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1954 DIGILAW 12 (MAD)

Untitled judgment

1954-01-06

SOMASUNDARAM

body1954
Order.- Accused 1 and 2 in C.C. No. 1822 of 1953 on the file of the Third Presidency Magistrate, Saidapet, are the petitioners herein. They were convicted of the offence of theft and sentenced to one month’s rigorous imprisonment each. The case for the prosecution is that the first petitioner with the assistance of two others (the third accused has been acquitted by the lower Court) shot a spotted deer in the Reserve forest attached to the Raj Bhavan, Guindy. On hearing the shot the forest guard, the forest watcher and other persons tried to trace where-from the shot came and they ultimately found these two accused cutting a deer at a distance of 150 yards from the reserve forest. The third accused escaped and the petitioners alone were immediately arrested and then a charge-sheet was laid against these petitioners and the other person for offences under sections 429 and 379 of the Indian Penal Code. They were acquitted under section 429, Indian Penal Code but convicted only under section 379, Indian Penal Code and sentenced as aforesaid. The defence was that the first accused bought this deer from another person and that it was that deer that he was killing and that the second accused assisted the first accused in the killing of the deer. The evidence of the prosecution has been believed by the lower Court and I see no reason to disbelieve the evidence let in this case. That evidence clearly establishes that the petitioners were involved in the shooting of this deer inside the reserve forest. The contention raised by the advocate for the petitioners, Mr. Coelho is that a deer in the reserve forest is ferae naturae and therefore it cannot be said to be in the possession of any person so as to make the removal of it theft within the meaning of the section. In “An Essay On Possession in The Common Law,” (Pollock and Wright) in Part III at page 231, Wright states as follows: “. . . . trespass or theft cannot at common law be committed of living animals ferae naturae unless they are tamed or confined. In “An Essay On Possession in The Common Law,” (Pollock and Wright) in Part III at page 231, Wright states as follows: “. . . . trespass or theft cannot at common law be committed of living animals ferae naturae unless they are tamed or confined. They may be in the park or pond of a person who has the exclusive right to take them, but they are not in his possession unless they are either so confined or so powerless by reason of immaturity that they can be taken at pleasure with certainty.” In Changal Halapota v. Basarmal1, following the decision in Bhagiram Dome v. Abar Dome2, it was held that fish in open and unenclosed water are ferae naturae and that they are not capable of possession and hence cannot form the subject of theft. The same principles will apply to animals found in reserve forests. Till they are tamed and domesticated and brought to the custody of a person, whether it be Government or any other individual, such animals cannot be said to be in the possession of the Government and if they are not in the possession of the Government, the offence of theft cannot be committed. The proper course in a case of this nature is not to proceed against the offenders for the offence of theft but to prosecute them for offences under the Forest Act which makes ample provision for such trespass and shooting of wild animals inside a forest. On the facts of this case I must agree with the contention of Mr. Coelho that the offence of theft has not been made out. The conviction and sentence are therefore set aside and the petitioners are acquitted. R.M. ----- Conviction set aside.