Case Laws Related to Indian Penal Code for Judiciary Exam 2026
Author : Mrunali Gaikwad
July 7, 2026
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Overview: Preparing for judiciary exams? Make sure you don't miss the most important case laws related to Indian Penal Code.
Landmark judgements/case laws have been significant inclusion in judiciary exams
Case laws related to Indian Penal Code help you understand its application in real-life scenarios.
This is helpful for both Prelims and Main exams where questions are asked in MCQs or written, descriptive formats.
In this blog we help you understand the most important case laws related to IPC.
Let's begin!
Why You Need to Study Case Laws Related to Indian Penal Code for Judiciary Exams?
Reading bare acts for IPC helps you understand what the law is all about. Case laws help you understand what the law actually means when applied to real-life situations.
This reason is enough to study case laws when you're preparing for an important position in the Indian judiciary system. But let's give you more.
Here's why you can't skip this part of your preparation:
Understand Practical Applications: Sections read very differently on paper than they do once a court has applied them to a real set of facts. Case laws help close that gap.
Get Conceptual Clarity on Core Doctrines: Concepts like mens rea, actus reus, common intention, and "rarest of rare" only really make sense once you've seen them being argued in an actual judgment.
Insight into Judicial Reasoning: Reading how a bench reasons through a hard fact pattern is, in a small way, training for how you'll eventually have to reason through one yourself.
Sharper Analytical Skills: Case-based questions force you to apply a principle to a new fact scenario rather than just recall a definition.
Better Exam Scores: Most state judiciary Prelims now include several case-based MCQs, and Mains answer-writing rewards candidates who can cite authority instead of just stating the law. With the new criminal laws being implemented, examiners are also testing whether you know which provision the case law now sits under.
What You Need to Know Before Reading These Case Laws Related to Indian Penal Code?
Since 1st July 2024, the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 has replaced the Indian Penal Code (IPC) as India's substantive criminal code. Most of the case laws below were decided under the old IPC numbering because that's when the facts actually happened. However, the principle they establish now lives under a renumbered BNS section.
Several state judiciary exams still test IPC and BNS side by side during this transition period. It's important that you know the section numbers for both.
Here's the mapping for every section you'll see referenced in this article:
Subject
IPC Section
BNS Section
Act done under mistaken belief of legal obligation
Section 76
Section 14
Act done under mistaken belief of legal justification
Section 79
Section 17
Accident in doing a lawful act
Section 80
Section 18
Act to prevent other harm (necessity)
Section 81
Section 19
Act of a person of unsound mind (insanity)
Section 84
Section 22
Intoxication caused against one's will
Section 85
Section 23
Offence requiring specific intent, committed while intoxicated
Case Laws Related to Indian Penal Code: Quick Overview
Preparing tables for revision is one of the best tips to remember articles, sections, and case laws. Here's a revision-friendly overview of important case laws related to Indian Penal Code before we discuss them in detail.
Case
Year
IPC / BNS Section
Core Principle
R vs. Tolson
1889
76/79 → 14/17
Honest, reasonable mistake of fact is a valid defense
R vs. Prince
1875
76/79 → 14/17
Mistake of fact fails where the underlying act is inherently wrongful
Keso Sahu vs. Saligram Shah
1977
79 → 17
Good-faith belief that law justified the act is protected
Jogeshwar vs. Emperor
-
80 → 18
Accident defense fails if the underlying act was itself unlawful
R vs. Dudley and Stephens
1884
81 → 19
Necessity cannot justify intentionally killing an innocent person
Daniel McNaughten's Case
1843
84 → 22
Founded the modern insanity defense (McNaughten Rules)
K.M. Nanavati vs. State of Maharashtra
1962
300 → 101
Provocation must be both grave and sudden; cooling-off time defeats it
Virsa Singh vs. State of Punjab
1958
300 → 101
Four-part test for murder under Section 300 "thirdly"
Mahbub Shah vs. Emperor
1945
34 → 3(5)
Common intention requires prior meeting of minds, not mere presence
Tukaram vs. State of Maharashtra
1979
375/376 → 63/64
Led to the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 1983 on custodial rape
Independent Thought vs. Union of India
2017
375 → 63
Struck down marital-rape exception for wives under 18
Kans Raj vs. State of Punjab
2000
304B → 80
Presumption under dowry-death law must still be weighed against facts
State of Tamil Nadu vs. Nalini
1999
120A/120B → 61
Conspiracy can be inferred from conduct; individual links must be shown
Bachan Singh vs. State of Punjab
1980
Death penalty doctrine
Laid down the "rarest of rare" standard for capital punishment
Landmark Case Laws Related to Indian Penal Code on General Exceptions
General exceptions are the most frequently asked chapter of IPC in judiciary Prelims, mainly because the fact patterns lend themselves so well to MCQs.
