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Fiji Legislation |
LAWS OF FIJI
CHAPTER 17
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
PART I-GENERAL PROVISIONS
CHAPTER I-PRELIMINARY
SECTION
1.
Short
title.
2.
Saving of certain laws.
CHAPTER II-INTERPRETATION
3.
General rule of
construction.
4.
Definition of certain expressions and terms.
CHAPTER III-TERRITORIAL APPLICATION OF THIS CODE
5.
Extent of jurisdiction of Fiji
Courts.
6.
Offences committed partly within and partly beyond the
jurisdiction.
CHAPTER IV-GENERAL RULES AS TO CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY
7.
Ignorance of
law.
8.
Bona
fide claim
of
right.
9.
Intention and
motive.
10.
Mistake of
fact.
11.
Presumption of
sanity.
12.
Insanity.
13.
Intoxication.
14.
Immature
age.
15.
Judicial
officers.
16.
Compulsion.
17.
Defence of person or
property.
18.
Use of force in effecting
arrest.
19.
Compulsion by
husband.
20.
Person not to be punished twice for same offence.
CHAPTER V-PARTIES TO OFFENCES
21.
Principal
offenders.
22.
Offences committed by joint offenders in prosecution of common
purpose.
23.
Counselling another to commit an offence.
CHAPTER VI-PUNISHMENTS
24.
Sentence of
death.
25.
Persons under 18 not to be sentenced to
death.
26.
Record and report to be sent to Governor
General.
27.
Procedure where woman convicted of capital offence alleges she is
pregnant.
28.
Imprisonment.
29.
Suspended sentences of
imprisonment.
30.
Power of court on conviction of further offence to deal with suspended
sentence.
31.
Court by which suspended sentence is to be dealt
with.
32.
Discovery of further
offences.
33.
Minimum period on sentence of imprisonment for
life.
34.
Corporal
punishment.
35.
Fines.
36.
Distress.
37.
Suspension of execution of sentence of imprisonment in default of
fine.
38.
Commitment in lieu of
distress.
39.
Payment after
commitment.
40.
Payment after issue of warrant but before
commitment.
41.
Security for keeping the
peace.
42.
Security for coming up for
judgment.
43.
Provisions of Criminal Procedure Code relating to recognisance to
apply.
44.
Absolute and conditional
discharge.
45.
Issue of warrants and errors in orders or
warrants.
46.
Police
supervision.
47.
General punishment for
misdemeanours.
48.
Escaped convicts to serve unexpired sentences when
recaptured.
49.
Forfeiture,
PART II-CRIMES
Division I-Offences against Public Order
CHAPTER
VII-TREASON AND OTHER OFFENCES AGAINST
THE
SOVEREIGN'S
AUTHORITY
50.
Treason by the law of
England.
51.
Instigating
invasion.
52.
Misprision of
treason.
53.
Treasonable
felonies.
54.
Limitations as to trial for treason. misprision of treason, or treasonable
felonies.
55.
Inciting to
mutiny.
56.
Aiding soldiers or policemen in acts of
mutiny.
57.
Inducing soldiers or policemen to
desert.
58.
Aiding prisoners of war to
escape.
59.
Definition of overt
acts.
60.
Definitions for purposes of sections relating to sedition,
etc.
61.
Power to prohibit importation of
publication.
62.
Offences in relation to publications, the importation of which is
prohibited.
63.
Delivery of prohibited publication to police
station.
64.
Power to examine
packages.
65.
Seditious
intention.
66.
Seditious
offences.
67.
Suspension of newspaper containing seditious
matter.
68.
Power of Court to prohibit circulation of seditious publications.
CHAPTER VIII-GENOCIDE
69.
Genocide.
CHAPTER
IX-OFFENCES AFFECTING RELATIONS WITH FOREIGN STATES
AND
EXTERNAL
TRANQUILLITY
70.
Defamation of foreign
princes.
71.
Foreign
enlistment.
72.
Piracy.
73.
Hijacking.
74.
Other offences committed in the course of
hijacking.
75.
Aircraft operated by joint or international
organisation.
76.
Aircraft
sabotage.
77.
Prosecution of
offences.
78.
Definition of State.
CHAPTER
X-UNLAWFUL ASSEMBLIES, RIOTS AND OTHER OFFENCES
AGAINST
PUBLIC
TRANQUILLITY
79.
Unlawful
society.
80.
Managing unlawful
society.
81.
Being member of unlawful
society.
82.
Prosecutions under sections 80 and
81.
83.
Power of entry, arrest, search,
etc.
84.
Declaration by
Minister.
85.
Forfeiture of insignia,
etc.
86.
Definition of unlawful assembly and
riot.
87.
Punishment of unlawful
assembly.
88.
Punishment of
riot.
89.
Making proclamation for rioters to
disperse.
90.
Dispersion of rioters after proclamation
made.
91.
Rioting after
proclamation.
92.
Preventing or obstructing the making of
proclamation.
93.
Rioters, demolishing buildings,
etc.
94.
Rioters damaging buildings, machinery,
etc.
95.
Riotously interfering with railway, vehicle or
vessel.
96.
Prohibition of the carrying of offensive weapons without lawful authority or
reasonable
excuse.
97.
Prohibition on manufacture, sale, etc. of flick knives, gravity knives and
knuckle
dusters.
98.
Going armed in
public.
99.
Forcible
entry.
100.
Forcible
detainer.
101.
Affray.
102.
Challenge to fight a
duel.
103.
Threatening
violence.
104.
Assembling for the purpose of
smuggling.
105.
Throwing or projecting objects.
Division II-Offences Against the Administration of Lawful Authority
CHAPTER XI-CORRUPTION AND THE ABUSE OF OFFICE
106.
Official
corruption.
107.
Extortion by public
officers.
108.
Public officers receiving property to show
favour.
109.
Officers charged with administration of property of a special character or with
special
duties.
110.
False claims by
officials.
111.
Abuse of
office.
112.
False certificates by public
officers.
113.
Unauthorised administration of
oaths.
114.
False assumption of
authority.
115.
Personating public
officers.
116.
Threats of injury to persons employed in public service.
CHAPTER XII-PERJURY AND FALSE STATEMENTS AND DECLARATIONS
117.
Perjury.
118.
False statements on oath made otherwise than in a judicial
proceeding.
119.
False statements, etc. with reference to
marriage.
120.
False statements, etc. as to births or
deaths.
121.
False statutory declarations and other false statements without
oath.
122.
False declarations, etc. to obtain registration, etc. for carrying on a
vocation.
123.
Aiders abettors, suborners,
etc.
124.
Corroboration.
125.
Fabricating
evidence.
126.
Inconsistent or contradictory
statements.
127.
Proof of certain proceedings on which perjury is
assigned.
128.
Forms and ceremonies of oath immaterial.
CHAPTER
XIII-OTHER OFFENCES RELATING TO
THE
ADMINISTRATION
OF JUSTICE
129.
Deceiving
witnesses.
130.
Destroying
evidence.
131.
Conspiracy to defeat justice and interference with
witnesses.
132.
Compounding
felonies.
133.
Compounding penal
actions.
134.
Advertisements for stolen
property.
135.
Corruptly taking a
reward.
136.
Offences relating to judicial proceedings.
CHAPTER
XIV-RESCUES AND ESCAPES AND
OBSTRUCTING
OFFICERS
OF COURT OF LAW
137.
Rescue.
138.
Escape.
139.
Aiding prisoners to
escape.
140.
Removal, etc. of property under lawful
seizure.
141.
Obstructing court officers.
CHAPTER
XV-MISCELLANEOUS OFFENCES
AGAINST
PUBLIC
AUTHORITY
142.
Frauds and breaches of trust by persons employed in the public
service.
143.
False information to public
servant.
144.
Disobedience of lawful orders.
Division III-Offences injurious to the public in general
CHAPTER XVI-OFFENCES RELATING TO RELIGION
145.
Insult to religion of any
class.
146.
Disturbing religious
assemblies.
147.
Trespassing on burial
places.
148.
Writing or uttering words with intent to wound religious
feelings.
CHAPTER XVII-OFFENCES AGAINST MORALITY
149.
Definition of
rape.
150.
Punishment of
rape.
151.
Attempted
rape.
152.
Abduction.
153.
Abduction of girl under eighteen years of age with intent to have
carnal-knowledge.
154.
Indecent assaults on and indecently insulting or annoying
females.
155.
Defilement of girl under thirteen years of
age.
156.
Defilement of girl between thirteen and sixteen years of age. Defilement of
idiots or
imbeciles.
157.
Procuration.
158.
Procuring defilement of women by threats, fraud or
drugs.
159.
Householder permitting defilement of girl under thirteen years of age on his
premises.
160.
Householder permitting, defilement of girl under sixteen years of age on his
premises.
161.
Detention of female in brothel or
elsewhere.
162.
Selling minors under the age of sixteen years for immoral
purposes.
163.
Buying minors under the age of sixteen years for immoral
purposes.
164.
Power of
search.
165.
Authority of court as to custody of
girls.
166.
Male person living on earnings of prostitution or persistently
soliciting.
167.
Women living on earnings of prostitution or aiding, etc. for gain prostitution
of another
woman.
168.
Loitering or soliciting for the purposes of
prostitution.
169.
Suspicious
premises.
170.
Brothels.
171.
Conspiracy to
defile,
172.
Attempts to procure
abortion.
173.
Abortion by woman with
child.
174.
Supplying drugs or instruments to procure
abortion.
175.
Unnatural
offences.
176.
Attempts to commit unnatural offences and indecent
assaults.
177.
Indecent practices between
males.
178.
Incest by
males.
179.
Incest by
females.
180.
Test of
relationship.
181.
Sanction of Director of Public
Prosecutions.
182.
Knowledge of age of female
immaterial.
183.
Definition of carnal knowledge.
CHAPTER XVIII-OFFENCES RELATING TO MARRIAGE
184.
Fraudulent pretence of
marriage.
185.
Bigamy.
186.
Marriage ceremony fraudulently gone through without lawful
marriage.
CHAPTER XIX-NUISANCES AND OTHER MISCELLANEOUS OFFENCES
187.
Common
nuisance.
188.
Traffic in obscene
publications.
189.
Offences in connexion with street and house to house
collections.
190.
Unlawful use of locomotives,
etc.
191.
Inciting dogs to
attack.
192.
Wearing, of uniform without authority
prohibited.
193.
Negligent spreading of
disease.
194.
Adulteration of
food.
195.
Sale of noxious food or
drink.
196.
Fouling
air.
197.
Criminal trespass.
Division IV-Offences against the person
CHAPTER XX-MURDER AND MANSLAUGHTER
198.
Manslaughter.
199.
Murder.
200.
Punishment of
murder.
201.
Punishment of
manslaughter.
202.
Malice
aforethought.
203.
Killing on
provocation.
204.
Provocation
defined.
205.
Infanticide.
206.
Causing death
defined.
207.
When child deemed to be a
person.
208.
Limitation as to time of death.
CHAPTER
XXI-DUTIES RELATING TO THE
PRESERVATION
OF
LIFE AND HEALTH
209.
Responsibility of person who has charge of
another.
210.
Duty of head of
family.
211.
Duty of
masters.
212.
Duty of persons doing dangerous
acts.
213.
Duty of persons in charge of dangerous things.
CHAPTER XXII-OFFENCES CONNECTED WITH MURDER AND SUICIDE
214.
Attempt to
murder.
215.
Attempt to murder by
convict.
216.
Accessory after the fact to
murder.
217.
Conspiracy to
murder.
218.
Suicide to cease to be
offence.
219.
Liability for complicity in another's
suicide.
220.
Concealing the birth of
children.
221.
Killing unborn child.
CHAPTER XXIII-OFFENCES ENDANGERING LIFE AND HEALTH
222.
Disabling in order to commit felony or
misdemeanour.
223.
Stupefying in order to commit felony or
misdemeanour.
224.
Acts intended to cause grievous harm or to prevent
arrest.
225.
Preventing escape from
wreck.
226.
Intentionally endangering safety of persons travelling by
railway.
227.
Grievous
harm.
228.
Placing explosive with
intent.
229.
Maliciously administering poison with intent to
harm.
230.
Unlawful
wounding.
231.
Unlawful
poisoning.
232.
Witchcraft and
sorcery.
233.
Failure to supply
necessaries.
234.
Surgical
operation.
235.
Excess of
force.
236.
Consent.
CHAPTER XXIV-CRIMINAL RECKLESSNESS AND NEGLIGENCE
237.
Reckless or negligent
acts.
238.
Causing death by dangerous
driving.
239.
Other negligent acts causing
harm.
240.
Negligent dealing with
poisons.
241.
Endangering safety of persons travelling by
railway.
242.
Exhibition of false light, mark or
buoy.
243.
Conveyance by unsafe or overloaded vessel.
CHAPTER XXV-ASSAULTS
244.
Common
assault.
245.
Assault causing actual bodily
harm.
246.
Assaults on magistrates and other persons protecting
wreck.
247.
Assaults punishable with five years' imprisonment.
