Police to inquire and report on suicide, etc.: Section-174 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898
The Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898
(ACT NO. V OF 1898)
INFORMATION TO
THE POLICE AND THEIR POWERS TO INVESTIGATE
CHAPTER XIV
Police to inquire and
report on suicide, etc.
174.(1) The officer in charge
of a police-station or some other police-officer specially empowered by the
Government in that behalf, on receiving information that a person-
(a) has committed suicide, or
(b) has been killed by another, or by an animal, or by machinery
or by an accident, or
(c) has died under circumstances raising a reasonable suspicion
that some other person has committed an offence,
shall immediately give
intimation thereof to the nearest Executive Magistrate empowered to hold
inquests, and, unless otherwise directed by any rule prescribed by the
Government, or by any general or special order of the District Magistrate,
shall proceed to the place where the body of such deceased person is, and
there, in the presence of two or more respectable inhabitants of the
neighborhood, shall make an investigation, and draw up a report of the apparent
cause of death, describing such wounds, fractures, bruises and other marks of
injury as may be found on the body, and stating in what manner, or by what
weapon or instrument (if any), such marks appear to have been inflicted:
Provided that, unless the
Government otherwise directs, it shall not be necessary under this sub-section,
in any case where the death or any person has been caused by enemy action, to
make any investigation or to draw up any report or to send any intimation to a
Magistrate empowered to hold inquests.
(2) The report shall be
signed by such police-officer and other persons, or by so many of them as
concur therein, and shall be forthwith forwarded to the District
Magistrate.
(3)
When there is any doubt regarding the cause of death, or when for any other
reason the police-officer considers it expedient so to do, he shall, subject to
such rules as the Government may prescribe in this behalf, forward the body,
with a view to its being examined, to the nearest Civil Surgeon, or other
qualified medical man appointed in this behalf by the Government, if the state
of the weather and the distance admit of its being so forwarded without risk of
such putrefaction on the road as would render such examination useless.
(5) The following
Magistrates are empowered to hold inquest, namely, any District Magistrate or
any other Executive Magistrate specially empowered in this behalf by the
Government or the District Magistrate.
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