Skip to content
How to use Judgment tools
  1. Click Tools to open PDF, Print, Tag, Note, Favourite, and CiteSignal.
  2. Use Brief & Ask in the toolbar for the AI Brief and case chat.
  3. Jump to sections with the pills below the help bar.

Emperor Vs. Abdul Ghafur

Emperor vs Abdul Ghafur

Type Court Judgment Court Allahabad Decided Sep 03, 1920
~6 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/460512

For advocates & juniors · 7-day free trial

Brief this judgment before chambers

Stop skimming 50 pages - get an 18-section AI Brief on this case, ask scoped follow-ups, and find related precedents with Semantic Search. Full trial, no card required.

  • 18-section brief - facts, issues, ratio, relief
  • Ask this case - answers cite the judgment
  • Semantic search - find precedents by meaning
  • Research drawer - sections, cites, related cases

No card required · credentials emailed · Log in if you already have an account

Citation
Court
Allahabad
Judge
Decided On
Subject
Criminal

Case Summary

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

Act No. XLV of 1860 (Indian Penal Code), Sections 465, 471 - Forgery--'Dishonestly'--Forging a rcceipt for a debt which had been writtenoff by the creditor for the purpose of obtaming a certificate of solvency and indirectly in order to serure a contract--Wrongful gain or loss. - - This had been written off as bad...

Key legal issue
Criminal

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Emperor

Respondent

Abdul Ghafur

Legal References

Reported In
(1921)ILR43All225

Excerpt

act no. xlv of 1860 (indian penal code), sections 465, 471 - forgery--'dishonestly'--forging a rcceipt for a debt which had been writtenoff by the creditor for the purpose of obtaming a certificate of solvency and indirectly in order to serure a contract--wrongful gain or loss. - - this had been written off as bad debt, the official receiver having had no funds in haul to pay it. it is unnecessary for the purposes of the present case to enter into a consideration whether such wrongful gain would have of necessity entailed wrongful loss to another person, although it might be said that the person who would have suffered wrongful loss might have been a rival applicant for the contract who might have failed because of the success of the applicant's petition for the contract, i deem it unnecessary to pursue this matter further, having regard to the express wording of section 24 of the indian penal code, which runs as follows: to be such, and has been rightly convicted, a good deal has been said to me about the sentence passed on the accused and it has been brought to my notice that he is the only adult male member of the family who earns the family bread and that the forgery was such a clumsy one that it could never have deceived any one and that having regard to the circumstances of the whole case, the sentence passed is unduly severe......there was no injury to the public or any person intended, there was no dishonest intention, the accused was not entering into a contract with the district judge and there was no intention to commit fraud. a large number of cases have been cited: queen-empress v. sheo dayal (1885) i.l.r. 7 all. 459, queen-empress v. girdhari lal (1886) i.l.r. 8 all. 653. queen-empress v. haradhan alias rakhal dass ghosh (1892) i.l.r. 19 calc. 380, jan mahomed v. queen-empress (1884) i.l.r. 10 calc. 584, queen-empress v. soshi bhushan (1893) i.l.r. 15 all. 210, queen-empress v. muhammad saeed khan (1898) i.l.r. 21 all. 113, kotamraju venkatrayadu v. emperor (1905) i.l.r. 28 mad. 90, emperor v. ali hasan (1906) i.l.r. 28 all. 358. i do not think it necessary to discuss every one of these rulings in detail. the case put briefly comes to this, that the accused by means of a forged receipt wanted to obtain an order declaring him to be solvent, so as to enable him to apply for a contract to the municipality. he was, because of his insolvency, under a disability and in order to get it removed by intended to obtain an order from the court by practising deceit on the court, an order which the court would never have passed if the real facts had come to its knowledge; or, in other words, he intended to obtain a wrongful gain to himself, i.e., the profits from the contract with the municipality; vide section 23 of the indian penal code. it is unnecessary for the purposes of the present case to enter into a consideration whether such wrongful gain would have of necessity entailed wrongful loss to another person, although it might be said that the person who would have suffered wrongful loss might have been a rival applicant for the contract who might have failed because of the success of the applicant's petition for the contract, i deem it unnecessary to pursue this matter further, having regard to the express wording of section 24 of the indian penal code, which runs as follows: whoever.....

Full Judgment

Gokul Prasad, J.

