Sudden Fight, Consent and the Principle of Comparative Responsibility in the Indian Penal Code

Singapore Journal of Legal Studies, pp. 282-303, December 2010

U. of Adelaide Law Research Paper No. 2011-001

Posted: 1 Mar 2011 Last revised: 5 Sep 2012

See all articles by Ian D. Leader-Elliott

Ian D. Leader-Elliott

University of Adelaide; University of South Australia

Date Written: February 27, 2011

Abstract

Sudden fight is one of four partial defences to murder in the Indian Penal Code. It was a late addition to the Code and lacks the qualifying provisos and illustrations that constrain applications of the partial defences of provocation and excessive force in private defence. A survey of recent decisions of the Indian Supreme Court suggests that the partial defence of sudden fight has the potential to subvert the principled limits that constrain the other partial defences. Sudden fight has no equivalent in other Commonwealth jurisdictions. It has been argued that sudden fight is an anachronism that should be eliminated from the law of murder in the IPC. This essay argues for its retention on the ground that the partial defences of provocation, excessive defence, sudden fight and consent are unified by an underlying principle of comparative responsibility that extenuates murder when the offender was seriously wronged by the victim or acted with the consent of the victim to death or the likelihood of death. A set of provisos and limitations is proposed that will constrain applications of the partial defence of sudden fight in conformity with the principle of comparative responsibility.

Suggested Citation

Leader-Elliott, Ian D., Sudden Fight, Consent and the Principle of Comparative Responsibility in the Indian Penal Code (February 27, 2011). Singapore Journal of Legal Studies, pp. 282-303, December 2010, U. of Adelaide Law Research Paper No. 2011-001, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1772142

Ian D. Leader-Elliott (Contact Author)

University of Adelaide ( email )

233 North Terrace
Adelaide, South Australia
Australia

University of South Australia ( email )

37-44 North Terrace, City West Campus
Adelaide, South Australia 5001
Australia

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Abstract Views
442
PlumX Metrics