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BNS 2024ACTIVE FRAMEWORK

Section 305

Theft in a Building, Tent or Vessel

Replaces colonial-era: IPC 380

Non-BailableCognizable: CognizableMagistrate First Class

Reform Highlights

1

Renumbered from IPC 380 to BNS 305.

2

7-year maximum preserved — more than double the standard theft maximum.

3

Non-bailable status preserved.

THE STATUTE

The Clause

Whoever commits theft in any building, tent or vessel, which building, tent or vessel is used as a human dwelling, or used for the custody of property, shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to seven years, and shall also be liable to fine.

Legal Commentary

Section 305 creates an aggravated form of theft by elevating the punishment from 3 years (standard theft, BNS 303) to 7 years when theft is committed in a place specifically used as a human dwelling or for the custody of property. The rationale is clear: stealing from someone's home violates not just their property rights but their sense of security and domestic sanctuary. The location — not the manner — is what aggravates the offence. A building, tent (camping/temporary shelter), or vessel (boat, ship) used as a dwelling or property storage all qualify. The non-bailable status reflects the more serious nature of intrusion into domestic spaces.

Case Simulations

"Stealing jewellery from inside a family home during a festival — Section 305."
"Stealing cargo from a vessel used as a warehouse — Section 305."
"A domestic worker stealing valuables from their employer's residence — Section 305."

Expert Insights

Yes — a hotel room is a temporary dwelling and qualifies as a building used as a human dwelling. Theft from a hotel room attracts Section 305.