his best judgment to apprehend Z and bring him before the appropriate
authorities. Even if it turns out that Z was defending herself, A has done
nothing wrong.
The common principles of ignorantia juris non excusat (ignorance of law is not
an excuse) and ignorantia facti excusat (ignorance of fact is an excuse) have
been embodied in sections 76 and 79 of the IPC.
Section 76 deals with those class of cases where a person by reason of a mistake
(or ignorance) of fact, in good faith, considers himself bound by law to do an
act, whereas, section 79 deals with that class of cases where by reason of a
mistake of fact a person
considers himself justified by law to do an act in a particular way. The purpose
of this section is to provide protection from conviction to persons, who are
bound by law or justified by law in doing a particular act, but due to mistake
of fact, commited an offence. The mistake must be in good faith and after
exercise of due diligence. The difference between the two provisions is shown in
the examples.
Therefore, if facts are true, a sincere conviction in their existence would
render an action harmless. No matter how sincere it may be, ignorance of the law
does not serve as a defense against an accusation of criminality. To put it
another way, everyone who lives in a nation—foreigners or subjects alike-is
subject to its laws.
The reason for this is that it is considered that every man should be aware of
the laws. Ignorance of the law is not a defense as, in that case, any accused
person may argue that he was not aware of the law, making it difficult for the
prosecution to establish that the accused person knew the law. It will be nearly
impossible to administer justice under such circumstances.
Written By: Akanksha
Law Article in India
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