CHAPTER XXVI-OFFENCES AGAINST LIBERTY
248.
Definition of kidnapping and
abduction.
249.
Punishment for
kidnapping.
250.
Kidnapping or abducting in order to
murder.
251.
Kidnapping or abducting with intent to confine
person.
252.
Kidnapping or abducting with intent to
harm.
253.
Wrongfully concealing kidnapped
person.
254.
Child
stealing.
255.
Abduction of girls under
sixteen.
256.
Punishment for wrongful
confinement.
257.
Unlawful compulsory labour.
Division V-Offences relating to property
CHAPTER XXVII-LARCENY, EMBEZZLEMENT AND CONVERSION
258.
Things capable of being
stolen.
259.
Definition of
theft.
260.
Stealing and embezzlement by co-partners,
etc.
261.
Husband and
wife.
262.
General punishment for
theft.
263.
Larceny of
will.
264.
Larceny of documents of title and legal
documents.
265.
Larceny of
electricity.
266.
Larceny of
ore.
267.
Larceny of postal
packets.
268.
Embezzlement by officer of post
office.
269.
Definitions relating to larceny and embezzlement of postal
packets.
270.
Larceny in
dwelling-house.
271.
Larceny from the
person.
272.
Larceny from ship, dock,
etc.
273.
Larceny by tenant or
lodger.
274.
Larceny and embezzlement by clerks or
servants.
275.
Larceny of
cattle.
276.
Larceny of
dogs.
277.
Larceny of
creatures.
278.
Larceny of
fish.
279.
Conversion.
CHAPTER XXVIII-STEALING AND DAMAGING TREES, FIXTURES, ETC.
280.
Larceny of
trees.
281.
Larceny of
fences.
282.
Larceny of fruit and
vegetables.
283.
Damaging fixtures, trees, etc., with intent to steal.
CHAPTER XXIX-OTHER OFFENCES ALLIED TO STEALING
284.
Fraudulent destruction of
documents.
285.
Fraudulent destruction of documents of
title.
286.
Fraudulent destruction of
wills.
287.
Fraudulent destruction of record, writ,
etc.
288.
Miners removing
ore.
289.
Killing animals with intent to
steal.
290.
Larceny of or dredging for
oysters.
291.
Factor, obtaining, advances on the property of their
principals.
292.
Unlawful use of vehicles, animals, etc.
CHAPTER XXX-ROBBERY AND EXTORTION
293.
Robbery.
294.
Demanding money etc. with
menaces.
295.
Demanding with menaces with intent to
steal.
296.
Extortion.
CHAPTER XXXI-BURGLARY, HOUSEBREAKING AND SIMILAR OFFENCES
297.
Definition of breaking and
entering.
298.
Sacrilege.
299.
Burglary.
300.
Housebreaking and committing
felony.
301.
Entering a magazine with
intent.
302.
Housebreaking with intent to commit
felony.
303.
Possession of housebreaking
implements.
304.
Forfeiture of housebreaking instruments.
CHAPTER
XXXII-FRAUDS BY TRUSTEES AND PERSONS IN A POSITION OF
TRUST,
AND
FALSE ACCOUNTING
305.
Conversion by
trustee.
306.
Directors destroying books,
etc.
307.
Fraudulent falsification of accounts.
CHAPTER XXXIII-FALSE PRETENCES
308.
Definition of false
pretence.
309.
False
pretences.
310.
Obtaining credit, etc., by false
pretences.
311.
Obtaining registration by false
pretence.
312.
False declaration for passport.
CHAPTER
XXXIV-RECEIVING PROPERTY STOLEN OR UNLAWFULLY
OBTAINED
AND
LIKE OFFENCES
313.
Receiving.
314.
Receiving goods stolen outside
Fiji.
315.
Evidence on charge of receiving stolen
property.
316.
Compulsory disclosures not to afford evidence.
Division VI-Malicious Injuries to Property
CHAPTER XXXV-OFFENCES CAUSING INJURY TO PROPERTY
317.
Arson.
318.
Attempts to commit
arson.
319.
Setting fire to crops,
etc.
320.
Attempting to set fire to crops.
etc.
321.
Casting away
vessels.
322.
Attempts to cast away
vessels.
323.
Injuring
animals.
324.
Other malicious injuries-general and special
punishments.
325.
Attempts to destroy property by
explosives.
326.
Spreading infectious disease among
animals.
327.
Removing boundary marks with intent to
defraud.
328.
Wilful damage, etc. to survey and boundary
marks.
329.
Penalties for damage, etc. to railway
works.
330.
Criminal Intimidation.
Division VII-Forgery, coining, counterfeiting and similar offences
CHAPTER XXXVI-INTERPRETATION
331.
Definitions for purposes of sections relating to forgery,
etc.
332.
Definition of
forgery.
333.
False
document.
334.
Intent to defraud.
CHAPTER XXXVII-PUNISHMENT FOR FORGERY
335.
Forgery of certain documents with intent to
defraud.
336.
Forgery with intent to defraud or
deceive.
337.
Making false entries in the books of the Chief
Accountant.
338.
Forging copies of certificates of
records.
339.
Forging registers of births,
etc.
340.
Making false entries in copies of register sent to
registrar.
341.
Forgery of other
documents.
342.
Forgery of seals and
dies.
343.
Uttering.
344.
Uttering cancelled
documents.
345.
Demanding property on forged
document.
346.
Possession of forged documents, seals and
dies.
347.
Possession of paper or implements for
forgery.
348.
Possession of revenue paper,
etc.
349.
Falsifying warrants for
money.
350.
Procuring execution of document by false
pretences.
351.
Letter written for another to be signed by writer.
CHAPTER
XXXVIII-OFFENCES RELATING TO
COIN,
AND
BANK AND CURRENCY NOTES
352.
Definitions.
353.
Counterfeiting.
354.
Gilding, silvering, filing and altering
coin.
355.
Imparting coin and possession of filing,
etc.
356.
Uttering and possession with intent to utter counterfeit
coin.
357.
Buying or selling counterfeit
coin.
358.
Importing and exporting counterfeit
coin.
359.
Possession of medals resembling
coin.
360.
Making, mending and having possession of coining
implements.
361.
Breaking up coin suspected to be
counterfeit.
362.
Evidence of coin being
counterfeit.
363.
Defacing and uttering defaced
coin.
364.
Melting down of
currency.
365.
Mutilating or defacing currency
notes.
366.
Imitation of
currency.
367.
Evidence of counterfeiting,
etc.
368.
Forfeiture of forged bank notes, currency notes. etc.
CHAPTER XXXIX-PERSONATION
369.
General penalty for
personation.
370.
Falsely making
acknowledgement.
371.
Personation of a person named in a
certificate.
372.
Lending, etc. certificate for
personation.
373.
Personation of person named in a testimonial of
character.
374.
Lending, etc. testimonial for personation.
CHAPTER XL-SECRET COMMISSIONS AND CORRUPT PRACTICES
375.
Interpretation for purposes of sections dealing with corrupt practices,
etc.
376.
Corrupt
practices.
377.
Secret commission on Government
contracts.
378.
Presumption as to corrupt
practices.
379.
Consent to prosecution.
Division VIII-Attempts and conspiracies to Commit Crimes, and Accessories After the Fact
CHAPTER XLI-ATTEMPTS
380.
Attempt
defined.
381.
Attempts to commit
offences.
382.
Punishment of attempts to commit certain
felonies.
383.
Soliciting or inciting others to commit offence in Fiji or
elsewhere.
384.
Neglect to prevent felony.
CHAPTER XLII-CONSPIRACIES
385.
Conspiracy to commit
felony.
386.
Conspiracy to commit
misdemeanour.
387.
Other conspiracies.
CHAPTER XLIII-ACCESSORIES AFTER THE FACT
388.
Definition of accessories after the
fact.
389.
Punishment of accessories after the fact to
felonies.
390.
Punishment of accessories after the fact to misdemeanours.
----------------------------------------
AN ACT TO ESTABLISH A CODE OF CRIMINAL LAW
Ordinances
Nos. 18 of 1944, 29 of 1945, 9 of 1946, 11 of 1948, 21 of
1950,
23
of 1951, 24 of 1952, 31 of 1954, 9 of 1955, 25 of 1957, 30 of
1958,
6
of 1959, 16 of 1960, 40 of 1960, 50 of 1961, 16 of 1966, 17 of
1966,
37
of 1966, 12 of 1969, 25 of 1969, 8 of
1970,
Orders
7th
October 1970*, 4th November
1970†,
Acts
Nos. 11 of 1971, 8 of 1972, 28 of 1972, 15 of 1973, 14 of
1975,
4
of 1976, 24 of 1976, 34 of 1976, 13 of 1977, 20 of 1977, 4 of 1979
*
See Legal Notice No. 112 of
1970
† See Legal
Notice No. 118 of 1970.
[1 May 1945]
PART
I-GENERAL
PROVISIONS
CHAPTER
I-PRELIMINARY
Short title
1.
This Act (hereinafter referred to as this Code) may be cited as the Penal
Code.
Saving of certain laws
2.
Except as hereinafter expressly provided nothing in this Code shall
affect-
(a) the liability, trial or punishment of a person for an offence against the common law or against any other law in force in Fiji other than this Code; or
(b) the liability of a person to be tried or punished for an offence under the provisions of any law in force in Fiji relating to the jurisdiction of the courts of Fiji in respect of acts done beyond the ordinary jurisdiction of such courts; or
(Amended by Order* 7th October 1970.)
(c) the power of any court to punish a person for contempt of such court; or
(d) the liability or trial of a person, or the punishment of a person under any sentence passed or to be passed, in respect of any act done or commenced before the commencement of this Code; or
(e) any power of Her Majesty, or of the Governor-General as the representative of Her Majesty, to grant any pardon or to remit or commute in whole or in part or to respite the execution of any sentence passed or to be passed; or
(Amended by Order* 7th October 1970.)
(f) any of the Statutes, Acts, Regulations or Articles for the time being in force for the government of Her Majesty's military or naval or air forces, or the military or police forces of Fiji:
Provided
that if a person does an act which is punishable under this Code and is also
punishable under another Act or Statute of any
of the kinds mentioned in this
section, he shall not be punished for that act both under that Act or Statute
and also under this
Code.
* See Legal notice
No. 112 of
1970
†
See: Legal Notice No. 118 of
1970
CHAPTER II - INTERPRETATION
General rule of construction
3.
This Code shall be interpreted in accordance with the principles of legal
interpretation obtaining in England, and expressions used
in it shall be
presumed, so far as is consistent with their context, and, except as may be
otherwise expressly provided, to be used
with the meaning attaching to them in
English criminal law and shall be construed in accordance
therewith.
Definition of certain expressions and terms
4.
In this Code unless the context otherwise requires-
"court" means a court of competent jurisdiction;
"dangerous harm" means any harm endangering life;
"document of title to goods" includes any bill of lading, India warrant, dock warrant, warehousekeeper's certificate, warrant or order for the delivery or transfer of any goods or valuable thing, bought or sold note, or any other document used in the ordinary course of business as proof of the possession or control of goods, or authorising or purporting to authorise, either by endorsement or by delivery, the possessor of such document to transfer or receive any goods thereby represented or therein mentioned or referred to;
"document of title to lands" includes any deed, map, roll, register, paper, or parchment, written or printed, or partly written and partly printed, being or containing evidence of the title, or any part of the title, to any real estate or to any interest in or out of any real estate and includes an instrument under the Land Transfer Act;
(Cap. 131)
"dwelling-house" includes any building or structure* or vessel or part of a building or structure* or vessel which is for the time being kept by the owner or occupier for the residence therein of himself, his family or servants or any of them, and it is immaterial that it is from time to time uninhabited; a building or structure adjacent to or occupied with a dwelling-house is deemed to be part of the dwelling-house if there is a communication between such building or structure and the dwelling-house, either immediate or by means of a covered and enclosed passage leading from the one to the other, but not otherwise;
*Inserted Act No. 15 of 1973.
"felony" means an offence which is declared by law to be a felony or, if not declared to be a misdemeanour, is punishable, without proof of previous conviction, with death, or with imprisonment for three years or more;
"grievous harm" means any harm which amounts to a maim or dangerous harm, or seriously or permanently injures health or which is likely so to injure health, or which extends to permanent disfigurement, or to any permanent or serious injury to any external or internal organ, member or sense;
"harm" means any bodily hurt, disease or disorder whether permanent or temporary;
"judicial proceeding" includes any proceeding had or taken in or before any court, tribunal, commission of inquiry, or person, in which evidence may be taken on oath;
"knowingly" used in connection with any term denoting uttering or using, implies knowledge of the character of the thing uttered or used;
"local authority" means a local authority established under any* Act;
†Amended by Order 8th October, 1970.
