A woman in a long relationship agrees to sex believing her partner will marry her, as he repeatedly assured. He later reveals he was already married, or never meant to marry at all. Is this a crime, and which one? Since 1 July 2024, India answers this with a dedicated provision, Section 69 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023.
In short: Section 69 BNS makes it a standalone offence for a man to have sexual intercourse with a woman by “deceitful means” or on a promise to marry he never intended to keep, where the act does not amount to rape. The maximum punishment is imprisonment up to ten years and a fine. This is a separate offence from rape under Section 64 BNS, and it did not exist as a named section before the BNS came into force.
Section 69 falls in Chapter V of the BNS (Offences Against Woman and Child). In plain terms, it punishes a man who, by deceitful means or by making a promise to marry a woman without any intention of fulfilling it, has sexual intercourse with her, where that intercourse does not amount to the offence of rape. The punishment is imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to ten years, plus a fine.
The section carries an Explanation that defines “deceitful means” to include a false promise of employment or promotion, an inducement, or marrying after suppressing identity. So the deceit covered is not limited to a marriage promise; a false job or promotion lure, or hiding that one is already married, can also fall within the provision.
The offence is cognizable (police can register an FIR and investigate without prior court permission), non-bailable, and triable by a Court of Session.
Before the BNS, there was no separate “false promise to marry” offence. Such cases were prosecuted as rape under Sections 375 and 376 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, on the argument that the woman's consent was given under a “misconception of fact” (Section 90 IPC), making the consent legally invalid. Courts had to stretch the definition of rape to cover deceit cases.
Section 69 changes that. It creates a distinct, lower-grade offence (maximum ten years) for deceit-based intercourse that does not meet the legal threshold of rape under Section 64 BNS. The aim is to address genuine deceit without automatically labelling every broken relationship as rape.
The single most important question is whether the promise to marry was false from the very beginning.
The Supreme Court, in Pramod Suryabhan Pawar v. State of Maharashtra (2019), framed the test (under the old IPC) that courts still apply: the promise must have been false and given in bad faith with no intention of being honoured at the time it was made, and it must have a direct nexus to the woman's decision to engage in the sexual act. A mere breach of a promise to marry is not enough.
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This is a two-sided question, and the law protects against misuse as much as it punishes deceit. Common defences include:
Consider a neutral illustration. Suppose, in Lucknow in 2025, Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak is alleged to have assured a colleague over two years that he would marry her and obtained her consent to a physical relationship, while he was in fact already married and had concealed it. If the complaint shows the promise was false from the start and was the reason for her consent, those facts could prima facie attract Section 69 BNS. If, instead, the records showed a genuine engagement that broke down after his family objected on caste grounds, the same facts would point away from an offence and towards a failed relationship. The outcome turns entirely on the falseness of the promise at the time it was made, not on the break-up.
This example is illustrative only and does not describe any real proceeding.
No. Rape is dealt with under Section 64 BNS. Section 69 is a separate, lower-grade offence for deceit-based intercourse that does not amount to rape, carrying a maximum of ten years.
Imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to ten years, and the accused is also liable to a fine.
No. A breach of a genuine promise to marry is not an offence. The promise must have been false from the beginning and the reason the woman consented.
As worded, the provision targets a man who deceives a woman. It does not, on its face, criminalise a woman in the same situation.
There was no separate section. Such cases were prosecuted as rape under IPC Sections 375 and 376 using the “consent under misconception of fact” route in Section 90 IPC. Section 69 BNS now provides a dedicated offence.
It is a non-bailable and cognizable offence, triable by a Court of Session. Whether bail is granted is for the court to decide on the facts.
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