सं Samvidhan

Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023

Section 303

Theft

Why this exists

Theft is one of the oldest and most fundamental property crimes, protecting people's right to possess and control their belongings without others dishonestly taking them away. This section, largely carried over from the historic IPC Section 378 definition, carefully defines the boundaries of theft using detailed illustrations to distinguish it from related but different wrongs like criminal breach of trust or misappropriation, and adds a modern community-service option for minor, first-time, low-value thefts where the property or its value is restored.

How courts read it

Indian courts have long relied on the illustrations attached to this definition to distinguish theft (taking property out of someone's possession without consent) from criminal breach of trust (misusing property already entrusted to you) and from criminal misappropriation (dishonestly keeping property that was never in anyone's possession, like a lost item). The key elements courts look for are dishonest intention and the actual moving of property out of another's possession without consent.

Common misconceptions
  • Myth: You have to actually leave the shop or the owner's property with the stolen item for it to count as theft.
    Fact: Theft is legally complete the moment the property is dishonestly moved out of the owner's possession without consent, even if the thief is caught immediately afterward.
  • Myth: Taking back your own property that someone else is lawfully holding (like pawned goods) can never be theft.
    Fact: As the illustrations show, dishonestly taking back your own property from someone lawfully holding it as security can still count as theft.