"mail" includes every conveyance by which postal packets are carried, whether it be a vessel, car, coach, cart, horse or any other conveyance, and also a person employed in conveying or delivering postal packets, and also any vessel employed by or under the post office for the transmission of postal packets by contract, or otherwise in respect of postal packets transmitted by the vessel;
"mail bag" includes a bag, box, parcel or any other envelope or covering in which postal packets in course of transmission by post are conveyed, whether it does or does not contain any such packet;
"maim" means the destruction or permanent disabling of any external or internal organ, member or sense;
"misdemeanour" means any offence which is not treason or a felony;
"money" includes bank notes, bank drafts, cheques and any other orders, warrants or requests for the payment of money;
"night" or "night-time" means the interval between half-past six o'clock in the evening and half-past six o'clock in the morning;
"oath" includes affirmation or declaration and "swear" includes affirm or declare;
"offence" is an act, attempt or omission punishable by law;
"officer of the post office" includes the *Permanent Secretary for Posts and Telecommunications and any person employed in any business of the post office, whether employed by the *Permanent Secretary by any person under him or on behalf of the post office;
*Amended by Order 19th November 1971.
"Person" and "owner", and other like terms, when used with reference to property, include corporations of all kinds and any other association of persons capable of owning property, and also when so used include Her Majesty;
"person employed in the public service" means any person holding any of the following offices or performing the duty hereof, whether as a deputy or otherwise, namely
(i)
any civil office including the office of †Governor-General the power of
appointing a person to which or of removing from
which is vested in Her Majesty
or in the †Governor-General in a †Minister or in any public
Commission or Board;
or
†
Amended by Order 8th October, 1970 and by Act 14 of 1975.
(ii) any office to which a person is appointed or nominated under the provisions of any Act or by election; or
(iii) any civil office, the power of appointing to which or removing from which is vested in any person or persons holding an office of any kind included in either of paragraphs (i) or (ii); or
(iv) any office of arbitrator or umpire in any proceeding or matter submitted to arbitration by order or with the sanction of any court, or in pursuance of any Act;
and the said term further includes-
(i) a justice of the peace;
(ii) a member of a commission of inquiry appointed under or in pursuance of any Act;
(iii) any person employed to execute any process of a court;
(iv) all persons belonging to the military forces of Fiji;
(v) all persons in the employment of any government department;
(vi) all persons in the employ of the Fijian Affairs Board;
(vii) a person acting as a minister of religion of whatsoever denomination, in so far as he performs functions in respect of the notification of intending marriage or in respect of the solemnisation of marriage, or in respect of the making or keeping of any register or certificate of marriage, birth, baptism, death or burial, but not in any other respect;
(viii) a person in the employ of a local authority;
"possession"-
(a) "be in possession of" or "have in possession" includes not only having in one's own personal possession, but also knowingly having anything in the actual possession or custody of any other person, or having anything in any place (whether belonging to or occupied by oneself or not) for the use or benefit of oneself or of any other person;
(b) if there are two or more persons and any one or more of them with the knowledge and consent of the rest has or have anything in his or their custody or possession, it shall be deemed and taken to be in the custody and possession of each and all of them;
"postal packet” means a letter, postcard, lettercard, newspaper, book, packet, printed paper, pattern or sample packet, small packet or parcel and every other packet or article when in course of transmission by post and shall include a telegram when conveyed by post;
(Substituted by 37 of 1966, s. 5.)
"property" includes any description of real and personal property, money, debts and legacies, and all deeds and instruments relating to or evidencing the title or right to any property, or giving a right to recover or receive any money or goods, and also includes not only such property as has been originally in the possession or under the control of any person, but also any property into or for which the same has been converted or exchanged, and anything acquired by such conversion or exchange, whether immediately or otherwise;
"public" refers not only to all persons within Fiji, but also to the persons inhabiting or using any particular place, or any number of such persons, and also to such indeterminate persons as may happen to be affected by the conduct in respect to which such expression is used;
"public way" includes any highway, market place, square, street, bridge or other way which is lawfully used by the public;
*"public place" or "public premises" means-
(a) any highway, public street, public road, public park or garden, sea beach, river, public bridge, wharf, jetty, lane, footway, square, court, alley or passage whether a thoroughfare or not; or
(b) any-
(i) land or open space, whether such land or space is closed or unenclosed; and
(ii) place or building of public resort, other than a dwelling house,
to which for the time being the public have or are permitted to have access whether on payment or otherwise;
*Replaced by Act No. 11 of 1971.
"publicly" when applied to acts done, means either-
(a) that they are so done in any public place as to be seen by any person whether such person be or be not in a public place; or
(b) that they are so done in any place not being a public place as to be likely to be seen by any person in a public place;
*"severe subnormality" means a state of arrested or incomplete development of mind which includes subnormality of intelligence and is of such a nature or degree that the patient is incapable of living an independent life or guarding himself against sources of exploitation or will be so incapable when of an age to do so;
*Inserted by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
"trustee" means a trustee on some express trust created by some deed, will, or instrument in writing, and includes the heir or personal representative of any such trustee, and any other person upon or to whom the duty of such trust shall have devolved or come, and also an executor and administrator, and an official receiver, assignee, liquidator or other like officer acting under any present or future †Act relating to companies or bankruptcy;
† Amended by Order 8th October, 1970.
"utter" includes using or dealing with and attempting to use or deal with and attempting to induce any person to use, deal with or act upon the thing in question;
"valuable security" includes any writing entitling or evidencing the title of any person to any share or interest in any public stock, annuity, fund or debt of any country or territory of the Commonwealth, or any territory which is under Her Majesty's protection or in respect of which a trusteeship agreement has been entered into by Her Majesty, or of any foreign state, or in any stock, annuity, fund or debt of any body corporate, company or society, whether within or without any country or territory of the Commonwealth, or any territory which is under Her Majesty's protection or in respect of which a trusteeship agreement has been entered into by Her Majesty, or to any deposit in any bank, and also includes any scrip, debenture, bill, note, warrant, order or other security for the payment of money, or any authority or request for the payment of money or for the delivery or transfer of goods or chattels, or any accountable receipt, release or discharge, or any receipt or other instrument evidencing the payment of money, or the delivery of any chattel personal, and any document of title to lands or goods;
(Amended by 37 of 1966, s. 5.)
"vessel" includes any ship, a boat and every other kind of vessel used in navigation either on the sea or in inland waters, and includes aircraft;
"wound" means any incision or puncture which divides or pierces any exterior membrane of the body, and any membrane is exterior for the purpose of this definition which can be touched without dividing or piercing any other membrane.
CHAPTER III-TERRITORIAL APPLICATION OF THIS CODE
Extent of jurisdiction of Fiji Courts
5.
The jurisdiction of the courts of Fiji for the purposes of this Code extends to
every place within Fiji or within *the internal waters,
archipelagic waters and
territorial seas
thereof.
*Amended by 20
of 1977 s.2.
Offences committed partly within and partly beyond the jurisdiction
6.
When an act which, if wholly done within the jurisdiction of the court, would be
an offence against this Code, is done partly within
and partly beyond the
jurisdiction, every person who within the jurisdiction does or makes any part of
such act may be tried and
punished under this Code in the same manner as if such
act had been done wholly within the jurisdiction.
CHAPTER IV-GENERAL RULES AS TO CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY
Ignorance of law
7.
Ignorance of the law does not afford any excuse for any act or omission which
would otherwise constitute an offence unless knowledge
of the law by the
offender is expressly declared to be an element of the offence.
Bona fide claim of right
8.
A person is not criminally responsible in respect of an offence relating to
property, if the act done or omitted to be done by him
with respect to the
property was done in the exercise of an honest claim of right and without
intention to defraud.
Intention and motive
9.-(1)
Subject to the express provision of this Code relating to negligent acts and
omissions, a person is not criminally responsible
for an act or omission which
occurs independently of the exercise of his will, or for an event which occurs
by
accident.
(2)
Unless the intention to cause a particular result is expressly declared to be an
element of the offence constituted, in whole
or part, by an act or omission, the
result intended to be caused by an act or omission is
immaterial.
(3)
Unless otherwise expressly declared, the motive by which a person is induced to
do or omit to do an act, or to form an intention
is immaterial so far as regards
criminal responsibility.
Mistake of fact
10.
A person who does or omits to do an act under an honest and reasonable, but
mistaken, belief in the existence of any state of things
is not criminally
responsible for the act or omission to any greater extent than if the real state
of things had been such as he
believed to
exist.
The
operation of this rule may be excluded by the express or implied provisions of
the law relating to the subject.
Presumption of sanity
11.
Every person is presumed to be of sound mind, and to have been of sound mind at
any time which comes in question, until the contrary
is proved.
Insanity
12.
A person is
not criminally responsible for an act or omission if at the time of doing the
act or making the omission he is through
any disease affecting his mind
incapable of understanding what he is doing, or knowing that he ought not to do
the act or make the
omission.
But
a person may be criminally responsible for an act or omission, although his mind
is affected by disease, if such disease does
not in fact produce upon his mind
one or other of the effects above mentioned in reference to that act or
omission.
Intoxication
13.-(1)
Save as provided in this section, intoxication shall not constitute a defence to
any criminal
charge.
(2)
Intoxication shall be a defence to any criminal charge if by reason thereof the
person charged at the time of the act or omission
complained of did not know
that such act or omission was wrong or did not know what he was doing
and-
(a) the state of intoxication was caused without his consent by the malicious or negligent act of another person; or
(b) the person charged was by reason of intoxication insane, temporarily or otherwise, at the time of such act or omission.
(3)
Where the defence under subsection (2) is established, then in a case falling
under paragraph (a) thereof the accused shall be
discharged, and in a case
falling under paragraph (b) the provisions of this Code and of the Criminal
Procedure Code relating to insanity shall
apply.
(Cap.
21)
(4)
Intoxication shall be taken into account for the purpose of determining whether
the person charged had formed any intention, specific
or otherwise, in the
absence of which he would not be guilty of the
offence.
(5)
For the purpose of this section "intoxication" shall be deemed to include a
state produced by narcotics or drugs.
Immature age
14.-(1)
A person under the age of *ten years is not criminally responsible for any act
or omission.
*Amended by
Ordinance No. 12 of
1969.
(2)
A person under the age of twelve years is not criminally responsible for an act
or omission, unless it is proved that at the time
of doing the act or making the
omission he had capacity to know that he ought not to do the act or make the
omission.
(3)
A male person under the age of twelve years is presumed to be incapable of
having carnal knowledge.
Judicial officers
15.
Except as expressly provided by this Code, a judicial officer is not criminally
responsible for anything done or omitted to be done
by him in the exercise of
his judicial functions, although the act done is in excess of his judicial
authority or although he is
bound to do the act omitted to be done.
(Amended by 9 of 1946, s. 2.)
Compulsion
16.
A person is not criminally responsible for an offence if it is committed by two
or more offenders, and if the act is done or omitted
only because during the
whole of the time in which it is being done or omitted the person is compelled
to do or omit to do the act
by threats on the part of the other offender or
offenders instantly to kill him or do him grievous bodily harm if he refuses;
but
threats of future injury do not excuse any offence.
Defence of person or property
17.
Subject to any express provisions in this Code or any other law in operation in
Fiji, criminal responsibility for the use of force
in the defence of person or
property shall be determined according to the principles of English common
law.
Use of force in effecting arrest
18.
Where any person is charged with a criminal offence arising out of the lawful
arrest, or attempted arrest, by him of a person who
forcibly resists such arrest
or attempts to evade being arrested, the court shall, in considering whether the
means used were necessary,
or the degree of force used was reasonable, for the
apprehension of such person, have regard to the gravity of the offence which
had
been or was being committed by such person and the circumstances in which such
offence had been or was being committed by such
person.
Compulsion by husband
19.
A married woman is not free from criminal responsibility of doing or omitting to
do an act merely because the act or omission takes
place in the presence of her
husband; but, on a charge against a wife for any offence other than treason or
murder, it shall be a
good defence to prove that the offence was committed in
the presence of, and under the coercion of, the husband.
Person not to be punished twice for same offence
20.
A person cannot be punished twice either under the provisions of this Code or
under the provisions of any other law for the same
act or omission, except in
the case where the act or omission is such that by means thereof he causes the
death of another person,
in which case he may be convicted of the offence of
which he is guilty by reason of causing such death, notwithstanding that he has
already been convicted of some other offence constituted by the act or
omission.
CHAPTER V-PARTIES TO OFFENCES
Principal offenders
21.-(1)
When an offence is committed, each of the following persons is deemed to have
taken part in committing the offence and to be
guilty of the offence, and may be
charged with actually committing it, that is to say-
(a) every person who actually does the act or makes the omission which constitutes the offences;
(b) every person who does or omits to do any act for the purpose of enabling or aiding another person to commit the offence;
(c) every person who aids or abets another person in committing the offence;
(d) any person who counsels or procures any other person to commit the offence.
In
the last-mentioned case he may be charged either with committing the offence or
with counselling or procuring its
commission.
(2)
A conviction of counselling or procuring the commission of an offence entails
the same consequences in all respects as a conviction
of committing the
offence.
(3)
Any person who procures another to do or omit to do any act of such a nature
that, if he had himself done the act or made the
omission, the act or omission
would have constituted an offence on his part, is guilty of an offence of the
same kind, and is liable
to the same punishment, as if he had himself done the
act or made the omission; and he may be charged with doing the act or making
the
omission.
