## Correct Answer: C. Section 84 of IPC McNaughten's rule is the legal test for determining criminal insanity and is codified in **Section 84 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC)**. This section defines the legal standard for the insanity defense in India, establishing that a person is not criminally responsible for an act if, at the time of committing it, they were suffering from unsoundness of mind such that they did not know the nature of the act, did not know it was wrong, or could not control their conduct due to mental disease. McNaughten's rule originated from an English case (1843) and was adopted into Indian criminal law. The rule focuses on cognitive capacity (knowledge of nature/quality and wrongfulness of the act) rather than volitional capacity alone. Section 84 IPC is the foundational provision for the insanity defense in Indian courts and is routinely cited in criminal trials involving psychiatric evaluation. This is distinct from the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC), which deals with procedural aspects of criminal trials, not substantive criminal law definitions. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Section 184 of CrPC** — This is a procedural section of the Code of Criminal Procedure, not the substantive criminal law. Section 184 CrPC deals with examination of witnesses and procedural matters, not the legal definition of insanity. The NBE trap here conflates CrPC (procedure) with IPC (substantive law), and uses a plausible-sounding section number to mislead. **B. Section 83 of CrPC** — Again, this references the Code of Criminal Procedure rather than the Indian Penal Code. Section 83 CrPC relates to procedure for examination of accused persons, not the insanity defense. Students may confuse the section numbers (83 vs 84) or conflate CrPC with IPC, making this a common trap. **D. Section 184 of IPC** — While this correctly identifies the IPC, Section 184 IPC deals with 'Act of a person of unsound mind' but is not the primary codification of McNaughten's rule. Section 84 IPC is the comprehensive and correct section that explicitly incorporates McNaughten's rule. The wrong section number (184 instead of 84) is a classic NBE distractor. ## High-Yield Facts - **Section 84 IPC** is the statutory codification of McNaughten's rule in Indian criminal law. - McNaughten's rule requires the accused to prove **lack of knowledge of nature/quality or wrongfulness** of the act due to mental disease. - The burden of proof in Section 84 IPC is on the **balance of probabilities** (not beyond reasonable doubt), making it easier to establish the insanity defense. - **CrPC sections (83, 184)** deal with procedural aspects; **IPC sections (84, 184)** define substantive criminal liability. - Section 84 IPC does NOT excuse acts committed due to **irresistible impulse alone** if the person knew the nature and wrongfulness of the act. ## Mnemonics **IPC vs CrPC for Insanity** **I**PC = **I**nsanity definition (Section 84); **C**rPC = **C**riminal **P**rocedure (Sections 83, 184). Insanity is a *substantive* defense, not a procedural issue. **Section 84 = 8 (Eight) Cognitive Tests** Section 84 focuses on **8** key cognitive elements: (1) Nature, (2) Quality, (3) Wrongfulness of act, (4) Mental disease/defect. Remember: 84 = cognitive, not volitional. ## NBE Trap NBE conflates IPC (substantive criminal law) with CrPC (procedural law) and uses adjacent section numbers (83, 84, 184) to trap students who confuse the code or misremember the exact section. The presence of "184" in two options (A and D) creates additional confusion. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian courts, when a psychiatrist is called to evaluate criminal insanity, the examination is framed entirely around Section 84 IPC criteria—did the accused know the nature/quality of the act or that it was wrong? This is why forensic psychiatrists in India must be conversant with Section 84 language, not just clinical diagnosis of mental illness. _Reference: Reddy's Forensic Medicine & Toxicology (Ch. 3: Forensic Psychiatry); Parikh's Textbook of Medical Jurisprudence, Forensic Medicine & Toxicology (Ch. 2: Criminal Law)_
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