## Correct Answer: B. 193 Section 193 of the Indian Penal Code specifically deals with **punishment for giving false evidence**. Perjury—the deliberate giving of false evidence on oath or solemn affirmation in a judicial proceeding—is prosecuted under this section. The section prescribes imprisonment up to 7 years and fine, or both, for anyone who intentionally gives false evidence in any stage of judicial proceeding or before any authorized person. The key discriminator is that Section 193 is the foundational section for false evidence; it applies to all false statements made under oath in court or before competent authority. In Indian forensic medicine and legal medicine practice, when a witness or expert is suspected of deliberately providing false testimony, Section 193 IPC is the charging section. The section is critical in Indian courts because expert witnesses (including doctors) can be prosecuted under it if they knowingly provide false medical opinions or autopsy findings. This is particularly relevant in criminal cases where medical evidence is pivotal—a pathologist giving false autopsy findings or a radiologist misreporting findings intentionally can face Section 193 charges alongside professional misconduct proceedings. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. 192** — Section 192 IPC deals with **fabricating false evidence**, not the punishment for giving it. This section covers the act of creating or preparing false documents or evidence with intent to use it in judicial proceedings. While related to false evidence, Section 192 addresses the creation phase, not the act of testifying falsely. NBE traps students who confuse the preparatory offence (fabrication) with the actual offence (giving false evidence in court). **C. 197** — Section 197 IPC deals with **prosecution of public servants for acts done in official capacity**. It provides immunity to government officials and requires sanction from appropriate authority before prosecution. This section has no direct connection to perjury or false evidence. Students may select this if they confuse it with procedural aspects of prosecuting false evidence cases, but Section 197 is purely about official immunity, not punishment for perjury. **D. 191** — Section 191 IPC defines **giving false evidence**, establishing what constitutes the offence itself. It is the definitional section, not the punishment section. Section 191 states that whoever being bound by oath or legal obligation makes any statement which is false and which he knows or believes to be false is said to give false evidence. The punishment for this offence defined in Section 191 is prescribed in Section 193, making 191 the definition and 193 the punishment—a common NBE trap pairing. ## High-Yield Facts - **Section 193 IPC** prescribes punishment for giving false evidence: imprisonment up to 7 years and/or fine. - **Section 191 IPC** defines false evidence; Section 193 provides punishment—always paired in IPC false evidence questions. - **Expert witnesses** (doctors, pathologists, radiologists) can be prosecuted under Section 193 if they knowingly provide false medical testimony. - **Section 192 IPC** covers fabrication of false evidence (preparation); Section 193 covers giving it (execution in court). - In Indian courts, **perjury charges** against medical professionals typically proceed under Section 193 alongside professional misconduct under Medical Council regulations. ## Mnemonics **191-192-193 False Evidence Sequence** **191** = Definition (what is false evidence), **192** = Fabrication (making it), **193** = Punishment (giving it in court). Remember: 191 defines, 192 makes, 193 punishes. **Section 193 = Court Testimony Punishment** **193** is always the answer for 'punishment of perjury/false evidence in court.' If the question asks 'what is false evidence?' → 191. If 'how is it made?' → 192. If 'what's the punishment?' → 193. ## NBE Trap NBE commonly pairs Section 191 (definition of false evidence) with Section 193 (punishment) in the same question set. Students who know only the definition (191) but not the punishment section (193) will select 191, making this a high-yield discrimination point. The sequential numbering (191, 192, 193) also creates a false sense that they are interchangeable. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian medical practice, when a doctor's autopsy report or medical opinion is challenged as deliberately false in court, the prosecution invokes Section 193 IPC. This is particularly common in criminal cases (homicide, poisoning) where pathologists' findings are contested. A radiologist misreporting an X-ray intentionally to favour a party in a civil or criminal case can face Section 193 charges—making this section directly relevant to medical professional accountability in Indian courts. _Reference: Reddy KSN. The Essentials of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology. 33rd ed. Ch. 3 (IPC Sections relevant to medical practice); Parikh CK. Parikh's Textbook of Medical Jurisprudence, Forensic Medicine and Toxicology. 6th ed. Ch. 2 (IPC Sections)_
Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.