IPC §241BNS §179

Delivery of coin as genuine, which, when first possessed, the deliverer did not know to be counterfeit

ModifiedConfidence: mediumStatus: cross checkedconsolidation context(observed)consolidation context(precautionary)
Last updated 2026-05-01 · Input coverage: full

Compiled by AI-assisted tools. Text verified against official sources where indicated. Field-level labels (AI-indicated / AI-inferred / Text-verified) apply per edge metadata. Verify current bail/cognizable status against official sources before relying on procedural claims. Last updated: 2026-04-28.

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Comparison

Old law
IPC §241
Delivery of coin as genuine, which, when first possessed, the deliverer did not know to be counterfeit

241. Delivery of coin as genuine, which, when first possessed, the deliverer did not know to be counterfeit.—Whoever delivers to any other person as genuine, or attempts to induce any other person to receive as genuine, any counterfeit coin which he knows to be counterfeit, but which he did not know to be counterfeit at the time when he took it into his possession, shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to two years, or with fine to an amount which may extend to ten times the value of the coin counterfeited, or with both. 1. Subs. by the A. O. 1950, for “the Queen’s coin”. 2. The words “British India” have successively been subs. by the A. O. 1948, the A. O. 1950 and Act 3 of 1951, s. 3 and the Sch., to read as above. 3. Subs. by Act 26 of 1955, s. 117 and the Sch., for “transportation for life” (w.e.f. 1-1-1956). Illustration A, a coiner, delivers counterfeit Company's rupees to his accomplice B, for the purpose of uttering them. B sells the rupees to C, another utterer, who buys them knowing them to be counterfeit. C pays away the rupees for goods to D, who receives them, not knowing them to be counterfeit. D, after receiving the rupees, discovers that they are counterfeit and pays them away as if they were good. Here D is punishable only under this section, but B and C are punishable under section 239 or 240, as the case may be.

New law
BNS §179
Using as genuine, forged or counterfeit coin, Government stamp, currency-notes or bank-notes

Whoever imports or exports, or sells or delivers to, or buys or receives from, any other person, or otherwise traffics or uses as genuine, any forged or counterfeit coin, stamp, currency-note or bank-note, knowing or having reason to believe the same to be forged or counterfeit, 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.

What changedAI-inferred

IPC 241 (delivery of counterfeit coin as genuine when, at first possession, the deliverer did not know it was counterfeit; imprisonment up to 2 years or fine up to 10 times the coin's nominal value) is absorbed into BNS 179. The IPC distinction between 'knew when first possessed' (IPC 239) and 'didn't know when first possessed' (IPC 241) collapses; BNS 179 applies its 'knowing or having reason to believe' standard uniformly to all delivery-of-counterfeit acts.

Old position

IPC 241 is concerned with Delivery of coin as genuine, which, when first possessed, the deliverer did not know to be counterfeit. Delivery of coin as genuine, which, when first possessed, the deliverer did not know to be counterfeit

New position

BNS 179 preserves the framework with drafting modernisations as required by the new code. Topic: Using as genuine, forged or counterfeit coin, Government stamp, currency-notes or bank-notes. Whoever imports or exports, or sells or delivers to, or buys or receives from, any other person, or otherwise traffics or uses as genuine, any forged or counterfeit coin, stamp, currency-note or bank-note, knowing or having reason to

IPC 241 (delivery of counterfeit coin as genuine when, at first possession, the deliverer did not know it was counterfeit; imprisonment up to 2 years or fine up to 10 times the coin's nominal value) is absorbed into BNS 179. The IPC distinction between 'knew when first possessed' (IPC 239) and...

Editorial deltaAI-indicated (source-linked)

IPC 241 (delivery of counterfeit coin as genuine when, at first possession, the deliverer did not know it was counterfeit; imprisonment up to 2 years or fine up to 10 times the coin's nominal value) is absorbed into BNS 179. The IPC distinction between 'knew when first possessed' (IPC 239) and 'didn't know when first possessed' (IPC 241) collapses; BNS 179 applies its 'knowing or having reason to believe' standard uniformly to all delivery-of-counterfeit acts.

Transitional note (repeal & savings)

For matters initiated before 1 July 2024, IPC 241 continues to apply. For matters from that date forward, BNS 179 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

BNS 179 (Using as genuine, forged or counterfeit coin, Government stamp, currency-notes or bank-notes). The relationship is classified as substantively_same — see the change-note above for the textual delta.

Sources

Cite this page

Newlaws.in, IPC §241 → BNS §179 Mapping Page, last updated 2026-05-01, accessed 2026-06-12, https://newlaws.in/ipc/241.

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

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