Offences committed by joint offenders in prosecution of common purpose
22.
When two or more persons form a common intention to prosecute an unlawful
purpose in conjunction with one another, and in the prosecution
of such purpose
an offence is committed of such a nature that its commission was a probable
consequence of the prosecution of such
purpose, each of them is deemed to have
committed the offence.
Counselling another to commit an offence
23.
When a person counsels another to commit an offence, and an offence is actually
committed after such counsel by the person to whom
it is given, it is immaterial
whether the offence actually committed is the same as that counselled or a
different one, or whether
the offence is committed in the way counselled or in a
different way, provided in either case that the facts constituting the offence
actually committed are a probable consequence of carrying out the
counsel.
In
either case the person who gave the counsel is deemed to have counselled the
other person to commit the offence actually committed
by
him.
If
the facts constituting the offence actually committed are not a probable
consequence of carrying out the counsel, the person who
gave the counsel is not
deemed to be responsible.
CHAPTER VI-PUNISHMENTS
Sentence of death
*24.-(1)
When any person is sentenced to death, the form of sentence shall be to the
effect only that he is to -suffer death in the manner
authorised by
law".
(Substituted
by 6 of 1959, s.
2.)
(2)
A certificate under the hand of the Chief Registrar or other officer of the
court that sentence of death has been passed, and
naming the person condemned,
shall be sufficient authority for the detention of such
person.
*Sections 24, 25
and 27 and subsections (2) and (3) of section 26 substituted by Ordinance No. 21
of 1950.
Persons under 18 not to be sentenced to death
*25.-(1)
Sentence of death shall not be pronounced on or recorded against a person
convicted of an offence if it appears to the court
that at the time when the
offence was committed he was under the age of eighteen years, but in lieu
thereof the court shall sentence
such person to be detained during the
†Governor-General's pleasure, and if so sentenced he shall be liable to be
detained in
such place and under such conditions as the †Governor-General
may direct, and whilst so detained shall be deemed to be in legal
custody.
(Amended
by 24 of 1952, s. 2, 17 of 1966, s. 2, and 28 of 1972 s.
2.)
(2)
When a person has been sentenced to be detained during the
†Governor-General's pleasure under subsection (1) the presiding
judge
shall forward to the †Governor-General a copy of the notes of evidence
taken on the trial, with a report in writing signed
by him containing any
recommendation or observations on the case he may think fit to
make.
(3)
Any person so detained as aforesaid may at any time be discharged by the
†Governor-General on licence. Such licence may
be in such form and may
contain such conditions as the †Governor-General may direct and may at any
time be revoked or varied
by the
†Governor-General.
Where
a licence has been revoked the person to whom the licence relates shall return
to such place as the †Governor-General
may direct and if he fails to do so
may be apprehended without warrant and taken to that
place.
*Sections 24, 25
and 27 and subsections (2) and (3) of section 26 substituted by Ordinance No. 21
of 1950.
†Amended
by Order 8th October, 1970.
Record and report to be sent to Governor-General
26.-(1)
As soon as possible after action has been taken in accordance with the
provisions of subsection (6) of section 88 of the Constitution,
the Commission
on the Prerogative of Mercy shall communicate to the presiding judge or his
successor in office the terms of any decision
reached by the Governor- General
under such provisions and such judge shall cause the tenor and substance thereof
to be entered in
the records of the
Court.
*(2)
The †Governor-General shall issue a death warrant, or an order for the
sentence of death to be commuted, or a pardon, under
his hand and the public
seal of Fiji, to give effect to the said decision. If the sentence of death is
to be carried out, the warrant
shall state that the person to be executed shall
be hanged by the neck until he is dead, and the place where and the time when
the
execution is to be had, and shall give directions as to the place of burial
or cremation of the body of the person executed. If the
sentence is commuted for
any other punishment the order shall specify that punishment. If the person
sentenced is pardoned, the pardon
shall state whether it is free, or to what
conditions, if any, it is
subject:
(Amended
by 6 of 1959, s.
3.)
Provided
that the †Governor-General's warrant may direct that the execution shall
take place at such time and at such place
and that the body of the person
executed shall be buried or cremated at such place, as shall be appointed by
some officer specified
in the
warrant.
*(3)
The warrant or order, or pardon of the †Governor-General shall be
sufficient authority in law to all persons to whom the
same is directed to
execute the sentence of death or other punishment awarded, and to carry out the
directions therein given in accordance
with the terms
thereof.
*Sections 24, 25
and 27 and subsections (2) and (3) of section 26 substituted by Ordinance No. 21
of 1950.
†Amended
by Order 8th October, 1970.
Procedure where woman convicted of capital offence alleges she is pregnant
*27.-(1)
Where a woman convicted of an offence punishable with death alleges that she is
pregnant, or where the court before whom she
is convicted thinks fit so to
order, the question whether or not the woman is pregnant shall, before sentence
is passed on her, be
determined by the trial
judge.
(2)
The question whether the woman is pregnant or not shall be determined by the
judge on such evidence as may be laid before him
on the part of the woman or on
the part of the Crown, and the judge shall find that the woman is not pregnant
unless it is proved
affirmatively to his satisfaction that she is
pregnant.
(3)
Where a woman convicted of an offence punishable with death is found in
accordance with the preceding provisions of this section
to be pregnant, the
sentence to be passed on her shall be a sentence of imprisonment for life
instead of sentence of
death.
*Sections 24, 25
and 27 and subsections (2) and (3) of section 26 substituted by Ordinance No. 21
of 1950.
Imprisonment
28.-(1)
No person shall be sentenced by a court to imprisonment with hard labour; and
every enactment conferring power on a court to pass
a sentence of imprisonment
with hard labour in any case shall be construed as conferring power to pass a
sentence of imprisonment
for a term not exceeding the term for which a sentence
of imprisonment with hard labour could have been passed immediately before
the
date of coming into force of this section; and so far as any enactment required
or permits prisoners to be kept to hard labour
it shall cease to have
effect.
(Substituted
by 25 of 1957, s.
3.)
(2)
A person liable to imprisonment for life or any other period may be sentenced
for any shorter
term.
(3)
A person liable to imprisonment for an offence may be sentenced to pay a fine in
addition to or instead of
imprisonment.
(4)
Where a person after conviction for an offence is convicted of another offence,
either before sentence is passed upon him under
the first conviction or before
the expiration of that sentence, any sentence of imprisonment which is passed
upon him under the subsequent
conviction shall be executed after the expiration
of the former sentence, unless the court directs that it shall be executed
concurrently
with the former sentence or any part
thereof:
Provided
that it shall not be lawful for a court to direct that a sentence of
imprisonment in default of payment of a fine shall be
executed concurrently with
a former
sentence.
(5)
A warrant under the hand of the judge or magistrate by whom any person is
sentenced to imprisonment, ordering that the sentence
be carried out in any
prison within Fiji, shall be issued by the sentencing judge or magistrate, and
shall be full authority to the
officer in charge of such prison and to all other
persons for carrying into effect the sentence described in such warrant, not
being
a sentence of death. Subject to the provisions of this section every
sentence shall be deemed to commence from and to include the
whole of the day on
which it was pronounced except where otherwise provided in this Code or
otherwise ordered by the court.
*Suspended sentences of imprisonment
29.-(1)
A court which passes a sentence of imprisonment for a term of not more than two
years for an offence, may order that the sentence
shall not take effect unless,
during a period specified in the order, being not less than one year nor more
than three years from
the date of the order, the offender commits in Fiji
another offence punishable with imprisonment and thereafter a court having power
to do so orders under the provisions of section
30
that the original sentence shall take effect; and in this and in sections
30,
31 and
32
"operational period" in relation to a suspended sentence means the period so
specified in the
order.
(2)
A court which passes a suspended sentence on any person for an offence shall not
make a probation order in his case in respect
of another offence of which he is
convicted by or before the court or for which he is dealt with by the
court.
(3)
A court which passes a sentence of imprisonment for a term of not more than six
months in respect of one offence shall not make
an order under the provisions of
subsection (1) where-
(a) the act or any of the acts constituting that offence consisted of an assault on or threat of violence to another person or of having or possessing a firearm, an imitation firearm, an explosive or an offensive weapon or of indecent conduct with or towards a person under the age of sixteen years;
(b) that offence is one in respect of which a probation order or order for conditional discharge was originally made or the offender was subject to such order at the time of committing the offence; or
(c) on the occasion on which a sentence is passed for that offence, the court passes or proposes to pass a sentence of immediate imprisonment on the offender for another offence which the court is not required to suspend.
(4)
On passing a suspended sentence the court shall explain to the offender in
ordinary language his liability under the provisions
of section
30
if during the operational period he commits an offence punishable with
imprisonment.
(5)
Subject to any provision contained in any written law-
(a) a suspended sentence which has not taken effect under the provisions of section 30 shall be treated as a sentence of imprisonment for the purposes of any written law which provides for disqualification for or loss of office or forfeiture of office of persons sentenced to imprisonment; and
(b) where a suspended sentence has taken effect under the provisions of section 30, the offender shall be treated for the purpose of such written law as having been convicted on the ordinary date on which the period allowed for making an appeal against an order under that section expires or, if such an appeal is made, the date on which it is finally disposed of, or abandoned or fails for non-prosecution.
* Inserted by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969
*Power of court on conviction of further offence to deal with suspended sentence
30.-(1)
Where an offender is convicted of an offence punishable with imprisonment
committed during the operational period of a suspended
sentence and either he
was convicted by or before a court having power under the provisions of section
31
to deal with him in respect of the suspended sentence or who subsequently
appears or is brought before a court, then, unless the
sentence has already
taken effect, that court shall consider his case and deal with him by one of the
following methods-
(a) the court may order that the suspended sentence shall take effect with the original term unaltered;
(b) it may order that the sentence shall take effect with the substitution of a lesser term for the original term;
(c) it may by order vary the original order made under the provisions of subsection (1) of section 29 by substituting for the period specified therein a period expiring not later than three years from the date of the variation; or
(d) it may make any order with respect to the suspended sentence, and a court shall make an order under paragraph (a) unless the court is of opinion that it would be unjust to do so in view of all the circumstances which have arisen since the suspended sentence was passed, including the facts of the subsequent, offence and, where it is of that opinion, the court shall state its reasons.
(2)
Where a court orders that a suspended sentence shall take effect with or without
any variation of the original term, the court
may order that that sentence shall
take effect immediately or that the term thereof shall commence on the expiry of
another term
of imprisonment passed on the offender by that or any other
court.
(3)
For the purposes of any written law conferring rights of appeal in criminal
cases, any order made by a court under the provisions
of subsection (1) shall be
treated as a sentence passed on the offender by that court for the offence for
which the suspended sentence
was
passed.
* Inserted by
Ordinance No. 12 of 1969
*Court by which suspended sentence is to be dealt with
31.-(1)
An offender shall be dealt with in respect of a suspended sentence by the
Supreme Court or, where the sentence was passed by a
magistrate's court. by any
magistrate's court before which he appears or is
brought.
(2)
Where an offender is convicted by a magistrate's court of an offence punishable
with imprisonment and the court is satisfied that
the offence was committed
during the operational period of a suspended sentence passed by the Supreme
Court-
(a) the court may, if it thinks fit, commit him in custody or on appeal to the Supreme Court; and
(b) if it does not, shall give written notice of the conviction to the Clerk of the Court by which the suspended sentence is passed.
(3)
For the purposes of this and section 32 a suspended sentence passed on an
offender on appeal shall be treated as having been passed
by the court by which
he was originally
sentenced.
* Inserted by
Ordinance No. 12 of 1969
*Discovery of further offences
32.-(1)
If it appears to a judge or a magistrate on whom jurisdiction is conferred by
subsection (2) that an offender has been convicted
in Fiji of an offence
punishable with imprisonment committed during the operational period of a
suspended sentence and that it has
not been dealt with in respect of this
suspended sentence, the judge or magistrate may issue a summons requiring the
offender to
appear at the place and time specified therein or may issue a
warrant for his
arrest.
(2)
The following persons shall have jurisdiction for the purpose of subsection
(1):-
(a) if the suspended sentence was passed by the Supreme Court, a judge of that court;
(b) if the suspended sentence was passed by a magistrate's court, any magistrate.
* Inserted by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969
*Minimum period on sentence of imprisonment for life
33.
Whenever a sentence of imprisonment for life is imposed on any convicted person
the judge who imposes the sentence may recommend
the minimum period which he
considers the convicted person should
serve.
*Inserted
by Act No. 28 of 1972.
Corporal punishment
†34.-(1)
A sentence of corporal punishment shall be to suffer corporal punishment once
only and shall specify the number of strokes which
shall not exceed
‡twelve in any
case.
‡Inserted by
Ordinance No. 12 of
1969.
(2)
No sentence of corporal punishment shall be carried out unless it has been
confirmed by the Supreme Court, and no such sentence
shall be executed publicly
or by
instalments.
