BNS Section 2 Definitions Explained: Simple Guide for Law Students
Hey future lawyers and law students! If you’ve just started studying the new criminal laws in India, you’ve probably seen the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 mentioned everywhere. It replaced the old Indian Penal Code (IPC) from 1 July 2024. One section that looks boring at first but is actually super important is Section 2 – Definitions.
Think of Section 2 as the dictionary of the entire BNS. Every word you read later in the chapters on murder, theft, rape, cheating, or cyber-related offences gets its meaning from here. If you misunderstand even one definition, your whole answer in exams or interpretation of a case can go wrong. That’s why we’re breaking it down here in plain, easy language – no heavy jargon, just clear explanations with real-life style examples.
Why Do Definitions Even Matter?
In criminal law, words are everything. A small difference in meaning can decide whether someone goes to jail or walks free. The old IPC had definitions scattered across many sections (mainly Sections 6 to 52). The new BNS brought almost everything into one clean Section 2. This makes life easier for students, police, lawyers, and judges.
Some definitions are exactly the same as before. Others got small but meaningful updates to match today’s world – like including electronic records in “document” or clearly mentioning transgender persons under “gender”. There’s also a single, clear definition of “child” (below 18 years) instead of the confusion that existed earlier.
Let’s dive into the important ones one by one.
1. “Act” – It’s Not Just One Action
Definition: “Act” denotes as well a series of acts as a single act.
In simple words: When the law says “act”, it can mean one single thing you did or a chain of connected things.
Why it matters: Many offences are committed through a series of steps. For example, in cheating, the person may first create fake documents, then meet the victim, take money, and run away. All these together count as one “act” for the purpose of the offence.
It also covers omission (not doing something you were legally bound to do). So if a parent starves a child or a doctor refuses to treat a patient in emergency, that “not doing” can also be an offence.
Student tip: Whenever you read any section that begins with “Whoever does any act…”, remember it can include multiple steps.
2. “Animal” – Broader Than You Think
Definition: Any living creature other than a human being.
This is straightforward but important. It covers dogs, cats, cows, birds, snakes – everything. Offences like mischief by killing or maiming animals (now covered under relevant BNS sections) use this definition. Animal cruelty cases often rely on this.
3. “Child” – One Clear Age Limit (Big Change!)
Definition: Any person below the age of eighteen years.
This is one of the new and very useful additions in BNS. Earlier, different laws used “minor”, “child under 16”, “child under 18” etc., which created confusion especially in sexual offence cases.
Now it’s uniform: anyone below 18 is a “child”. This directly helps in cases of rape, gang rape, kidnapping, and child marriage-related offences. The protection for children is clearer and stronger.
Example: If a 17-year-old is a victim in a sexual offence, the stricter punishments and procedures meant for children will apply without any doubt.
4. “Counterfeit” – Not Just Exact Copy
Definition: A person is said to “counterfeit” who causes one thing to resemble another thing, intending by means of that resemblance to practise deception, or knowing it to be likely that deception will thereby be practised.
Explanation 1: It is not essential that the imitation should be exact. Explanation 2: If the resemblance is such that people might get deceived, the law will presume the person intended to deceive (unless proved otherwise).
Real-life example: Making fake currency notes, fake marksheets, fake stamps, or even fake WhatsApp screenshots to cheat someone. It doesn’t have to be a perfect photocopy – if it looks close enough to fool people, it counts as counterfeit.
This definition is used in offences related to fake currency, government stamps, and property marks.
5. “Document” – Now Includes Digital Records (Modern Update!)
Definition: Any matter expressed or described upon any substance by means of letters, figures or marks… and includes electronic and digital record, intended to be used, or which may be used, as evidence of that matter.
This is a key modernisation. The old IPC definition didn’t clearly mention electronic records. Now it does.
Examples:
- A signed contract on paper
- A cheque
- A power of attorney
- An email, PDF, WhatsApp chat screenshot, or digital invoice that can be used as evidence in court
Why students should care: In today’s world, most cheating, fraud, and even some sexual harassment cases involve WhatsApp messages, emails, or digital documents. This definition makes it crystal clear that these are legally valid “documents”.
