CrPC 1973 in English 4+

Mohit Agarwal

專為 iPad 設計

    • 免費

螢幕截圖

描述

The Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC ) is the main legislation on the procedure for administration of substantive criminal law in India. It was enacted in 1973 and came into force on 1 April 1974.[2] It provides the machinery for the investigation of crime, apprehension of suspected criminals, the collection of evidence, determination of guilt or innocence of the accused person and the determination of punishment of the guilty. Additionally, it also deals with public nuisance, prevention of offenses and maintenance of wife, child, and parents.

At present, the Act contains 484 Sections, 2 Schedules, and 56 Forms. The Sections are divided into 37 Chapters.

History
In medieval India, subsequent to the conquest by the Muslims, the Mohammedan Criminal Law came into prevalence. The British rulers passed the Regulating Act of 1773 under which a Supreme Court was established in Calcutta and later on at Madras and in Bombay. The Supreme Court was to apply British procedural law while deciding the cases of the Crown’s subjects. After the Rebellion of 1857, the crown took over the administration in India. The Criminal Procedure Code, 1861 was passed by the British parliament. The 1861 code continued after independence and was amended in 1969. It was finally replaced in 1972.

Classification of Offences under the Code
Cognizable and Non-cognizable Offences
Main article: Cognizable offence
Cognizable offences are those offences for which a police officer may arrest without court mandated warrant in accordance with the first schedule of the code. For non-cognizable cases the police officer may arrest only after being duly authorized by a warrant. Non-cognizable offences are, generally, relatively less serious offences than cognizable ones. Cognizable Offences reported under section 154 Cr.P.C while Non-Cognizable Offences reported under section 155 Cr.P.C. For Non-Cognizable Offences the Magistrate empowered to take cognizance under section 190 Cr.P.C. Under section 156(3) Cr.P.C the Magistrate is competent to direct the police to register the case, investigate the same and submit the challan/report for cancellation. (2003 P.Cr.L.J.1282)

Summons-Case and Warrant-Case
Under Section 204 of the code, a Magistrate taking cognizance of an offence is to issue summons for the attendance of the accused if the case is a summons case. If the case appears to be a warrant case, he may issue a warrant or summons, as he sees fit. Section 2(w) of the Code defines summons-case as, a case relating to an Offence, and not being a warrant-case. Section 2(x) of the Code defines warrant-case as, a case relating to an Offence punishable with death, imprisonment for life or imprisonment for a term exceeding two years.

最新功能

版本 1.6.0

Bug fixes and improvements

App 私隱

開發者表明Mohit Agarwal的私隱慣例或包括下列資料的處理。詳情請參閱開發者的私隱政策

用於追蹤你的資料

以下資料可能會用於追蹤你在其他公司的 App 和網站的活動:

  • 識別碼
  • 使用資料

不會與你連結的資料

開發者可能會收集以下資料,但不會連結你的個人身份:

  • 識別碼
  • 使用資料
  • 診斷
  • 其他資料

私隱慣例或因使用的功能或年齡等因素而異。進一步了解

更多此開發者的出品

Poems - Poetry in English
書籍
Essay Writing - IELTS / TOEFL
教育
Sherlock Holmes - Collection
書籍
Hindu Panchang - Calendar
參考
Shri Guru Granth Sahib Ji Bani
書籍
Bhagavad Gita : Marathi
書籍

你可能也喜歡

Indian Penal Code - IPC
教育
Indian Constitution - Offline
教育
Law-App
教育
Manupatra
參考
Law Dictionary : Offline
教育
LawSikho
教育