Chapter 17
Chapter 17
Chapter 17
Additionally:
“Whoever dishonestly misappropriates or converts to his own use any movable property shall
be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to two
years, or with fine, or with both”
“Whoever, being in any manner entrusted with property, or with any dominion over property,
dishonestly misappropriates or converts to his own use that property, or dishonestly uses or
disposes of that property in violation of any direction of law prescribing the mode in which
such trust is to be discharged, or of any legal contract, express or implied, which he has
made touching the discharge of such trust, or willfully suffers any other person so to do,
commits “criminal breach of trust””
Section 96 – When the Right of Private Defense of property extends to Causing Death
…”to the voluntary causing of death or of any other harm to the wrongdoer, if the offence,
the committing of which, or the attempting to commit which, occasions the exercise of the
right, be am offence of any of the descriptions hereinafter enumerated, namely-
Firstly – Robbery;
Fourthly – Theft, Mischief, or house – trespass under such circumstances as may reasonably
cause apprehension that death or grievous hurt will be the consequence if such right or
private defense is not exercised”
“Whoever, intending to take dishonestly any movable property out of the possession of any
person without that person’s consent, moves that property in order to such taking, is said to
commit ‘theft’”
Possessor – The offence of theft can only be done against the person who is either the
possessor or the owner. Ownership allows one to transfer, use, sell and destroy while
possessor can only transfer, use, sell but could never destroy. Owner can be both the
possessor and the owner while the possessor is only the possessor. (except in circumstances
in which ownership is also transferred to the possessor)
01. Consent of the particular person (without the consent to remove the property) – proof
of dishonest intentions
02. Possessor
03. Movable property
04. With dishonest intention – unless the person believes himself to be the ‘temporary
caretaker’
05.
Temporary Caretaker – is also a possessor. The Legal Possessor remains the car owner.
Eg; The garage owner becomes the temporary caretaker of your vehicle when you put
your car in the garage.
Therefore, in an event of complaining of a theft of a single property, all these parties
(owner, possessor, temporary caretaker) could complain.
In English Law they specify a time period which would amount to theft. Unlike Sri
Lankan law, which does not require anything like that and the mere act of removing
or starting to remove the property will amount to theft.
Trying to misplace, to deprive others with the ill intention will amount to theft
Eg: Taking out the book from the library shelf and hiding the book, even if it is inside
the library itself (deprive others) as with the dishonest intention will amount to the
offence of theft.
Ripping the pages from the library book from where it belongs, will also amount to theft.
In an event of abetting for theft, (supporting to take the property out after you remove it),
under Sri Lankan law would be considered under abetting of stolen property.
Eg: if one unhinges and remove a door from the frame, the door becomes stolen
property, and the other one helping to carry it out will be the abettor for theft of the
stolen property and thus each one will be punished accordingly.
However, In English Law, the abettor will be liable for the main offence as well aka for the
act of theft.
“Whoever dishonestly misappropriates or converts to his own use any movable property
shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to two
years, or with fine, or with both”
Cases
Cases
01. Rarunapala v State (This case could be used for both Robbery and Extortion)
02. Alevis Appu v Basnayaka (1947) 49 NLR p 66
03. James v Siwa (1943) 44 NLR p 300
04. Gunawardana v Samarakoon (1920) 21 NLR p 411
05. Thilakarathna v AG (1989) 2 SLR P 54
06. Sumathipala v Inspector of Police Crimes (1969) 72 NLR p 378