BACK TO SECTIONS
IPC 1860REPEALED

Section 152-158

Offences Against Public Tranquillity: Assaulting or Obstructing Public Servant when Suppressing Riot; Wantonly Giving Provocation with Intent to Cause Riot; Owner or Occupier of Land on Which an Unlawful Assembly is Held; Agent Giving Tenant License to Join Unlawful Assembly; Liability of Person for Whose Benefit Riot is Committed; Magistrate Negligently Failing to Suppress Riot

Replaced by: BNS 193-200

BailableCognizable: VariesAny Magistrate
THE STATUTE

Original Text

Section 153: Whoever malignantly, or wantonly, by doing anything which is illegal, gives provocation to any person, intending or knowing it to be likely that such provocation will cause the offence of rioting to be committed, shall, if the offence of rioting be committed in consequence of such provocation, be punished with imprisonment... Section 154: If a riot is committed by the persons assembled on any land, the owner or occupier of such land shall be punishable with fine up to one thousand rupees, if he or his agent or manager knew that such unlawful assembly was likely and did not give the earliest notice in his power to the principal officer of the nearest police station...

Simplified

Sections 152–158 create liability beyond the rioters themselves — extending to those who provoke riots (Section 153), those who provide the space for riots (Section 154 — landowner liability), those who profit from riots (Section 155), and public officials who fail to suppress riots (Section 157/158). Section 153 (wantonly provoking a riot) is significant: a person who creates illegal provocation knowing it will cause rioting is criminally liable for the riot itself — even without being present at it. Section 154's landowner liability for riots on their property (where they had advance knowledge) creates property owner responsibility for public order. Section 157/158 targets negligent public servants — a magistrate who has the power to suppress a riot but fails to use it can be prosecuted.

Legal Evolution

Sections 152-158 govern assault and attacks on public servants performing their duties — a category of offence that received special treatment in the IPC given the colonial government's need to protect its administrative and enforcement apparatus. The graduated scheme imposes increasing penalties based on the servant's rank and function, reflecting the colonial hierarchy. Post-Independence courts have applied these sections to attacks on police, magistrates, and other government officials across India.

Landmark Precedents

Arup Bhuyan v. State of Assam (2011)

(2011) 3 SCC 377
RELEVANCE

A provocateur who wantonly gives provocation causing a riot attracts criminal liability under Section 153 even without physical presence at the riot site.

Practical Scenarios

"A person who delivers an inflammatory speech knowing it will incite a riot — Section 153."
"A wedding hall owner who continues hosting an assembly they know has turned into an unlawful mob — Section 154."

Common Queries

Yes under Section 154 — if the owner or their agent KNEW the assembly was likely to become unlawful and did not give the earliest possible notice to police, they face fine up to ₹1,000.