BNSS §268

shall be discharged.

Substantively sameConfidence: mediumStatus: cross checked
Last updated 2026-05-01 · Input coverage: full

Compiled by AI-assisted tools. Verify current status against official sources. Last updated: 2026-04-28.

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Comparison

Old law
CRPC §245
When accused shall be discharged

245. When accused shall be discharged.—(1) If, upon taking all the evidence referred to in section 244, the Magistrate considers, for reasons to be recorded, that no case against the accused has been made out which, if unrebutted, would warrant his conviction, the Magistrate shall discharge him.

(2) Nothing in this section shall be deemed to prevent a Magistrate from discharging the accused at any previous stage of the case if, for reasons to be recorded by such Magistrate, he considers the charge to be groundless. STATE AMENDMENT West Bengal In section 245 of the principal Act, after sub-section (2), the following sub-section shall be inserted: — “(3) If all the evidence referred to in section 244 are not produced in support of the prosecution within four years from the date of appearance of the accused, the Magistrate shall discharge the accused unless the prosecution satisfies the Magistrate that upon the evidence already produced and for special reasons there is ground for presuming that it shall not be in the interest of justice to discharge the accused.”. [Vide West Bengal Act 24 of 1988, s. 5.]

New law
BNSS §268
shall be discharged.

268.

(1) If, upon taking all the evidence referred to in section 267, the Magistrate considers, for reasons to be recorded, that no case against the accused has been made out which, if unrebutted, would warrant his conviction, the Magistrate shall discharge him.

(2) Nothing in this section shall be deemed to prevent a Magistrate from discharging the accused at any previous stage of the case if, for reasons to be recorded by such Magistrate, he considers the charge to be groundless.

What changedAI-inferred

When accused shall be discharged.

Old position

CrPC 245 is concerned with When accused shall be discharged. When accused shall be discharged

New position

BNSS 268 preserves the framework with drafting modernisations as required by the new code. Topic: shall be discharged.. If, upon taking all the evidence referred to in section 267, the Magistrate considers, for reasons to be recorded, that no case against the accused has been made out which, if unrebutted, would warrant his conviction, the Magistrate shall

BNSS 268 (shall be discharged.) preserves the framework of CrPC 245. BNSS 268 retains the operative provisions in substantively the same form, with drafting modernisation and structural updates as required by the new code. BNSS 268 text: If, upon taking all the evidence referred to in section...

Editorial deltaAI-indicated (source-linked)

BNSS 268 (shall be discharged.) preserves the framework of CrPC 245. BNSS 268 retains the operative provisions in substantively the same form, with drafting modernisation and structural updates as required by the new code.

BNSS 268 text: If, upon taking all the evidence referred to in section 267, the Magistrate considers, for reasons to be recorded, that no case against the accused has been made out which, if unrebutted, would warrant his conviction, the Magistrate shall discharge him.(2) Nothing in this section shall be deemed to prevent a...

Transitional note (repeal & savings)

For matters initiated before 1 July 2024, CrPC 245 continues to apply. For matters from that date forward, BNSS 268 applies. The transition is governed by the repeal-and-savings clause in the new code (BNS 358 / BNSS 531 / BSA 170 as the case may be); pending proceedings under the old code carry forward unaffected.

Frequently asked

BNSS 268 (shall be discharged.). The relationship is classified as substantively_same — see the change-note above for the textual delta.

Sources

Cite this page

Newlaws.in, CRPC §245 → BNSS §268 Mapping Page, last updated 2026-05-01, accessed 2026-06-14, https://newlaws.in/bnss/268.

Compiled using AI-assisted tools · Source-linked · Last updated 2026-05-01

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