BNS §19

Act likely to cause harm, but done without criminal intent, and to prevent other harm

Substantively sameConfidence: mediumStatus: editor verified
Last updated 2026-05-01 · Input coverage: full

Compiled by AI-assisted tools. Text verified against official sources where indicated. Field-level labels (AI-indicated / AI-inferred / Text-verified) apply per edge metadata. Verify current bail/cognizable status against official sources before relying on procedural claims. Last updated: 2026-04-28.

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Comparison

Old law
IPC §81
Act likely to cause harm, but done without criminal intent, and to prevent other harm. 3

81. Act likely to cause harm, but done without criminal intent, and to prevent other harm.— Nothing is an offence merely by reason of its being done with the knowledge that it is likely to cause harm, if it be done without any criminal intention to cause harm, and in good faith for the purpose of preventing or avoiding other harm to person or property. Explanation.—It is a question of fact in such a case whether the harm to be prevented or avoided was of such a nature and so imminent as to justify or excuse the risk of doing the act with the knowledge that it was likely to cause harm. Illustrations (a) A, the captain of a steam vessel, suddenly, and without any fault or negligence on his part, finds himself in such a position that, before he can stop his vessel, he must inevitably run down a boat B, with twenty or thirty passengers on board, unless he changes the course of his vessel, and that, by changing his course, he must incur risk of running down a boat C with only two passengers on board, which he may possibly clear. Here, if A alters his course without any intention to run down the boat C and in good faith for the purpose of avoiding the danger to the passengers in the boat B, he is not guilty of an offence, though he may run down the boat C by doing an act which he knew was likely to cause that effect, if it be found as a matter of fact that the danger which he intended to avoid was such as to excuse him in incurring the risk of running down C. (b) A, in a great fire, pulls down houses in order to prevent the conflagration from spreading. He does this with the intention in good faith of saving human life or property. Here, if it be found that the harm to be prevented was of such a nature and so imminent as to excuse A's act, A is not guilty of the offence.

New law
BNS §19
Act likely to cause harm, but done without criminal intent, and to prevent other harm

Nothing is an offence merely by reason of its being done with the knowledge that it is likely to cause harm, if it be done without any criminal intention to cause harm, and in good faith for the purpose of preventing or avoiding other harm to person or property.

What changedAI-inferred

IPC 81 and BNS 19 carry the same necessity (lesser-harm) exception character-identically. The Explanation about questions of fact and both illustrations (boat-captain and great-fire) are preserved.

Old position

IPC 81 is concerned with Act likely to cause harm, but done without criminal intent, and to prevent other harm. 3. Act likely to cause harm, but done without criminal intent, and to prevent other harm

New position

BNS 19 preserves the framework with drafting modernisations as required by the new code. Topic: Act likely to cause harm, but done without criminal intent, and to prevent other harm. Nothing is an offence merely by reason of its being done with the knowledge that it is likely to cause harm, if it be done without any criminal intention to cause harm, and in good faith for the purpose of preventing or avoiding other harm

IPC 81 and BNS 19 carry the same necessity (lesser-harm) exception character-identically. The Explanation about questions of fact and both illustrations (boat-captain and great-fire) are preserved.

Editorial deltaAI-indicated (source-linked)

IPC 81 and BNS 19 carry the same necessity (lesser-harm) exception character-identically. The Explanation about questions of fact and both illustrations (boat-captain and great-fire) are preserved.

Transitional note (repeal & savings)

For matters initiated before 1 July 2024, IPC 81 continues to apply. For matters from that date forward, BNS 19 applies. The transition is governed by the repeal-and-savings clause in the new code (BNS 358 / BNSS 531 / BSA 170 as the case may be); pending proceedings under the old code carry forward unaffected.

Frequently asked

BNS 19 (Act likely to cause harm, but done without criminal intent, and to prevent other harm). The relationship is classified as substantively_same — see the change-note above for the textual delta.

Sources

Cite this page

Newlaws.in, IPC §81 → BNS §19 Mapping Page, last updated 2026-05-01, accessed 2026-06-15, https://newlaws.in/bns/19.

Compiled using AI-assisted tools · Source-linked · Last updated 2026-05-01

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