These 6 cases are the ones you'll see referenced most often.
R vs. Tolson (1889): Mistake of Fact as a Valid Defense
Sarah Tolson's husband abandoned her in 1881, and after years without any word from him, she genuinely believed he had died.
She remarried in 1887; only for her first husband to resurface a year later, leading to a bigamy charge against her.
At trial, she argued that her honest and reasonable belief in her husband's death should excuse her.
The court agreed, holding that an honest and reasonable mistake of fact, which would have made the act innocent if true, is a valid criminal defense.
This case is the classic illustration of Section 76/79 IPC (Sections 14/17 BNS): mistake of fact as a shield, provided the belief was both honest and reasonable.
R vs. Prince (1875): When Mistake of Fact Fails
The accused took an unmarried girl below the age of 16 out of her father's custody, genuinely and reasonably believing she was older. The court still convicted him.
The reasoning: the underlying act. Taking a minor from parental custody was wrongful and immoral in itself, so a mistaken belief about her age didn't erase the wrong.
Keso Sahu vs. Saligram Shah (1977): Good Faith Belief and Section 79
Keso Sahu genuinely suspected Saligram Shah was smuggling rice and, acting on that suspicion, handed over a cart and cartman to the police.
It turned out no smuggling was actually taking place.
Despite the mistake, the court held Keso Sahu had acted in good faith, believing the law justified his conduct in Section 79 IPC (now Section 17 BNS), which protects acts done under an honest, if mistaken, belief that the law permits them.
Jogeshwar vs. Emperor: Accident Under Section 80
During an altercation, the accused struck out intending to hit the person he was fighting, but the blow accidentally struck his own wife's two-month-old child, who died as a result.
The defence argued, the Section 80 IPC - accident during a lawful act, should apply. The court rejected this.
Section 80 only protects acts that are lawful and done with proper care. Since the accused was engaged in an unlawful assault at the time, the "accident" defence under Section 80 IPC (Section 18 BNS) didn't hold up, even though the fatal blow itself was unintended.
R vs. Dudley and Stephens (1884): Why Necessity Didn't Save Two Sailors
After a shipwreck left four survivors adrift without food or water for days, Dudley proposed killing the weakest among them (a young cabin boy) so the others could survive by eating him.
One of the men objected, but Dudley and Stephens went ahead anyway once the boy was near death.
When rescued and tried for murder, they pleaded necessity.
The court refused to accept it, holding that necessity cannot justify the intentional killing of an innocent person, however desperate the circumstances.
This remains the leading English authority on the outer limits of the necessity defence under Section 81 IPC (Section 19 BNS).
Daniel McNaughten's Case (1843): The Foundation of the Insanity Defence
Daniel McNaughten, suffering from severe paranoid delusions that he was being persecuted by the Tories, shot and killed Edward Drummond after mistaking him for the Prime Minister, Sir Robert Peel.
7 witnesses at trial testified his evident insanity, and the judge eventually halted proceedings.
The case led to the framing of the McNaughten Rules - the foundation of the insanity defence in criminal law across common-law jurisdictions, including India's Section 84 IPC (now Section 22 BNS).
If you remember only one insanity case for your exam, it should be this one.
