Order. The petitioner has been convicted by the Special First Class Magistrate, Shevapet, under section 75 of the Madras City Police Act, for having been guilty of indecent behaviour in a public place, that is a tea-shop and sentenced to pay a fine of Rs. 10. The only point argued is that a tea-shop cannot be said to be a public place. ‘Public place ‘is defined in section 3 of the Act as meaning a place including a road, street or way, whether a throughfare or not, and a landing place to which the public are granted access or have a right to resort or over which they have a right to pass. In Mangubhai v. Emperor1, a hotel has been held to be a place to which the public are permitted to have access. In the Crown Prosecutor v. Moonooswamy2, an arrack-shop has been held to be a public place within the meaning: of section 75. In Natarajan v. State3, a barber’s saloon has been held to be a public place, as defined in section 3 of the City Police Act. There is no doubt that a tea shop is a place to which the public can have access and they have a right to resort to a tea-shop and the keeper of the tea-shop cannot exclude any person who comes to his hotel to be served refreshments. It is, therefore, quite clear that the tea-shop in this case would be a public place and consequently it should be held that the petitioner has been rightly convicted for having behaved indecently in a public place. The Criminal Revision Case is, therefore, dismissed. V.M.K. ----- Revision dismissed.