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Emperor Vs. Muli

Emperor vs Muli

Type Court Judgment Court Allahabad Decided Jul 23, 1920
~2 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/459624

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Citation
Court
Allahabad
Judge
Decided On
Subject
Criminal

Case Summary

AI-generated summary - not the official court judgment text.

Act No. XLV 1860 (Indian Penal Code), Section 225B - Escave from jail of a person imprisoned of failure to furnish security to be of good behaviour. - - 1. Muli has been couvioted, on a charge under Section 224 of the Indian Penal Code, of having escaped from a jail in which he was confined under a warrant under S...

Key legal issue
Criminal

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Emperor

Respondent

Muli

Legal References

Reported In
(1921)ILR43All185

Excerpt

act no. xlv 1860 (indian penal code), section 225b - escave from jail of a person imprisoned of failure to furnish security to be of good behaviour. - - 1. muli has been couvioted, on a charge under section 224 of the indian penal code, of having escaped from a jail in which he was confined under a warrant under section 123 of the code of criminal prosedure, by reason of his having failed to find security to be of good behaviour. 67 seems to hold good to this extent that the applicant value was not being detained for any offence, and consequently the conviction against him should not have been recorded under section 224 of the indian penal code, the decision above referred to, along with one or two similar decisions of the calcutta high court, were regarded as pointing to an error of omission on the part of the legislature, and led, amongst other changes in the law, to the enactment of section 225b of the indian penal code. i do not propose to reduce it below the maximum period specified in that section, because this was an escape from a jail, and the escape of a person imprisoned for want of furnishing security to be of good behaviour is a serious matter.piggott, j.1. muli has been couvioted, on a charge under section 224 of the indian penal code, of having escaped from a jail in which he was confined under a warrant under section 123 of the code of criminal prosedure, by reason of his having failed to find security to be of good behaviour. the old ruling of this court in queen empress v. kandhaia (1884) i.l.r. 7 all. 67 seems to hold good to this extent that the applicant value was not being detained for any offence, and consequently the conviction against him should not have been recorded under section 224 of the indian penal code, the decision above referred to, along with one or two similar decisions of the calcutta high court, were regarded as pointing to an error of omission on the part of the legislature, and led, amongst other changes in the law, to the enactment of section 225b of the indian penal code. the conviction in this case should undoubtedly have been recorded under that section and the sentence cannot exceed the maximum provided by section 225b. i do not propose to reduce it below the maximum period specified in that section, because this was an escape from a jail, and the escape of a person imprisoned for want of furnishing security to be of good behaviour is a serious matter. i direct that the conviction in this case be recorded under section 225b of the indian penal code and the sentence reduced to one of rigorous imprisonment for six months.

Full Judgment

Piggott, J.

1. Muli has been couvioted, on a charge under Section 224 of the Indian Penal Code, of having escaped from a jail in which he was confined under a warrant under Section 123 of the Code of Criminal Prosedure, by reason of his having failed to find security to be of good behaviour. The old ruling of this Court in Queen Empress v. Kandhaia (1884) I.L.R. 7 All. 67 seems to hold good to this extent that the applicant Value was not being detained for any offence, and consequently the conviction against him should not have been recorded under Section 224 of the Indian Penal Code, The decision above referred to, along with one or two similar decisions of the Calcutta High Court, were regarded as pointing to an error of omission on the part of the Legislature, and led, amongst other changes in the law, to the enactment of Section 225B of the Indian Penal Code. The conviction in this case should undoubtedly have been recorded under that section and the sentence cannot exceed the maximum provided by Section 225B. I do not propose to reduce it below the maximum period specified in that section, because this was an escape from a jail, and the escape of a person imprisoned for want of furnishing security to be of good behaviour is a serious matter. I direct that the conviction in this case be recorded under Section 225B of the Indian Penal Code and the sentence reduced to one of rigorous imprisonment for six months.

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