(3)
The following provisions shall govern the carrying out of a sentence of corporal
punishment-
(a) where the person sentenced to corporal punishment signs a statement that he does not intend to appeal against conviction or sentence, §his right to appeal shall be deemed to have been abandoned and shall, notwithstanding the provisions of any other written law, thereon cease, and the sentence shall be carried out forthwith after it has been confirmed by the Supreme Court under the provisions of subsection (2);
§Inserted by Act No. 15 of 1973
(b) where the person so sentenced does not sign such a statement and does not appeal against his conviction or sentence within the period prescribed by law, such sentence shall be carried out forthwith after it has been confirmed by the Supreme Court under the provisions of subsection (2);
(c) where the person so sentenced appeals against conviction or sentence and such sentence is upheld on appeal, such sentence shall be carried out within fourteen days of the determination of the appeal;
(Amended by 37 of 1966, s. 5).
(d) the period of fourteen days prescribed in paragraph (c) may be extended by the Supreme Court if it is satisfied that the sentence of corporal punishment could not be carried out within such period owing to the accused's physical state or wilful act or omission;
(e) if there is an appeal in a case in which corporal punishment has been awarded, it shall be determined with as much expedition as practicable;
(f) In no circumstances whatsoever shall a sentence of corporal punishment be carried out after the expiration of whichever of the following periods from the date of passing sentence is applicable-
(i) where the sentence was passed by the Supreme Court, six months;
(ii) where the sentence was passed by a Magistrate's Court, three months.
(Subsection substituted by 16 of 1960, s. 2 and amended by 4 of 1976, s. 3 and 24 of 1976, s. 2.)
(4)
No sentence of corporal punishment shall be passed upon any of the following
persons:-
(a) females;
(b) males sentenced to death;
(c) males whom the court considers to be more than thirty-five years of age;
(d) persons under the age of seventeen years.
(Amended by 17 of 1966, s. 3, 12 of 1969, s. 5, and 28 of 1972, s. 2)
(5)
Where a person is convicted at one trial of two or more distinct offences any
two or more of which are punishable by corporal
punishment under the provisions
of this Code or any other Act, the combined sentences of corporal punishment
awarded by the court
shall not exceed, twelve
strokes.
(Amended
by Ordinance 12 of 1969, s.
5)
(6)
In determining the age of an offender for the purposes of this section the court
may in the absence of direct evidence or medical
testimony of age adjudge such
age according to the appearance of the
offender.
(7)
A sentence of corporal punishment shall not be carried out except in the
presence of a medical officer or a duly qualified medical
practitioner, nor
before such medical officer or practitioner has after examination certified that
in his opinion the prisoner is
physically fit to undergo the sentence of
corporal punishment about to be inflicted upon
him.
(8)
The medical officer or practitioner may at any time during the carrying out of
the sentence of corporal punishment intervene and
prohibit the remainder of the
sentence from being carried out if in his opinion the prisoner is unable to bear
such sentence without
risk of grave or permanent
injury.
(9)
If any person has been sentenced to corporal punishment, and such sentence is,
wholly or partially, prevented from being carried
out, such person shall be kept
in custody, and shall as soon as possible be taken before the court which passed
the sentence of corporal
punishment and such court shall either remit such
sentence or substitute for such sentence, or the balance thereof, any sentence
to which such person might have been
liable.
(Amended
by 16 of 1960, s.
2.)
(10)
An offender sentenced to undergo corporal punishment may be detained in a prison
or some other convenient place for such time
as may be necessary for carrying
the sentence into effect, or for ascertaining whether the same shall be carried
into
effect.
(11)
A sentence of corporal punishment shall be carried out with an instrument of a
size and pattern approved by the
*Minister.
†Sections
34 to 39 substituted by Ordinance No, 21 of
1950.
* Amended by Order
8th October, 1970.
Fines
*35.-(1)
Where a fine is imposed under any law, then in the absence of express provisions
relating to such fine in such law the following
provisions shall
apply:
(a) Where no sum is expressed to which the fine may extend, the amount of the fine which may be imposed is unlimited, but shall not be excessive;
(b) Where the sum to which the fine may amount is expressed, any lesser fine may be imposed;
(c) In the case of an offence punishable with a fine or a term of imprisonment the imposition of a fine or a term of imprisonment shall be a matter for the discretion of the court;
(d) In the case of an offence punishable with imprisonment as well as a fine in which the offender is sentenced to a fine with or without imprisonment and in every case of an offence punishable with a fine only in which the offender is sentenced to a fine the court passing sentence may, in its discretion-
(i) direct by its sentence that in default of payment of the fine the offender shall suffer imprisonment for a certain term, which imprisonment shall be in addition to any other imprisonment to which he may have been sentenced or to which he may be liable under a commutation of sentence; and also
(ii) issue a warrant for the levy of the amount on the immovable and movable property of the offender by distress and sale under warrant:
Provided that if the sentence directs that in default of payment of the fine the offender shall be imprisoned, and if such offender shall be imprisoned, and if such offender has undergone the whole of such imprisonment in default, no court shall issue a distress warrant.
(2)
The term of imprisonment to which a person may be sentenced by a court in
default of payment of a fine shall be such term as in
the opinion of the court
will satisfy the justice of the case but shall not exceed the maximum fixed by
the following scale:-
Amount
|
Maximum
period
|
†Not
exceeding $2
|
7
days
|
Exceeding
$2 but not exceeding $4
|
14
days
|
Exceeding
$4 but not exceeding $20
|
6
weeks
|
Exceeding
$20 but not exceeding $40
|
2
months
|
Exceeding
$40 but not exceeding $80
|
3
months
|
Exceeding
$80 but not exceeding $150
|
4
months
|
Exceeding
$150 but not exceeding $300
|
6
months
|
Exceeding
$300
|
9
months
|
†(3)
Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (5) of section
28
but subject to the provisions of subsection (4) of that section, the
imprisonment which is imposed in default of payment of a fine
shall commence on
the day on which the person so in default was arrested by virtue of the sentence
of the court and shall terminate
whenever the fine and all expenses are either
paid or levied by process of
law.
*Sections 34 to 39
substituted by Ordinance No. 21 of
1950.
†Inserted by
Ordinance No, 12 of 1969.
Distress
*36.-(1)
When a court orders money to be paid by an accused person or by a prosecutor or
complainant for fine, penalty, compensation,
costs, expenses or otherwise, the
money may be levied on the †real and personal property by distress or sale
under warrant.
If he shows sufficient †personal property to satisfy the
order his †real property shall not be
sold.
†Inserted by
Ordinance No. 12 of
1969.
(2)
Such persons may pay or tender to the officer having the execution of the
warrant the sum therein mentioned, together with the
amount of the expenses of
the distress up to the time of payment or tender, and thereupon the officer
shall cease to execute the
same.
†(3)
A warrant under the provisions of this section may be executed anywhere in
Fiji.
†Inserted by
Ordinance No. 12 of
1969.
(4)
Any person claiming to be entitled to or to have a legal or equitable interest
in the whole or part of any property attached in
execution of a warrant issued
under this section may, at any time prior to the receipt by the court of the
proceeds of sale of such
property, give notice in writing to the court of his
objection to the attachment of such property. Such notice shall set out shortly
the nature of the claim which such person (hereinafter in this section referred
to as the objector) makes to the whole or part of
the property attached, and
shall certify the value of the property claimed by him. Such value shall be
deposed to upon affidavit
which shall be filed with the
notice.
(5)
Upon receipt of a valid notice given under subsection (4), the court shall by an
order in writing addressed to the officer having
the execution of the warrant,
direct the stay of the execution
proceedings.
(6)
Upon the issue of an order under subsection (5), the court shall, by notice in
writing, direct the objector to appear before such
court and establish his claim
upon a date to be specified in the
notice.
(7)
A notice shall be served upon the person whose property was, by the warrant
issued under subsection (1), directed to be attached,
and, unless the property
is to be applied to the payment of a fine, upon the person entitled to the
proceeds of the sale of such
property. Such notice shall specify the time and
place fixed for the appearance of the objector and shall direct the person upon
whom the notice is served to appear before the court at the same time and place
if he wishes to be heard upon the hearing of the
objection.
(8)
Upon the date fixed for the hearing of the objection, the court shall
investigate the claim and, for such purpose, may hear any
evidence which the
objector may give or adduce and any evidence given or adduced by any person
served with a notice in accordance
with the provisions of subsection
(7).
(9)
If, upon investigation of the claim, the court is satisfied that the property
was not, when attached, in the possession of the
person ordered to pay the money
or of some person in trust for him or in the occupancy of a tenant or other
person paying rent to
him, or that, being in the possession of the person
ordered to pay the money at such time it was so in his possession not on his
own
account or as his own property but on account of or in trust for some other
person or partly on his own account and partly on
account of some other person,
the court shall make an order releasing the property, wholly or to such extent
as it thinks fit from
attachment.
(10)
If, upon the date fixed for his appearance, the objector fails to appear, or if,
upon investigation of the claim in accordance
with the provisions of subsection
(8), the court is of opinion that the objector has failed to establish his
claim, the court shall
order the attachment and execution to proceed, and shall
make such order as to cost as it deems
fit.
(11)
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to deprive a person who has failed to
comply with the requirements of subsection (4)
of the right to take any other
proceedings which, apart from the provisions of this section, may lawfully be
taken by a person claiming
an interest in property attached under a
warrant.
(12)
No distress made under this section shall be deemed unlawful, nor shall any
person making the same be deemed a trespasser, on
account of any defect or want
of form in the summons, conviction, warrant of distress or other proceedings
relating
thereto.
*Sections 34 to
39 substituted by Ordinance No. 21 of 1950.
Suspension of execution of sentence of imprisonment in default of fine
*37.-(1)
When a convicted person has been sentenced to a fine only and to imprisonment in
default of payment of a fine, and whether or
not a warrant of distress has been
issued under section
36
the court may make an order directing the fine to be paid on or before a
specified date, not being more than thirty days from the
date of the order, and
in the event of the fine not being paid on or before that date may, subject to
the other provisions of this
section, forthwith issue a warrant of committal.
The court may, before making such order, require the convicted person to execute
a bond, with or without sureties, conditioned for his appearance before the
court on the specified date if the fine be not in the
meantime paid. Upon the
making of an order under this subsection the sentence of imprisonment shall be
deemed to be suspended and
the convicted person shall be released from
custody.
(2)
In any case in which an order for the payment of money has been made, on
non-recovery of which imprisonment may be awarded, and
the money is not paid
forthwith, the court may require the person ordered to make such payment to
enter into a bond as prescribed
in subsection (1), and in default of his so
doing may at once pass sentence of imprisonment as if the money had not been
recovered.
(3)
The court may in its discretion direct that any money to which this section
applied may be paid by instalments at such times and
in such amounts as the
court may deem fit; but so nevertheless that in default of payment of any such
instalment as aforesaid the
whole of the amount outstanding shall become and be
immediately due and payable, and all the provisions of this Code applicable to
a
sentence of fine and to imprisonment in default of payment thereof shall apply
to the same
accordingly.
(4)
A warrant of commitment to prison in respect of the non-payment of any sum of
money by a person to whom time has been allowed
for payment under the provisions
of subsection (1), or who has been allowed to pay by instalments under the
provisions of subsection
(3), shall not be issued unless the court shall first
make inquiry as to his means in his
presence:
Provided
that a court may issue such a warrant of commitment without any further inquiry
as to means if it shall have made such inquiry
in the presence of the convicted
person at the time when the fine was imposed or at any subsequent time and the
convicted person
shall not before the expiration of the time for payment have
notified the court of any change in his means or applied to the court
for an
extension of time to pay the
fine.
(Proviso
inserted by 25 of 1957, s.
7.)
(5)
After making inquiry in accordance with the provisions of subsection (4), the
court may, if it thinks fit, instead of issuing
a warrant of commitment to
prison, make an order extending the time allowed for payment or varying the
amount of the instalments
or the times at which the instalments were, by the
previous order of the court, directed to be paid, as the case may
be.
(6)
For the purpose of enabling inquiry to be made under the provisions of
subsection (4), the court may issue a summons to the person
ordered to pay the
money to appear before it and, if he does not appear in obedience to the
summons, may issue a warrant for his
arrest or, without issuing a summons, issue
in the first instance a warrant for his
arrest.
* Sections 34 to
39 substituted by Ordinance No. 21 of 1950.
Commitment in lieu of distress
*38.-(1)
If the officer having the execution of a warrant of distress reports that he
could find no property or not sufficient property
whereon to levy the money
mentioned in the warrant with expenses, the court may by the same or a
subsequent warrant commit the person
ordered to pay to prison for a time
specified in the warrant, unless the money and all expenses of the distress,
commitment and conveyance
to prison, to be specified in the warrant, are sooner
paid.
(2)
When it appears to the court that distress and sale of property would be ruinous
to the person ordered to pay the money or his
family, or (by his confession or
otherwise) that he has no property whereon the distress may be levied, or other
sufficient reason
appears to the court, the court may if it thinks fit, instead
of or after issuing a warrant of distress, commit him to prison for
a time
specified in the warrant, unless the money and all expenses of the commitment
and conveyance to prison, to be specified in
the warrant, are sooner
paid.
