CrPC 221 — Where it is doubtful what offence has been committed

Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973

Statutory text

(1) If a single act or series of acts is
of such a nature that it is doubtful which of several offences the facts which can be proved will constitute,
the accused may be charged with having committed all or any of such offences, and any number of such
charges may be tried at once; or he may be charged in the alternative with having committed some one of the said offences.
(2) If  in  such  a  case  the  accused  is  charged  with  one  offence,  and  it  appears  in  evidence  that  he committed a different offence for which he might have been charged under the provisions of sub-section
(1),  he  may  be  convicted  of  the  offence  which  he  is  shown  to  have  committed,  although  he  was  not charged with it.
Illustrations
(a) A is accused of an act which may amount to theft, or receiving stolen property, or criminal breach of trust or cheating. He
may  be  charged  with  theft,  receiving  stolen  property,  criminal  breach  of  trust  and  cheating,  or  he  may  be  charged  with  having committed theft, or receiving stolen property, or criminal breach of trust or cheating.
(b) In the case mentioned, A is only charged with theft. It appears that he committed the offence of criminal breach of trust, or

that of receiving stolen goods. He may be convicted of criminal breach of trust or of receiving stolen goods (as the case may be), though he was not charged with such offence.
(c) A states on oath before the Magistrate that he saw B hit C with a club. Before the Sessions Court A states on oath that B
never hit C. A may be charged in the alternative and convicted of  intentionally giving false evidence, although it cannot be proved which of these contradictory statements was false.

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