1. The facts which have given rise to this revision are as follows:

2. The accused Abdul Ghafur was declared an insolvent by the District Judge of Allahabad, Ho wanted to take some contract from the Municipal Board and found that his application would not be considered until be obtained an order to the effect that he was solvent. He thereupon went to the official receiver, who told him that he could not give him a certificate of solvency until he, the accused, proved to his satisfaction that all the outstanding debts against him had been paid up. There was an amount of Rs. 73-12-0 due from accused on account of arrears of rent to the cantonment authorities. This had been written off as bad debt, the official receiver having had no funds in haul to pay it. The accused then went away and returned a few days later with a receipt showing that the aforesaid amount; had been paid up. An application was then put in by the accused, accompanied by the said receipt and other receipts, for the purpose of being declared solvent and annulment of the adjudication order. The suspicions of the District Judge were aroused about the genuineness of this receipt and he directed the prosecution of the accused under Section 476 of the Code of, Criminal Procedure. The accused has been tried and convicted under Section 465/471 of the Indian Penal Cede for fraudulently using as genuine the receipt aforesaid, knowing it to be forged. He was sentenced to one year's rigorous imprisonment. He appealed and the conviction and sentence have been upheld. He comes in revision to this Court. It is contended on his behalf that it has not been shown that the forged receipt was used dishonestly or fraudulently as defined by the Indian Penal Code. None of the findings of fact of the court below has been challenged before me. It is admitted that the receipt is a forged one and the whole argument has proceeded on the assumption that it is so. Babu Sailu Nath Mukerji, for the applicant, has addressed a very long and elaborate argument, but, put in short, it comes to this that the accused only wanted to be declared solvent, there was no injury to the public or any person intended, there was no dishonest intention, the accused was not entering into a contract with the District Judge and there was no intention to commit fraud. A large number of cases have been cited: Queen-Empress v. Sheo Dayal (1885) I.L.R. 7 All. 459, Queen-Empress v. Girdhari Lal (1886) I.L.R. 8 All. 653. Queen-Empress v. Haradhan alias Rakhal Dass Ghosh (1892) I.L.R. 19 Calc. 380, Jan Mahomed v. Queen-Empress (1884) I.L.R. 10 Calc. 584, Queen-Empress v. Soshi Bhushan (1893) I.L.R. 15 All. 210, Queen-Empress v. Muhammad Saeed Khan (1898) I.L.R. 21 All. 113, Kotamraju Venkatrayadu v. Emperor (1905) I.L.R. 28 Mad. 90, Emperor v. Ali Hasan (1906) I.L.R. 28 All. 358. I do not think it necessary to discuss every one of these rulings in detail. The case put briefly comes to this, that the accused by means of a forged receipt wanted to obtain an order declaring him to be solvent, so as to enable him to apply for a contract to the Municipality. He was, because of his insolvency, under a disability and in order to get it removed by intended to obtain an order from the Court by practising deceit on the Court, an order which the Court would never have passed if the real facts had come to its knowledge; or, in other words, he intended to obtain a wrongful gain to himself, i.e., the profits from the contract with the Municipality; vide Section 23 of the Indian Penal Code. It is unnecessary for the purposes of the present case to enter into a consideration whether such wrongful gain would have of necessity entailed wrongful loss to another person, although it might be said that the person who would have suffered wrongful loss might have been a rival applicant for the contract who might have failed because of the success of the applicant's petition for the contract, I deem it unnecessary to pursue this matter further, having regard to the express wording of Section 24 of the Indian Penal Code, which runs as follows: Whoever does anything with the intention of causing wrongful gain to one person or wrongful loss to another person, is said to do that thing dishonestly. 'Therefore the case falls under Section 464 of the Indian Penal Code. It was a forgery because the intention which the accused had was to support his claim to be declared a solvent person; vide Kotamraju Venkatrayadu v. Emperor (1905) I.L.R. 28 Mad. 90 (98). In the case of Queen-Empress v. Muhammad Saeed Khan (1898) I.L.R. 21 All. 113 referred to above, Banerji, J., says, at page 115: 'Where, therefore, there is an intention to deceive and by means of the deceit to obtain an advantage there is fraud, and if a document is fabricated with such intent, it is a forgery. This was held by this Court in Queen-Empress v. Soahi Bhushan (1893) I.L.R. 15 All. 210. A somewhat wider interpretation has been placed on the word ' fraud' by the Bombay High Court in Queen Empress v. Vithal Narayan (1886) I.L.R. 13 Bom. 515 (Foot-note), which was followed by the Calcutta High Court in Lolit Mohan Sarkar v. The Queen-Empress (1894) I.L.R. 22 Calc. 313 In the case in the Bombay High Court the learned Judges accepted the interpretation of Le Blanc, J., in Hay craft v. Creasy (6) that by fraud is meant an intention to deceive; whether it be from any expectation of advantage to the party himself or from ill-will towards the other is immaterial,'' So that in this case, looked at from any point of view the accused is guilty of the offence of using as genuine a forged document knowing it; to be such, and has been rightly convicted, A good deal has been said to me about the sentence passed on the accused and it has been brought to my notice that he is the only adult male member of the family who earns the family bread and that the forgery was such a clumsy one that it could never have deceived any one and that having regard to the circumstances of the whole case, the sentence passed is unduly severe. The idea of the accused was not to cheat the cantonment authorities who had already written off the amount of the tax but it was to get the stain removed from his character which unfitted him from taking contracts and thus earning an honest living. Under these circumstances I think the sentence should be reduced to one of six months' rigorous imprisonment and I so direct. In other respects the application is dismissed.

Continue Your Research


AI Briefs · Semantic Search · Save & annotate judgments

Start your 7-day free trial