More General Exceptions Case Laws Related to Indian Penal Code You Should Know
Here are other related case laws related to Indian Penal Code that are important for judiciary exam preparation.
Case
Relevant Provision
What It Established
State of Orissa vs. Ram Bahadur Thapa
Section 79 IPC / 17 BNS
An honest belief in superstition (ghosts) that caused the accused to act was accepted as good-faith mistake of fact
State of Orissa vs. Bhagaban Barik
Section 80 IPC / 18 BNS
Death caused while chasing a suspected thief in the dark was held not to be a lawful-act "accident"
Tunda vs. Rex
Section 87 IPC
Injury during a friendly wrestling match with implied consent did not amount to an offence
Queen-Empress vs. K.N. Shah
Section 84 IPC / 22 BNS
Reaffirmed that legal insanity, not medical insanity alone, must be proved for the defence to succeed
Lakshmi vs. State
Section 84 IPC / 22 BNS
Court examined the accused's conduct before and after the act to test the insanity claim
Azharuddin Ahmed vs. The King
Section 84 IPC / 22 BNS
Held that the burden of proving unsoundness of mind rests on the accused
Shrikant Anandrao Bhosle vs. State of Maharashtra
Section 84 IPC / 22 BNS
Applied the insanity defence in a domestic-violence-linked killing, examining the accused's history of mental illness
Badusab vs. State of Pepsu
Section 86 IPC / 24 BNS
Voluntary intoxication does not excuse an offence requiring specific intent if that intent can still be shown
Rex vs. Maekin
Section 86 IPC / 24 BNS
Distinguished between intoxication affecting capacity to form intent and mere reduced inhibition
DPP vs. Beard
Section 85/86 IPC / 23-24 BNS
Established that drunkenness can only negate specific intent, never general intent, in English law
Landmark Case Laws Related to Indian Penal Code on Culpable Homicide and Murder
The difference between culpable homicide and murder is one of the most frequently tested areas from the judiciary exam syllabus.
Here are the two cases every aspirant is expected to know cold.
K.M. Nanavati vs. State of Maharashtra (1962)
Naval officer K.M. Nanavati shot and killed his wife's lover after she confessed to an affair.
Nanavati argued grave and sudden provocation, which would have reduced the charge from murder to culpable homicide not amounting to murder.
The Supreme Court rejected the defence, holding that the time gap between the confession and the killing was long enough for Nanavati's passion to have cooled, defeating the "sudden" element of the provocation exception.
The case remains the leading authority on how courts assess whether provocation was genuinely grave and sudden.
Virsa Singh vs. State of Punjab (1958)
The accused inflicted a single spear wound that penetrated the victim's intestines, causing death.
The question was whether this satisfied Section 300 "thirdly" - an intention to cause a bodily injury sufficient in the ordinary course of nature to cause death.
The Supreme Court laid down a clear four-part test: the prosecution must show the injury existed, its nature, that it was intentional (not accidental), and that it was objectively sufficient to cause death.
Intention to cause that specific degree of injury is what matters, not intention to kill.
This test is still the standard framework that courts apply when classifying an act as murder under Section 300 IPC (Section 101 BNS).
Landmark Case Laws Related to Indian Penal Code on Common Intention
Two men were part of a group when one of them shot and killed the victim during a confrontation.
The prosecution sought to convict Mahbub Shah as well, relying on Section 34's "common intention" principle.
The Privy Council acquitted him, holding that common intention requires a prior meeting of minds to commit the specific criminal act. It cannot be inferred merely from the fact that several people were present or that a crime happened to occur in a group setting.
This case is the standard citation whenever a judiciary answer needs to distinguish "common intention" (Section 34) from "common object" (Section 149), so it's worth knowing both the facts and this distinction well.
Landmark Case Laws Related to Indian Penal Code on Offences Against Women
Tukaram vs. State of Maharashtra (1979): The Mathura Case
A young tribal girl, Mathura, was raped in a police station by two constables.
