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Sheo Charan Vs. Emperor

Sheo Charan vs Emperor

Type Court Judgment Court Allahabad Decided Mar 22, 1923
~3 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/483725

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Citation
Court
Allahabad
Judge
Decided On
Subject
Criminal

Case Summary

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

Penal Code (Act XLV of 1860), Section 412 - Retention of property obtained in dacoity--Property belonging to different owners--Separate convictions. - U.P. ZAMINDARI ABOLITION & LANDS REFORMS ACT, 1951 [Act No. 1/1951]. Section 3(4) & U.P. Land Revenue Act, (3 of 1901). Sections 14-A (3) & 14; [S.Rafat Alam, R.K.Aga...

Key legal issue
Criminal

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Sheo Charan

Respondent

Emperor

Legal References

Cases Referred
Ishan Muchi v. Queen Empress
Reported In
AIR1923All547; 73Ind.Cas.520

Excerpt

penal code (act xlv of 1860), section 412 - retention of property obtained in dacoity--property belonging to different owners--separate convictions. - u.p. zamindari abolition & lands reforms act, 1951 [act no. 1/1951]. section 3(4) & u.p. land revenue act, (3 of 1901). sections 14-a (3) & 14; [s.rafat alam, r.k.agarwal & ashok bhushan, jj] expression collector- held, it includes additional collector. powers and functions of collector can be exercised by additional collector under section 198(4) of 1950 act, provided he has been so directed by collector of the district. [1996 aihc 3628 overruled].daniels, j.1. sheo charan appeals from his conviction under section 412 of the indian penal code. the facts found against him are as follows:on the 14th april 1922 a sub-inspector of police had occasion to search his house with reference to another triminal charge. his suspicious were aroused by the condition, of a small platform behind an oven in the kitchen and he dug up the place. he unearthed a bundle in which were a number of ornaments, some broken up and some intact. it was subsequently ascertained that one of these articles on which this charge is based, was stolen in a dacoity which took place at the house of musammat dhanpatia in the village of marwatia on the 30th december 1921. there is further evidence that this dacoity in marwatia was committed by the same gang that committed another dacoity at about the same time in the village of ganwaria, and it has been satisfactorily proved that some of the ornaments found in the same bundle were taken in that dacoity. sheo charan has already been put on his trial and convicted under section 412 of the indian penal code in connection with the articles stolen at the ganwaria dacoity and was sentenced to five years' rigorous imprisonment.2. he has now been put on his trial for being in dishonest possession of this particular ornament knowing or having reason to believe that it was stolen in a dacoity. in our opinion, sheo charan cannot on the evidence adduced in this case be convicted saparately with regard to this particular ornament. there is no evidence that it was received by him on a different occasion to the ornaments which were stolen in the ganwaria dacoity. both the ornaments were found in the same bundle hidden at the same place. the case of queen-empress v. makhan 15 a. 317 : a.w.n. (1893) 101 : 7 ind. dec. (n.s.) 919 [which followed an earlier calcutta decision ishan muchi v. queen empress 5 c. 511 : 7 ind. dec. (n.s.) 925] is authority for the proposition that a person found in possession of stolen.....

Full Judgment

Daniels, J.

1. Sheo Charan appeals from his conviction under Section 412 of the Indian Penal Code. The facts found against him are as follows:

On the 14th April 1922 a Sub-Inspector of Police had occasion to search his house with reference to another triminal charge. His suspicious were aroused by the condition, of a small platform behind an oven in the kitchen and he dug up the place. He unearthed a bundle in which were a number of ornaments, some broken up and some intact. It was subsequently ascertained that one of these articles on which this charge is based, was stolen in a dacoity which took place at the house of Musammat Dhanpatia in the village of Marwatia on the 30th December 1921. There is further evidence that this dacoity in Marwatia was committed by the same gang that committed another dacoity at about the same time in the village of Ganwaria, and it has been satisfactorily proved that some of the ornaments found in the same bundle were taken in that dacoity. Sheo Charan has already been put on his trial and convicted under Section 412 of the Indian Penal Code in connection with the articles stolen at the Ganwaria dacoity and was sentenced to five years' rigorous imprisonment.

2. He has now been put on his trial for being in dishonest possession of this particular ornament knowing or having reason to believe that it was stolen in a dacoity. In our opinion, Sheo Charan cannot on the evidence adduced in this case be convicted saparately with regard to this particular ornament. There is no evidence that it was received by him on a different occasion to the ornaments which were stolen in the Ganwaria dacoity. Both the ornaments were found in the same bundle hidden at the same place. The case of Queen-Empress v. Makhan 15 A. 317 : A.W.N. (1893) 101 : 7 Ind. Dec. (N.S.) 919 [which followed an earlier Calcutta decision Ishan Muchi v. Queen Empress 5 C. 511 : 7 Ind. Dec. (N.S.) 925] is authority for the proposition that a person found in possession of stolen property identified as belonging to different owners cannot be convicted separately in respect of property identified by each owner unless there is evidence to prove that they were received by him at different times.

3. We have been asked by the learned Assistant Government Advocate to dissent from this case but we arc not prepared to do so. It has stood unchallenged for nearly thirty years and has been treated as laying down the law by which the Courts should be guided. On principle also we consider that the ruling is correct. The essence of an offence under Section 411 or 412 is the act of receiving or retaining stolen property. If a thief hands over to the accused a bundle containing a number of articles, the offence committed by the accused in receiving those articles is a single offence and not a number of offences and it makes to difference whether the articles belonged to a single owner or to different owners. If there were evidence that the accused received the articles at different times or from different persons the case would be different but the Court cannot presume this against the accused in the absence of any evidence.

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