(3)
The period for which a person may be committed to prison in default of or in
lieu of distress under this section shall be-
(a) if the person has been sentenced to a term of imprisonment in default of payment of a fine, the period to which he was so sentenced;
(b) in other cases such period as the court considers reasonable subject to the maximum laid down in subsection (2) of section 30 relating to fines.
* Sections 34 to 39 substituted by Ordinance No. 21 of 1950.
Payment after commitment
*39.-(1)
Any person committed for non-payment may pay the sum mentioned in the warrant,
with the amount of expenses therein authorised
(if any), to the person in whose
custody he is, and that person shall thereupon discharge him if he is in custody
for no other
matter.
(2)
If any person committed to prison for non-payment shall pay any sum in part
satisfaction of the sum adjudged to be paid, the term
of his imprisonment shall
be reduced by a number of days bearing as nearly as possible the same proportion
to the total number of
days for which such person is committed, as the sum so
paid bears to the sum for which he is liable. The calculation shall be made
by
the officer in charge of the prison in which such person is confined, who shall
forthwith give notice in writing to such person
and to the court which passed
sentence on him, stating the sum paid and the number of days by which the term
of imprisonment originally
awarded is reduced. The reduction of sentence shall
be as so notified unless the court otherwise
orders.
* Sections 34 to
39 substituted by Ordinance No. 21 of
1950.
(Amended
by 16 of 1960 s.
3.)
*Payment after issue of warrant but before commitment
40.
Where a warrant has been issued under the provisions of this Code for
non-payment of a fine, any payment made after the issue of
such warrant but
before the person in respect of whom the warrant has been issued has been taken
into custody, being a payment insufficient
to satisfy the sum mentioned in the
warrant together with the amount of the expenses therein mentioned, shall be
deemed to be appropriated
primarily in satisfaction, or part satisfaction, of
such expenses.
*Inserted
by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
Security for keeping the peace
†41.-(1)
A person convicted of an offence not punishable with death may, instead of or in
addition to any punishment to which he is liable,
be ordered to enter into his
own recognizance, with or without sureties, in such amount as the court thinks
fit, conditioned that
he shall keep the peace and be of good behaviour for a
time to be fixed by the court, not exceeding two years, and may be ordered
to be
imprisoned until such recognizance, with sureties if so directed, is entered
into; but so that the imprisonment for not entering
into the recognizance shall
not extend for a term longer than six
months:
Provided
that no order shall be made under this section where the person convicted has
been sentenced to a term of imprisonment of
more than six
months.
(2)
In addition to the powers conferred by sub-section (1), any magistrate shall
have power in any trial before him, whether or not
the complaint be dismissed,
to bind both the complainant and defendant with or without sureties, to keep the
peace and be of good
behaviour for a period not exceeding one year and may order
any person so bound, in default of compliance with the order, to be imprisoned
for three months or until such earlier time as he so
complies:
Provided
that:
(a) a defendant who has been sentenced to more than six months' imprisonment shall not be bound over under this subsection;
(b) a complainant shall not be bound over under the powers contained in this subsection unless he shall have been given an opportunity to address the Court personally or by a barrister and solicitor as to why he should not be bound over.
(3)
In this section "complainant" includes a person who makes complaint, or on
behalf of whom complaint is made, to the
police.
†Sections
41 to 43 substituted by Ordinance No. 21 of
1950.
(Section
amended by 30 of 1958, s.
2.)
Security for coming up for judgment
†42.-(1)
In any case in which a person is convicted before any court of any offence not
punishable with death, if it appears to the court
before which he is convicted
that having regard to the circumstances, including the nature of the offence and
the character of the
accused, it is expedient to release the offender on
probation, the court may, instead of sentencing him at once to any punishment,
direct that he be released on his entering into a bond, with or without
sureties, *for such period not exceeding two years as the
court may order, to
appear and receive sentence when called upon and, in the meantime, to keep the
peace, to be of good behaviour
and to comply with such conditions as the court
may impose.
*Inserted by
Ordinance No. 12 of
1969.
(2)
If at any time the court which convicted the offender is satisfied that the
offender has failed to observe any of the conditions
of his recognizance, it may
issue a warrant for his
apprehension.
(3)
An offender when apprehended on any such warrant shall be brought forthwith
before the court by which the warrant was issued and
such court may either
remand him in custody until the case is heard or admit him to bail with a
sufficient surety conditioned for
his appearing for sentence. Such court may
after hearing the case, pass
sentence.
(4)
Where an order under subsection (1) is made by a court, the order shall for the
purpose of revesting or restoring stolen property
and for the purpose of
enabling the court to make any order under the provisions of sections
164
and
165
of the Criminal Procedure Code, have the like effect as a
conviction.
(Cap.
21)
†Sections
41 to 43 substituted by Ordinance No. 21 of 1950.
Provisions of Criminal Procedure Code relating to recognizance to apply
*43.
The provisions of sections
113,114
and
116
of the Criminal Procedure Code shall apply
mutatis
mutandis to
recognisances taken under section
41
or section
42.
(Cap.
21)
*Sections
41 to 43 substituted by Ordinance No. 21 of 1950.
†Absolute and conditional discharge
44.-(1)
Where a court by or before which a person is found guilty of an offence, not
being an offence for which a fixed sentence is
prescribed by law, is of opinion,
having regard to the circumstances including the nature of the offence and the
character of the
offender, that it is inexpedient to inflict punishment and that
a probation order under the Probation of Offenders Act is not appropriate, the
court may, with or without proceeding to conviction, make an order discharging
him absolutely, or, if the
court thinks fit, discharging him subject to the
condition that he commits no offence during such period, not exceeding twelve
months
from the date of the order, and subject to such other conditions, if any,
‡including the payment of costs or compensation,
or the restitution of
goods or the payment of money in lieu of goods, as may be specified in such
order.
(Cap.
22)
‡Inserted
by Act No. 15 of
1973.
(2)
Before making an order discharging a person subject to the conditions referred
to in subsection (1), the court shall explain to
the offender in ordinary
language that if during the period of conditional discharge he commits another
offence or fails to comply
with such conditions, if any, which may have been
imposed he will be liable to be sentenced for the original
offence.
(3)
Where an order discharging an offender is made under the provisions of this
section the court may order him to pay the whole,
or any part, of the costs of
and incidental to the prosecution, and of any compensation
adjudged.
(4)
An order made under the provisions of this section when the court does not
proceed to conviction shall, for the purpose of revesting
or restoring stolen
property and of enabling the court to make an order under the provisions of
sections 162 and 165 of the Criminal Procedure Code, have the like effect as a
conviction.
(Cap.
21)
†Inserted
by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
Issue of warrants and errors in orders or warrants
*45.-(1)
Every warrant for the execution of any sentence may be issued either by the
judge or magistrate who passed the sentence or by
his successor in
office.
(2)
The court may at any time amend any defect in substance or in form in any order
or warrant, and no omission or error as to the
time and place, and no defect in
form in any order or warrant given under this Code, shall be held to render void
or unlawful any
act done or intended to be
done.
*Sections 43 and 45
substituted by Ordinance No. 21 of 1950.
Police supervision
46.-(1)
When any person having been convicted of any offence punishable with
imprisonment for a term of three years or upwards, is again
convicted of any
offence punishable with imprisonment for a term three years or upwards, the
Court may, if it thinks fit, at the
time of passing sentence on such person,
also order that he shall be subject to police supervision as hereinafter
provided for such
period as the court may specify but not exceeding five years
from the date of the order or from the date of his next release from
prison
after the making of the order whichever shall be the later
date:
*Provided
that-
(a) where a person, whilst subject to police supervision, is sentenced to a term of imprisonment for another offence, the period of police supervision shall cease to run and remain suspended during such term of imprisonment and shall be revived upon such person being released from imprisonment;
(b) where a person has been released from prison under a compulsory supervision order made under the provisions of the Prisons Act, any order made under the provisions of this subsection shall not come into effect until the expiry of such compulsory supervision order.
(Cap. 86)
(2)
Every person ordered to be subject to police super-vision who is at large in
Fiji shall-
(a) within one week of his release from prison personally present himself and notify the place of his residence to the officer in charge of the police station nearest to such place of residence;
*(b) whenever he changes the place of his residence either within the Division or from Division to Division, personally present himself and notify such change of the place of his residence to the officer in charge of the police station nearest to the place of residence he is leaving and, if a different police station, to the officer in charge of the police station nearest to his new place of residence;
* Inserted by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
(c) personally present himself, when called upon to do so by any police officer, to the officer in charge of the police station nearest †to the place of his residence.
†Amended by Order 8th October, 1970.
(3)
Any person subject to police supervision who is at large in Fiji
who-
(a) fails to notify *the place of his residence or change of residence in accordance with the provisions of this section; or
(b) fails to present himself to a police station when called upon to do so under paragraph (c) of subsection (2); or
(c) neglects to comply with any rule made under this section,
shall,
unless he proves to the satisfaction of the Court before which he is tried that
he did his best to act in conformity with the
law, be guilty of an offence and
shall be liable to a fine not exceeding two hundred dollars or imprisonment for
*a continuing term
not exceeding six months or to both such fine and
imprisonment.
*Inserted
by Ordinance No. 12 of
1969.
(4)
Where any person while subject to police supervision is sentenced to a term of
imprisonment upon being convicted of any offence,
the court, in addition to any
such sentence of imprisonment, may order that such person shall be subject to
police supervision for
a period not exceeding five years from the date of his
release from
prison.
(Amended
by 14 of 1975
s.6)
(5)
The †Minister may make rules for carrying out the provisions of this
section, and in particular prescribing that supervision
cards shall be carried
by persons under police supervision when reporting under the provisions of this
section.
(Section
substituted by 16 of 1960, s.
4)
†Amended
by Order 8th October,
1970.
*(6)
For the purposes of this section, the expression "the place of his residence"
means any one dwelling-house or other abode in
which the person concerned
actually resides and which he nominates as such to the officer in charge of the
police station to whom
he is required to report under the provisions of this
section.
*Inserted by Ordinance
No. 12 of
1969.
*(7)
For the purposes of this section, a person shall be deemed to have changed the
place of his residence if he has been absent from
the place of his residence
continuously for a period of seven days or more unless, before the expiration of
such period, he has notified
the officer in charge of the police station nearest
to such place of his residence that his absence is only temporary; and he shall
in any event be deemed to have changed his place of residence if he has been
absent from the place of his residence continuously
for a period of twenty-eight
days or more.
* Inserted
by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
General punishment for misdemeanours
‡47.
When in this Code no punishment is specially provided for any misdemeanour, it
shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term
not exceeding two years or with
a fine or with
both.
‡Sections 47
to 49 substituted by Ordinance No. 21 of 1950.
Escaped convicts to serve unexpired sentences when recaptured
‡48.-(1)
The time during which an escaped person is at large shall not be counted as part
of the term of the sentence which he was serving
at the time of his
escape.
(2)
When sentence is passed under this Code on an escaped convict, such
sentence-
(a) if of death, fine or corporal punishment shall, subject to the provisions of this Code, take effect immediately;
(b) if of imprisonment, shall be executed in accordance with the provisions of subsection (4) of section 28.
‡Sections 47 to 49 substituted by Ordinance No. 21 of 1950.
Forfeiture
‡49.
When any person is convicted of an offence under any of the following sections,
namely, sections
106,
107, 108, 132, 133
and
373, the
court may, in addition to or in lieu of any penalty which may be imposed, order
the forfeiture to Her Majesty of any property
which has passed in connection
with the commission of the offence or, if such property cannot be forfeited or
cannot be found, of
such sum as the court shall assess as the value of the
property; and any property or sum so forfeited shall be dealt with in such
manner as the *Minister may direct. Payment of any sum so ordered to be
forfeited may be enforced in the same manner and subject
to the same incidents
as in the case of the payment of a
fine.
‡Sections 47
to 49 substituted by Ordinance No. 21 of
1950.
*Amended by Order
8th October, 1970.
PART
II-CRIMES
__________
Division
I.-Offences against Public
Order
___________
CHAPTER
VII-TREASON AND OTHER OFFENCES
AGAINST
THE
SOVEREIGN'S AUTHORITY
Treason by the law of England
50.
Any person who compasses, imagines, invents, devises or intends any act, matter
or theory, the compassing, imagining, inventing,
devising or intending whereof
is treason by the law of England for the time being in force, and expresses,
utters or declares such
compassing, imagining, inventing, devising or intending
by publishing any printing or writing or by any overt acts or does any act
which
if done in England, would be deemed to be treason according to the law of
England for the time being in force, is guilty of
the offence termed treason and
shall be
†sentenced
to death.
†Amended
by Ordinance No. 12 of
1969.
Instigating invasion
51.
Any person who instigates any foreigner to invade Fiji with an armed force is
guilty of treason, and
†shall
be sentenced to
death.
