CrPC 215 — Effect of errors

Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973

Statutory text

No error in stating either the offence or the particulars required to be stated
in the charge, and no omission to state the offence or those particulars, shall be regarded at any  stage of
the  case  as  material,  unless  the  accused  was  in  fact  misled  by  such  error  or  omission,  and  it  has occasioned a failure of justice.
Illustrations
(a) A  is  charged  under  section  242  of  the  Indian  Penal  Code  (45  of  1860),  with “having  been  in  possession  of
counterfeit  coin,  having  known  at  the  time  when  he  became  possessed  thereof  that such  coin  was  counterfeit,” the  word
“fraudulently” being omitted in the charge. Unless it appears that A was in fact misled by this omission, the error shall not be regarded as material.
(b) A  is  charged  with  cheating  B,  and  the  manner  in  which  he  cheated  B  is  not  set  out  in  the  charge  or  is  set  out incorrectly. A defends himself, calls witnesses and gives his own account of the transaction. The Court may infer from this that the omission to set out the manner of the cheating is not material.
(c) A is charged with cheating B, and the manner in which he cheated B is not set out in the charge. There were many

transactions  between  A  and  B,  and  A  had  no  means  of  knowing  to  which  of  them  the  charge  referred,  and  offered  no defence.  The  Court  may  infer  from  such  facts  that  the  omission  to  set  out  the  manner  of  the  cheating  was,  in  the  case,  a material error.
(d) A is charged with the murder of Khoda Baksh on the 21st January, 1882. In fact, the murdered person's name was Haidar Baksh, and the date of the murder was the 20th January, 1882. A was never charged with any  murder but one, and had  heard the  inquiry  before  the  Magistrate,  which  referred  exclusively  to  the  case  of  Haidar  Baksh.  The  Court  may  infer from these facts that A was not misled, and that the error in the charge was immaterial.
(e) A was charged with murdering Haidar Baksh on the 20th January, 1882, and Khoda Baksh (who tried to arrest him for that murder) on the 21st January, 1882. When charged for the murder of Haidar Baksh, he was  tried for the murder of Khoda Baksh. The witnesses present in his defence were witnesses in the case of Haidar Baksh. The Court may infer from this that A was misled, and that the error was material.

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