Section 271-293
Public Health and Safety: Disobedience to Quarantine Rule; Adulteration of Drugs; Sale of Adulterated Drugs; Fouling Water; Making Atmosphere Noxious; Rash Navigation; Rash Conduct with Machinery; Negligence Regarding Explosive Substances; Negligence Regarding Poison; Making/Selling Instruments for Counterfeiting; Keeping Lottery Office; Obscene Books
Replaced by: BNS BNS 273-296
Original Text
Simplified
Legal Evolution
Sections 271-293 cover a range of offences against public health, safety, and order — from quarantine violations and adulteration to rash driving and public nuisance. The drafters grouped these offences together as threats to the public welfare broadly conceived, recognizing that health, road safety, and environmental quality were collective concerns requiring criminal law protection. Sections 279-289 on rash driving and negligent handling of dangerous things have taken on increased importance with India's explosive growth in vehicle numbers.
Landmark Precedents
M.C. Mehta v. Union of India (Oleum Gas Leak Case) (1987)
Established absolute liability for hazardous substances — complements IPC public health provisions (Sections 277–289) for environmental harm and public nuisance liability.