†Amended by
Ordinance No. 12 of 1969
Misprision of treason
52.
Any person who-
(a) becomes an accessory after the fact to treason; or
(b) knowing that any person intends to commit treason, does not give information thereof with all reasonable despatch to the *Governor-General, the Minister or to a magistrate or police officer or use other reasonable endeavours to prevent the commission of the offence,
*Amended by Order 8th October, 1970.
is
guilty of the felony termed misprision of treason, and is liable to imprisonment
for life.
Treasonable felonies
53.
Any person who forms an intention to effect any of the following purposes, that
is to say-
*(a) to depose Her Majesty from any style, honour and royal name to which she is entitled; or
* Substituted by 14 of 1975 s.6.
(b) to levy war against Her Majesty within any part of Her Majesty's territories, or within any country which has been declared to be under her protection or in respect of which Her Majesty has a accepted a trusteeship agreement, in order by force or constraint to compel her to change her measures or counsels, or in order to put any force or constraint upon or in order to intimidate or overawe, the legislature or legislative authority of any of Her Majesty's territories, or of any country which has been declared to be under her protection or in respect of which Her Majesty has accepted a trusteeship agreement; or (Amended by 37 of 1966, s. 5)
(c) to instigate any foreigner to make an armed invasion of any of Her Majesty's dominions or of any country which has been declared to be under her protection or in respect of which Her Majesty has accepted a trusteeship agreement,
and
manifests such intention by an overt act, or by publishing any printing or
writing, is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment
for
life.
Limitations as to trial for treason, misprision of treason, or treasonable felonies
54.
A person cannot be tried for treason, or for any of the felonies defined in
sections
51,
52 or
53,
unless the prosecution is commenced within two years after the offence is
committed.
Two witnesses necessary
Nor
can a person charged with treason, or with any of such felonies, be convicted,
except on his own plea of guilty, or on the evidence
in open court of two
witnesses at the least to one overt act of the kind of treason or felony
alleged, or the evidence of one witness
to one overt act, and one other witness
to another overt act of the same kind of treason or
felony.
This
section does not apply to cases in which the overt act of treason alleged is the
killing of Her Majesty, or a direct attempt
to endanger the life or injure the
person of Her Majesty.
Inciting to mutiny
55.
Any person who advisedly attempts to effect any of the following purposes, that
is to say-
(a) to seduce any person serving in the military forces of Fiji or any police officer from his duty and allegiance to Her Majesty; or
(b) to incite any such persons to commit an act of mutiny or any traitorous or mutinous act; or
(c) to incite any such persons to make or endeavour to make a mutinous assembly,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life.
Aiding soldiers or policemen in acts of mutiny
56.
Any person who-
(a) aids, abets, or is accessory to, any act of mutiny by; or
(b) incites to sedition or to disobedience to any lawful order given by a superior officer,
any
non-commissioned officer or private of the military forces of Fiji or any police
officer, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Inducing soldier or policemen to desert
57.
Any person who, by any means whatsoever, directly or indirectly-
(a) procures or persuades or attempts to procure or persuade to desert; or
(b) aids, abets, or is accessory to the desertion of; or
(c) having reason to believe he is a deserter, harbours or aids in concealing,
any
non-commissioned officer or private of the Fiji military forces or any police
officer is guilty of a misdemeanour and is liable
to imprisonment for six
months.
Aiding prisoners of war to escape
58.
Any person who-
(a) knowingly and advisedly aids an alien enemy of Her Majesty, being a prisoner of war in Fiji, whether such prisoner is confined in a prison or elsewhere, or is suffered to be at large on his parole, to escape from his prison or place of confinement, or, if he is at large on his parole, to escape from Fiji, is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life;
(b) negligently and unlawfully permits the escape of any such person as is mentioned in paragraph (a), is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Definition of overt acts
59.
In the case of any of the offences defined in this Chapter, when the
manifestation by an overt act of an intention to effect any
purpose is an
element of the offence, every act of conspiring with any person to effect that
purpose, and every act done in furtherance
of the purpose by any of the persons
conspiring, is deemed to be an overt act manifesting the
intention.
Definitions for purposes of sections relating to sedition, etc.
60.
For the purposes of sections
61
to
68-
"import" includes-
(a) to bring into Fiji; and
(b) to bring within the waters of Fiji whether or not the publication is brought ashore, and whether or not there is an intention to bring the same ashore;
"newspaper" means a periodical publication containing any public news or comments thereon or any discussion of political matters;
"periodical publication" includes every publication issued periodically, or in parts or numbers at intervals, whether regular or irregular;
"publication" includes all written or printed matter and everything, whether of a nature similar to written or printed matter or not, containing any visible representation, or by its form, shape, or in any manner capable of suggesting words or ideas, and every copy and reproduction of any publication;
"seditious publication" means a publication having a seditious intention;
"seditious words" means words having a seditious intention.
Power to prohibit importation of publication
61.
If the *Minister is of opinion that the importation of any publication would be
contrary to the public interest, he may in his absolute
discretion, by order
prohibit the importation of such publication, and in the case of periodical
publication may, by the same or
subsequent order, prohibit the importation of
any past or future issue
thereof.
*
Amended by Order 8th
October,
1970.
Offences in relation to publications, the importation of which is prohibited
62.-(1)
Any person who,
†except
with the permission of the *Minister, imports, publishes, sells, offers for
sale, distributes or reproduces any publication,
the importation of which has
been prohibited under section
61,
or any extract therefrom, is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable for a first
offence to imprisonment for two years or to a fine
of two hundred dollars or to
both such imprisonment and fine, and for a subsequent offence to imprisonment
for three years; and such
publication or extract therefrom shall be forfeited to
Her
Majesty.
†
Inserted by Ordinance No. 12
of
1969.
*
Amended by Order 8th
October,
1970.
(2)
Any person who without lawful excuse has in his possession any publication the
importation of which has been prohibited under
section
61,
or any extract therefrom, is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable for a first
offence to imprisonment for one year or to a fine
of one hundred dollars or to
both such imprisonment and fine, and for a subsequent offence to imprisonment
for two years; and such
publication or extract therefrom shall be forfeited to
Her Majesty.
Delivery of prohibited publication to police station
63-(1)
Any person to whom any publication the importation of which has been prohibited
under section
61,
or any extract therefrom, is sent without his knowledge or privity or in
response to a request made before the prohibition of the
importation of such
publication came into effect, or who has such a publication of extract therefrom
in his possession at the time
when the prohibition of its importation comes into
effect, shall forthwith if or as soon as the nature of its contents have become
known to him, or, in the case of a publication or extract therefrom coming into
the possession of such person before an order prohibiting
its importation has
been made, forthwith upon the coming into effect of an order prohibiting the
importation of such publication,
deliver such publication or extract therefrom
to the officer in charge of the nearest police station, and in default thereof
is guilty
of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for one year or to a
fine of one hundred dollars or to both such imprisonment and
fine; and such
publication or extract therefrom shall be forfeited to Her
Majesty.
(2)
A person who complies with the provisions of subsection (1) or is convicted of
an offence under that subsection is not liable
to be convicted for having
imported or having in his possession the same publication or extract
therefrom.
Power to examine packages
64-(1)
Any of the following officers, that is to say:-
(a) the Comptroller of Customs, the Commissioner of Police, the ‡Permanent Secretary for Posts and Telecommunications, or any officer authorised in that behalf in writing by any one of them; or
‡ Amended by Order 1 November, 1971.
(b) any other officer authorised in that behalf by the *Minister, may detain, open and examine any package or article which he suspects to contain any publication or extract therefrom which it is an offence under the provisions of section 62 to import, publish, sell, offer for sale, distribute, reproduce or possess, and during such examination may detain any person importing, distributing or posting such package or article or in whose possession such package or article is found.
* Amended by Order 8th October, 1970.
(2)
If any such publication or extract therefrom is found in such package or
article, the whole package or article may be impounded
and retained by the
officer, and the person importing, distributing or posting it or in whose
possession it is found, may forthwith
be arrested and proceeded against for the
commission of an offence under section
62
or section
63
as the case may be.
Seditious intention
65.-(1)
A "seditious intention" is an intention-
(i) to bring into hatred or contempt or to excite disaffection against the person of Her Majesty, Her heirs or successors or the Government of Fiji as by law established; or
(ii) to excite Her Majesty's subjects or inhabitants of Fiji to attempt to procure the alteration, otherwise than by lawful means, of any matter in Fiji as by law established; or
(iii) to bring into hatred or contempt or to excite disaffection against the administration of justice in Fiji; or
(iv) to raise discontent or disaffection amongst Her Majesty's subjects or inhabitants of Fiji; or
(v) to promote feelings of ill-will and hostility between different classes of the population of Fiji.
But
an act, speech or publication is not seditious by reason only that it
intends-
(a) to show that Her Majesty has been misled or mistaken in any of her measures; or
(b) to point out errors or defects in the government or constitution of Fiji as by law established or in legislation or in the administration of justice with a view to the remedying of such errors or defects; or
(c) to persuade Her Majesty's subjects or inhabitants of Fiji to attempt to procure by lawful means the alteration of any matter in Fiji as by law established; or
(d) to point out, with a view to their removal, any matters which are producing or having a tendency to produce feelings of ill-will and enmity between different classes of the population of Fiji.
(2)
In determining whether the intention with which any act was done, any words were
spoken, or any document was published, was or
was not seditious, every person
shall be deemed to intend the consequences which would naturally follow from his
conduct at the time
and under the circumstances in which he so conducted
himself.
Seditious offences
66.-(1)
Any person who-
(a) does or attempts to do, or makes any preparation to do, or conspires with any person to do any act with a seditious intention;
(b) utters any seditious words;
(c) prints, publishes, sells, offers for sale, distributes or reproduces any seditious publication; or
(d) imports any seditious publication, unless he has no reason to believe that it is seditious,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable for a first offence to imprisonment for
two years or to a fine of two hundred dollars or
to both such imprisonment and
fine, and for a subsequent offence to imprisonment for three years; and any such
seditious publication
shall be forfeited to Her Majesty.
(2)
Any person who without lawful excuse has in his possession any seditious
publication is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable
for a first offence to
imprisonment for one year or to a fine of one hundred dollars or to both such
imprisonment and fine, and for
a subsequent offence to imprisonment for two
years; and such publication shall be forfeited to Her
Majesty.
(3)
No prosecution for an offence under this section shall be begun except within
six months after the offence is
committed.
(4)
A person shall not be prosecuted for an offence under this section without the
written consent of the *Director of Public
Prosecutions.
* Amended
by Order 8th October,
1970.
(5)
No person shall be convicted of an offence under this section on the
uncorroborated testimony of one witness.
Suspension of newspaper containing seditious matter
67.-(1)
Whenever any person is convicted of publishing in any newspaper matter having a
seditious intention, the court may, if it thinks
fit, either in lieu of or in
addition to any other punishment, make orders as to all or any of the following
matters, that is to
say:-
(a) prohibiting, either absolutely or except on conditions to be specified in the order, for any period not exceeding one year from the date of the order, the future publication of that newspaper;
(b) prohibiting, either absolutely or except on conditions to be specified in the order, for the period aforesaid, the publisher, proprietor or editor of that newspaper from publishing, editing or writing for any newspaper, or from assisting, whether with money or money's worth, material, personal service or otherwise, in the publication, editing or production of any newspaper; and
(c) that for the period aforesaid any printing press used in the production of the newspaper be used only on conditions to be specified in the order, or that it be seized by the police and detained by them for the period aforesaid.
(2)
Any person who contravenes an order made under this section is guilty of a
misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for six
months or to a fine of two
hundred dollars or to both such imprisonment and fine.
(3) Nothing in this Code shall affect the power of the
court to punish any person contravening an order made under this section for
contempt of court:
Provided
that no person shall be punished twice for the same offence.
Power of court to prohibit circulation of seditious publications
68.-(1)
Whenever on the application of the *Director of Public Prosecutions it is shown
to the satisfaction of the court that the issue
or circulation of a seditious
publication is or if commenced or continued would be likely to lead to unlawful
violence, or appears
to have the object of promoting feelings of hostility
between different classes or races of the community, the court shall make an
order (in this section called a "prohibition order") prohibiting the issuing and
circulation of that publication (in this section
called a "prohibited
publication") and requiring every person having any copy of the prohibited
publication in his possession, power
or control forthwith to deliver every such
copy into the custody of the
police.
* Amended by
Order 8th October,
1970.
(2)
An order under this section may be made
ex
parte on
the application of the *Director of Public Prosecutions in
chambers.
* Amended by
Order 8th October,
1970.
(3)
It shall be sufficient if the order so describes the prohibited publication that
it can be identified by a reasonable person who
compares the prohibited
publication with the description in the prohibition
order.
(4)
Every person on whom a copy of a prohibition order is served by any police
officer shall forthwith deliver to that police officer
every prohibited
publication in his possession, power or control, and if he fails to do so he is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is
liable to imprisonment for one year or to a
fine of two hundred dollars or to both such imprisonment and
fine.
