must be the person who gave the provocation.
(ii) The provocation must be both ‗grave' and ‗sudden'.
(iii) The provocation must deprive ... provocation to the accused.
(2) The provocation so given must have been grave.
(3) The provocation given by the deceased must have been sudden
provocation to the
accused.
(2) The provocation so given must have been grave.
Crl. A. 302/2018 Page 12 of 17
(3) The provocation given ... deceased must have been
sudden.
(4) The offender by reason of such grave and sudden
provocation must have been deprived of his power of
self
Verma's alternative submission was that there was grave and sudden
provocation which led to A-1 assaulting the deceased and therefore
Exception ... deceased was a stranger; (viii) whether
there was any grave and sudden provocation, and if so, the cause for
such provocation; (ix) whether
Section 300 IPC would not be attracted. No
grave and sudden provocation could be said to exist as there was sufficient
cooling time
Jaspal Singh Gosain vs Cbi on 6 February, 2018
Equivalent citations: AIRONLINE 2018 DEL 2424
Section 300 IPC would not be attracted. No
grave and sudden provocation could be said to exist as there was sufficient
cooling time
Section 300 IPC would not be attracted. No
grave and sudden provocation could be said to exist as there was sufficient
cooling time
Section 300 IPC would not be attracted. No
grave and sudden provocation could be said to exist as there was sufficient
cooling time
Section 300 IPC would not be attracted. No
grave and sudden provocation could be said to exist as there was sufficient
cooling time
Section 300 IPC would not be attracted. No
grave and sudden provocation could be said to exist as there was sufficient
cooling time