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Accused ‘A’ obtained utensils representing that he was a tenant and would return after repairing but he did not return the utensils and it was found that he was not the tenant. A is guilty of
Cheating.
Criminal breach of trust.
Theft.
Mischief.
- Option 1: Cheating
- Cheating involves deceiving someone to believe something that is not true with the intention of causing that person harm or having an unfair advantage over them.
- In this case, Accused 'A' misrepresented himself as a tenant to take the utensils and did not return them, thereby causing loss to the owner.
- This is the correct option.
- Option 2: Criminal Breach of Trust
- This involves misappropriating or converting someone else's property to one's own use, which is entrusted to them.
- Here, trust was not formally established because the accused was not the rightful tenant.
- Option 3: Theft
- Theft involves taking someone's property with the intent to permanently deprive them of it.
- In this scenario, the initial taking of utensils was under false pretenses, not secretly.
- Option 4: Mischief
- Mischief involves causing wrongful loss or damage to property.
- There's no evidence of physical damage to items.
By: santosh ProfileResourcesReport error
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