The Supreme Court acquitted the accused, reasoning that the absence of visible injury marks suggested "consent," and questioned Mathura's conduct.
This judgment triggered widespread public outrage and directly led to the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 1983, which introduced custodial rape as a distinct, more severely punished category and shifted the burden of proof in certain custodial-rape cases onto the accused.
Independent Thought vs. Union of India (2017)
The case challenged Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC, which had exempted a husband from rape charges for non-consensual intercourse with his wife if she was between 15 and 18 years old.
The Supreme Court struck down this exception as unconstitutional, holding that a girl below 18 remains a "child" regardless of marital status, and sexual intercourse with her, married or not, amounts to rape.
This is a frequently tested case for constitutional law sections, child rights, and criminal law.
Landmark Case Law Related to Indian Penal Code on Criminal Conspiracy
State of Tamil Nadu vs. Nalini (1999)
Arising out of the assassination of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, this case required the Supreme Court to determine the scope of criminal conspiracy under Section 120A/120B and decide which of the many accused could be said to share the conspiratorial agreement.
The Court held that conspiracy need not be proved through direct evidence of an explicit agreement.
It can be inferred from the conduct of the parties, but each accused's link to the common design must still be established, rather than assumed from mere association.
The "Rarest of Rare" Doctrine and the Death Penalty Case Law
Bachan Singh vs. State of Punjab (1980)
Bachan Singh challenged the constitutionality of the death penalty itself, arguing it violated the right to life under Article 21.
The Supreme Court upheld the death penalty's constitutionality but laid down the "rarest of rare" doctrine.
The court held that capital punishment should be reserved only for cases where the alternative of life imprisonment is unquestionably foreclosed, and courts must weigh aggravating and mitigating circumstances before imposing it.
Nearly every subsequent death-penalty judgment in India refers to this case, making it essential reading regardless of which state exam you're targeting.
How Are Case Laws Related to Indian Penal Code Asked in Judiciary Exams?
In Prelims: Expect direct MCQs: a one-line fact pattern followed by "which defence applies" or "identify the case," often pulled straight from the cases above. Sections 76-86 and Section 300 are the most heavily recycled areas across states.
In Mains: you're usually given a fact scenario and asked to decide the outcome, citing authority. Answer scripts that name the relevant case and apply its test (like the Virsa Singh four-part test) consistently score better than ones that only state the section.
How to Remember Case Laws Related to Indian Penal Code?
Pair opposite outcomes. Learn Tolson and Prince together. Why? They have the same defence, opposite results. It's far easier to retain a contrast than an isolated fact.
Anchor each case to one line, not the full story. For revision, you only need the core principle; the facts are there to help you remember the principle, not to be memorized word for word.
Always attach the BNS section alongside the IPC section. Examiners are actively testing this transition right now, and a case answer that only cites the old IPC number can cost you marks.
Revise using the quick-reference table, not the full write-ups, once you've read the detailed version at least twice.
Practice application-based questions, not just recalling names. The Virsa Singh test and the Bachan Singh "rarest of rare" standard are far more useful in Mains if you can apply them to a new fact pattern.
Here are your key takeaways:
Case laws related to Indian Penal Code are important and should not be skipped during judiciary exam prep.
General exceptions (Sections 76-86 IPC / 14-24 BNS) remain the most frequently tested chapter for Prelims MCQs.
Always learn a case's IPC section alongside its BNS equivalent.
Murder, common intention, offences against women, dowry death, and criminal conspiracy each have one or two "must-know" landmark cases.
You can score higher in mains when you cite the relevant test or doctrine (Virsa Singh, Bachan Singh) rather than just the section number.
Use the quick-reference table for revision once you've understood the detailed explanations at least once.
How do I prepare for bare acts for Judiciary Mains Examination?
How to handle panic during the Judiciary Exam?
About the Author
Mrunali Gaikwad
Full Stack Content Writer
I am a writer and researcher with 8 years of experience in content creation, aspiring to further expand my knowledge and experience within the law and judiciary sectors.... more
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