6. “Dishonestly” vs “Fraudulently” – Know the Difference
Dishonestly: Doing anything with the intention of causing wrongful gain to one person or wrongful loss to another person.
Fraudulently: Doing anything with the intention to defraud but not otherwise.
These two words appear in almost every property-related offence (theft, cheating, criminal breach of trust, etc.).
Simple way to remember:
- Dishonestly = focused on gain or loss of property/money.
- Fraudulently = focused on deception itself.
Example: If A takes B’s bike without permission just for a joyride and returns it, it may not be dishonest (no intention of permanent wrongful gain). But if A sells the bike and keeps the money, it becomes dishonest.
7. “Gender” – Inclusive Definition
Definition: The pronoun “he” and its derivatives are used of any person, whether male, female or transgender.
Explanation: “Transgender” has the same meaning as in the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019.
This is another progressive and clear addition. The law now explicitly uses “he” to cover all genders. It removes any ambiguity in sections dealing with sexual offences, outraging modesty, etc.
8. “Good Faith” – Not Just Good Intention
Definition: Nothing is said to be done or believed in “good faith” which is done or believed without due care and attention.
Just saying “I did it with good intention” is not enough. You must also show that you acted carefully and reasonably.
Example: A doctor who operates without proper diagnosis or a police officer who arrests someone without verifying facts cannot claim “good faith” protection.
9. “Offence” – The Heart of Criminal Law
This is one of the longest and most important definitions.
Basically: An “offence” means anything made punishable by the BNS. But there are special rules when the act is punishable under special laws (like NDPS Act, POCSO, etc.) or local laws.
The definition carefully lists certain sections where even if something is punishable under special law, it will still be treated as an “offence” under BNS for specific purposes (like abetment, conspiracy, etc.).
Why it matters for students: When you study abetment or criminal conspiracy, you need to know whether the main act is an “offence” under BNS or only under some other law.
10. “Public Servant” – Wide Coverage
This definition lists many categories:
- Commissioned officers in Army, Navy, Air Force
- Judges and people doing adjudicatory work
- Officers of court, liquidators, receivers
- Government officers involved in investigation, record-keeping, property management, etc.
- And many more (the full list is quite long)
It also covers people who are not regular government employees but are authorised to perform public duties.
This is crucial because many offences have stricter punishment when committed by or against public servants (corruption-related, assault on public servant, etc.).
11. Other Important Definitions
- Injury: Any harm illegally caused to body, mind, reputation or property.
- Movable property: Everything except land and things permanently attached to earth.
- Wrongful gain / Wrongful loss: Gaining or losing property by unlawful means.
- Voluntarily: Causing an effect intentionally or with knowledge that it is likely to happen.
- Valuable security: A document that creates or acknowledges a legal right (like a bond, promissory note, etc.).
- Will: A testamentary document (related to inheritance after death).
- Harbour: Giving shelter, food, money, clothes, or any help to help someone evade arrest.
- Number: Singular includes plural and vice versa (unless context says otherwise).
- Month and Year: Always according to the Gregorian calendar.
How These Definitions Connect to Real Offences
Understanding Section 2 helps you understand later chapters better. For example:
- “Child” definition directly affects rape and sexual offence punishments.
- “Document” + “electronic record” helps in cheating and forgery cases involving digital evidence.
- “Dishonestly” and “fraudulently” decide whether an act becomes cheating or just a civil dispute.
- “Public servant” decides if a case falls under stricter sections.
Final Thoughts
Section 2 of the BNS may look like a long list of dry definitions, but it is the foundation of the entire new criminal law. The changes made – especially bringing definitions together, adding electronic records, clarifying “child”, and making gender inclusive – show that the new law wants to be clearer and more relevant to today’s India.
As a student, if you master these definitions early, everything else in BNS (theft, murder, sexual offences, property offences, etc.) will become much easier to understand and remember.
Don’t just memorise – understand why each word is defined the way it is. Law is not about rote learning; it’s about logical application.
Keep revising, keep making your own examples, and you’ll do really well. The new criminal laws are here to stay, and students who understand the basics like Section 2 will have a strong edge.
Happy studying! If you want explanations of specific offences or comparisons with old IPC sections, just let me know. You’ve got this!