CrPC 300 — Person once convicted or acquitted not to be tried for same offence

Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973

Statutory text

(1) A person who has once been
tried by a Court of competent jurisdiction for an offence and convicted or acquitted of such offence shall, while such
conviction or acquittal remains in force, not be liable to be tried again for the same offence, nor on the same facts for
any  other  offence  for  which  a  different  charge  from  the  one  made  against  him  might  have  been  made  under sub-section (1) of section 221, or for which he might have been convicted under sub-section (2) thereof.
(2) A  person  acquitted  or convicted  of  any  offence  may  be  afterwards  tried,  with  the  consent  of  the  State
Government, for any distinct  offence for which a separate  charge  might have been made against him at the  former trial under sub-section (1) of section 220.
(3) A person convicted of any offence constituted by any  act causing consequences  which, together  with  such
act,  constituted  a  different  offence  from  that  of  which  he  was convicted,  may  be  afterwards  tried  for  such  last
mentioned offence, if the consequences had not happened, or were not known to the Court to have happened, at the time when he was convicted.
(4) A person acquitted convicted of any offence constituted by any acts may, notwithstanding such acquittal or
conviction,  be  subsequently  charged  with,  and  tried  for,  any  other  offence  constituted  by  the  same  acts  which  he

may have committed if the Court by which he was first tried was not competent to try the offence with which he is subsequently charged.
(5) A person discharged under section 258 shall not be tried again for the same offence except with the consent of the Court by which he was discharged or of any other Court to which the first-mentioned Court is subordinate.
(6) Nothing   in   this    section   shall   affect   the   provisions   of   section   26   of   the   General    Clauses Act, 1897 (10 of 1897) or of section 188 of this Code.
Explanation.—The dismissal of a complaint, or the discharge of the accused, is not an acquittal for the purposes of this section.
Illustrations
(a)  A  is  tried  upon  a  charge  of  theft  as  a  servant  and  aquitted.    He  cannot  afterwards,  while  the  acquittal  remains  in force, be charged with theft as a servant, or, upon the same facts, with theft simply, or with criminal breach of trust.
(b) A is tried  for causing grievous hurt and convicted.  The person injured afterwards dies.   A may be tried again  for culpable homicide.
(c)  A  is  charged  before  the  Court  of  Session  and  convicted  of  the  culpable homicide  of  B.    A  may  not  afterwards  be tried on the same facts for the murder of B.
(d) A is charged by a Magistrate of the first class with, and convicted by him of, voluntarily causing hurt to B.  A may
not  afterwards  be  tried  for  voluntarily  causing  grievous  hurt  to  B  on  the  same  facts,  unless  the  case  comes  within sub-section (3) of this section.
(e) A is charged by a Magistrate of the second class with, and convicted by him of, theft of property from the person of B. A  may subsequently be charged with, and tried for, robbery on the same facts.
(f) A, B and C are charged by a Magistrate of the first class with, and convicted by him of, robbing D.  A, B and C may afterwards be charged with, and tried for, dacoity on the same facts.

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