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IPC 1860REPEALED

Section 461-492

Documents and Property Marks: Dishonestly Breaking Open Receptacle; Dishonestly Breaking Open Receptacle After Notice; Forgery; Making False Document; Punishment for Forgery; Forgery of Court Records; Forgery of Valuable Security; Forgery for Cheating; Forgery to Harm Reputation; Counterfeiting Device; Using Forged Document; Property Mark; Counterfeiting Property Mark; Using False Property Mark; Tampering with Property Mark; Currency Notes and Bank Notes

Replaced by: BNS BNS 178-211

Bailable / Non-BailableCognizable: Non-Cognizable / CognizableMagistrate / Court of Session
THE STATUTE

Original Text

Section 463: Whoever makes any false document or false electronic record or part of a document with intent to cause damage or injury, to the public or to any person, or to support any claim or title, or to cause any person to part with property, or to enter into any express or implied contract, or with intent to commit fraud or that fraud may be committed, commits 'forgery'. Section 467: Whoever forges a document which purports to be a valuable security or a will, or an authority to adopt a son, or which purports to give authority to any person to make or transfer any valuable security, or to receive the principal, interest or dividends thereon, or to receive or deliver any money, movable property, or valuable security, or any document purporting to be an acquittance or receipt acknowledging the payment of money, or an acquittance or receipt for the delivery of any movable property or valuable security, shall be punished with imprisonment for life, or with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to ten years, and shall also be liable to fine. Section 489A: Whoever counterfeits, or knowingly performs any part of the process of counterfeiting, any currency-note or bank-note, shall be punished with imprisonment for life, or with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to ten years, and shall also be liable to fine.

Simplified

Sections 461–492 create the IPC's comprehensive forgery and document fraud framework. Section 463 (forgery definition) covers false documents intended to support claims, enable property transfer, or facilitate fraud — including false electronic records (added 2000). Section 465 (basic forgery — 2 years) is the standard punishment. Aggravated forms: Section 466 (forgery of court record, authority to adopt son — 7 years), Section 467 (forgery of valuable securities, wills — life imprisonment), Section 468 (forgery for cheating — 7 years), Section 469 (forgery to harm reputation — 3 years), Section 471 (using a forged document as genuine — same punishment as forgery). Sections 477–481 address property marks and trade marks — counterfeiting a property mark or trade mark, using false property marks, and tampering with property marks. Sections 489A–489E address currency note counterfeiting — the most severe forgery provisions, carrying life imprisonment. Section 489C (having or concealing counterfeit notes — 7 years) is notable: merely possessing counterfeit currency with knowledge is a serious non-bailable offence.

Legal Evolution

Sections 461-492 address dishonest misappropriation, criminal breach of trust, receiving stolen property, and cheating — the IPC's scheme for offences against property not involving direct physical taking. These provisions have grown enormously in importance with India's commercial development and now form the backbone of prosecutions for financial fraud, Ponzi schemes, and corporate malfeasance. The basic definitions have remained unchanged since 1860 but have been applied to modern financial instruments through judicial interpretation.

Landmark Precedents

P.K. Narayanan v. State of Kerala (1995)

(1995) 1 SCC 142
RELEVANCE

The false document must be capable of actually supporting a false claim or causing harm — a document that could not deceive any reasonable person may not constitute forgery.

Practical Scenarios

"Creating a fake will purporting to transfer an ancestor's property — Section 467 (life imprisonment)."
"Printing counterfeit ₹2000 notes — Section 489A (life imprisonment)."
"Using a forged stamp certificate in a property registration — Section 466 (7 years) + Section 471 (using forged document — 7 years)."

Common Queries

Yes — Section 467 (forgery of a will — life imprisonment) is one of the most serious forgery provisions. Forging a will to inherit property attracts life imprisonment.
Section 489C (possession of counterfeit currency with knowledge — 7 years, non-bailable). Even accidental possession can be a cognizable offence if knowledge is later established.