(5)
Every person to whose knowledge it shall come that a prohibited publication is
in his possession, power or control shall forthwith
deliver every such
publication into the custody of the
police.
(6)
The court may, if it thinks fit, either before or after or without service of
the prohibition order on any person, issue a warrant
authorising any police
officer not below the rank of sergeant and his assistants to break, enter and
search, either by day or night,
any building or place specified in the order,
and any enclosure, room, box, receptacle or thing in such building or place, and
to
seize and carry away every prohibited publication there found, and to use
such force as may be necessary for the
purpose.
A
copy of the prohibition order and of the search warrant shall be left in a
conspicuous position at every building or place so
entered.
(7)
The owner of any prohibited publication delivered or seized under this section
may, at any time within fourteen days after the
delivery or seizure, petition
the court for the discharge of the prohibition order, and the court, if on the
hearing of the petition
it decides that the prohibition order ought not to have
been made, shall discharge the order and shall order the prohibited publication
delivered by or seized from the petitioner to be returned to
him.
(8)
Every prohibited publication delivered or seized under this section with respect
to which a petition is not filed within the time
aforesaid or which is not
ordered to be returned to the owner shall be deemed to be forfeited to Her
Majesty.
*CHAPTER VIII-GENOCIDE
*Genocide
69.-(1)
A person commits the offence of genocide if he commits any of the following acts
with intent to destroy, in whole or in part,
a national, ethnical, racial or
religious group as such:-
(a) killing members of the group;
(b) causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
(c) deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
(d) imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
(e) forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.
†(2)
A person guilty of an offence of genocide shall on conviction-
(a) if the offence consists of the killing of any person, be sentenced to death;
(b) in any other case, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding fourteen years.
† Amended by Ordinance No. 15 of 1973.
(3)
Proceedings for an offence of genocide shall not be instituted except by or with
the consent of the
‡Director
of Public Prosecutions.
*
Inserted by Ordinance No. 25 of
1969.
‡ Amended by
Order 13th November, 1970.
CHAPTER
IX-OFFENCES AFFECTING RELATIONS
WITH
FOREIGN
STATES AND EXTERNAL TRANQUILLITY
Defamation of foreign princes
°70.
Any person who, without such justification or excuse as would be sufficient in
the case of the defamation of a private person, publishes
anything intended to
be read, or any sign or visible representation, tending to degrade, revile or
expose to hatred or contempt any
foreign prince, potentate, ambassador or other
foreign dignitary with intent to disturb peace and friendship between Fiji and
the
country to which such prince, potentate, ambassador or dignitary belongs, is
guilty of a
misdemeanour.
°
Amended by 14 of 1975, s.6.
Foreign enlistment
°71. Any person commits a misdemeanour who does any of the following acts without the licence, order, command or authority of the Governor-General, that is to say:-
(a) who prepares or fits out any naval or military expedition to proceed against the dominions of any friendly state, or is engaged in such preparation or fitting-out, or assists therein, or is employed in any capacity in such expedition; or
(b) who, being a British subject, accepts or agrees to accept any commission or engagement in the military or naval service of any foreign state at war with any friendly state, or, whether a British subject or not, induces any other person to accept or agree to accept any commission or engagement in the military or naval service of any such foreign state as aforesaid; or
(c) who, being a British subject, quits or goes on board any vessel with a view of quitting Fiji, with intent to accept any commission or engagement in. the military naval service of any foreign state at war with a friendly state, or, whether a British subject or not, induces any other person to quit or to go on board any vessel with a view of quitting Fiji with the like intent; or
(d) who, being the master or owner of any vessel, knowingly either takes on board, or engages to take on board, or has on board such vessel, any illegally enlisted person; or
(e) who, with intent or knowledge, or having reasonable cause to believe that the same will be employed in the military or naval service of any foreign state at war with any friendly state, builds, agrees to build, causes to be built, equips, despatches, or causes or allows to be despatched, any vessel, or issues or delivers any commission for any vessel:
Provided
that a person building, causing to be built, or equipping a vessel in any of the
cases aforesaid, in pursuance of a contract
made before the commencement of such
war as aforesaid, is not liable to any of the penalties specified in this
section in respect
of such building or equipment if-
(i) upon a proclamation of neutrality being issued by Her Majesty *in right of Her Government of Fiji he forthwith gives notice to the *Minister or the Secretary of State that he is so building, causing to be built, or equipping such vessel, and furnishes such particulars of the contract and of any matters relating to, or done, or to be done under the contract as may be required by the *Minister or the Secretary of State; and
* Amended by Order 8th October, 1970.
(ii) he gives such security, and takes and permits to be taken such other measures, if any, as the *Minister or the Secretary of State may prescribe for ensuring that such vessel shall not be despatched, delivered or removed without the licence of Her Majesty until the termination of such war as aforesaid.
° Amended by 14 of 1975, s.6.
* Amended by Order 8th October, 1970.
Piracy
72.
Any person who is guilty of piracy or any crime connected with or relating or
akin to piracy †shall be liable to imprisonment
for
life.
† Amended by
Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
‡Hijacking
73.-(1)
A person on board an aircraft in flight who-
(a) unlawfully, by the use of force or by threats of any kind or by any other form of intimidation, seizes or exercises control of that aircraft or attempts to seize or exercise control of it; or
(b) assists any person who carries out or attempts to carry out any act mentioned in paragraph (a),
commits
the offence of hijacking, whatever his nationality or citizenship, whatever the
State in which the aircraft is registered
and whether-the aircraft is in Fiji or
elsewhere.
(2)
The provisions of subsection (1) shall not apply if-
(a) the aircraft is used in military, customs or police service; or
(b) both the place of take-off and the place of landing are in the territory of the State in which the aircraft is registered,
unless
the person seizing or exercising control of the aircraft or assisting in so
doing is a citizen of Fiji or resident in Fiji
or his act is committed in Fiji
or the aircraft whatever its use is registered in
Fiji.
(3)
A person who commits the offence of hijacking is liable on conviction to
imprisonment for
life.
(4)
The period during which an aircraft is in flight shall be deemed to include any
period from the moment when all its external doors
are closed following
embarkation until the moment when any such door is opened for disembarkation,
and, in the case of a forced landing,
any period until the competent authorities
take over responsibility of the aircraft and for persons and property on
board.
(5)
For the purposes of this section, the territorial waters of any State shall be
treated as part of its
territory.
‡Inserted
by Act No. 8 of 1972.
*Other offences committed in the course of hijacking
74.
Where outside Fiji any person of whatever nationality or citizenship, while on
board an aircraft wherever registered, does any act
which would constitute an
offence under this Code if done in Fiji shall be liable to be convicted of such
offence if it is done in
connection with the offence of
hijacking.
*Inserted by Act No. 8 of 1972 and
amended by Act No. 15 of 1973.
*Aircraft operated by joint or international organisation
75.-(1)
If the Minister by order declares-
(a) that any two or more States named in the order have established an organisation or agency which operates aircraft; and
(b) that one of these States has been designated as exercising, for aircraft so operated, the powers of the State of registration,
the State declared under
paragraph (b) of this subsection shall be deemed for the purposes of this Code
to be the State in which any
aircraft so operated is registered; but in relation
to such an aircraft paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section
73 and paragraph (b) of subsection (2)
of section 76 shall have effect as if
these paragraphs referred to the territory of any one of the States named in the
order.
*Inserted by Act No. 8 of 1972 and
amended by Act No. 15 of 1973.
*Aircraft Sabotage
76.-(1)
A person who-
(a) destroys an aircraft in service or causes damage which renders it incapable of flight or which is likely to endanger its safety in flight; or
(b) places or causes to be placed on an aircraft in service by any means whatsoever, a device or substance which is likely to destroy that aircraft or to cause damage to it which renders it incapable of flight, or to cause damage to it which is likely to endanger its safety in flight; or
(c) destroys or damages air navigation facilities or interferes with their operation, it any such act is likely to endanger the safety of aircraft in flight; or
(d) communicates information which he knows to be false thereby endangering the safety of an aircraft in flight; or
(e) performs an act of violence on board an aircraft in flight likely to endanger the safety of that aircraft; or
(f) assists any person who carries out or attempts to carry out any act mentioned in the preceding paragraphs of this section;
*(g) communicates any information which he knows to be false or performs any other act for the purpose of causing, or which is likely to cause, inconvenience to persons travelling upon or about to travel upon an aircraft in service or which is likely adversely to affect the journey or passage of an aircraft in service,
* Inserted by Act No. 15 of 1973
commits
the offence of aircraft sabotage whatever his nationality or citizenship,
whatever the State in which the aircraft is registered
and whether the aircraft
is in Fiji or
elsewhere.
(2)
The provisions of subsection (1) shall not apply if-
(a) the aircraft is used in military, customs or police service; or
(b) both the place of take off and the place of landing are in the territory of the State in which the aircraft is registered, unless-
(i) the offence is committed in Fiji; or
(ii) The aircraft whatever its use is registered in Fiji; or
(iii) the aircraft lands in Fiji with the offender on board; or
(iv) the offence is committed against or on board an aircraft leased to a lessee who has either his principal place of business or a residence in Fiji.
(3)
A person who commits an offence under this section is liable on conviction to
imprisonment for life.
(4) For the purposes of this
section "aircraft in service" means the period beginning with the pre-flight
preparation of the aircraft
by ground personnel or by the crew for a specific
flight until twenty-four hours after any landing after such
flight.
*Inserted by Act No. 8 of 1972 and
amended by Act No. 15 of 1973.
†Prosecution of offences
77.
Proceedings for an offence under sections
73
and
76
shall not be instituted except by or with the consent of the Director of Public
Prosecutions.
†
Inserted by Act No. 8 of 1972
†Definition of State
78.
“State" means, for the purposes of sections
73
to
76,
any State which is a party to any international convention to which Fiji is also
a party.
† Inserted
by Act No. 8 of 1972
CHAPTER
X-UNLAWFUL ASSEMBLIES, RIOTS AND OTHER OFFENCES
AGAINST
PUBLIC
TRANQUILLITY
Unlawful society
79.-(1)
A society includes any combination of ten or more persons whether the society be
known by any name or
not.
(2)
A society is an unlawful society-
(a) if formed for any of the following purposes:-
(i) levying war or encouraging or assisting any persons to levy war on the Government or the inhabitants of any part of Fiji; or
(ii) killing or injuring or inciting to the killing or injuring of any person; or
(iii) destroying or injuring or inciting to the destruction or injuring of any property; or
(iv) subverting or promoting the subversion of the Government or of its officials; or
(v) committing or inciting to acts of violence or intimidation; or
(vi) interfering with, or resisting, or inciting to interference with or resistance to the administration of the law; or
(vii) disturbing or inciting to the disturbance of peace and order in any part of Fiji; or
(b) if declared by an order of the *Minister to be a society dangerous to the good government of Fiji.
*Amended by Order 8th October, 1970
Managing unlawful society
80.
Any person who manages or assists in the management of an unlawful society is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment
for seven
years.
Being member of unlawful society
81.
Any person who-
(a) is a member of an unlawful society; or
(b) knowingly allows a meeting of an unlawful society, or of members of an unlawful society, to be held in any house, building or place belonging to or occupied by him, or over which he has control,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for three
years.
Prosecutions under sections 80 and 81
82.-(1)
A prosecution for an offence under sections
80
and
81
shall not be instituted except with the consent of the *Director of Public
Prosecutions:
Provided
that a person charged with such an offence may be arrested, or a warrant for his
arrest may be issued and executed, and any
such person may be remanded in
custody or on bail, notwithstanding that the consent of the *Director of Public
Prosecutions to the
institution of a prosecution for the offence has not been
obtained, but no further or other proceedings shall be taken until that
consent
has been
obtained.
*Amended by
Order 8th October,
1970.
(2)
In any prosecution for an offence under sections
80
and
81
it shall not be necessary to prove that the society consisted of ten or more
members; but it shall be sufficient to prove the existence
of a combination of
persons, and the onus shall then rest with the accused to prove that the number
of members of such combination
did not amount to
ten.
(3)
Any person who attends a meeting of an unlawful society shall be presumed, until
and unless the contrary is proved, to be a member
of the
society.
(4)
Any person who has in his possession or custody or under his control any of the
insignia, banners, arms, books, papers, documents
or other property belonging to
an unlawful society, or wears any of the insignia, or is marked with any mark of
the society, shall
be presumed, unless and until the contrary is proved, to be a
member of the society.
Power of entry, arrest, search, etc.
83.
Any peace officer, and any police officer authorised in writing by a peace
officer, may enter with or without assistance any house
or building or into any
place in which he has reason to believe that a meeting of an unlawful society,
or of persons who are members
of an unlawful society, is being held, and to
arrest or cause to be arrested all persons found therein and to search such
house,
building or place, and seize or cause to be seized all insignia, banners,
arms, books, papers, documents and other property which
he may have reasonable
cause to believe to belong to any unlawful society or to be in any way connected
with the purpose of the
meeting.
For
the purposes of this section, the expression "peace officer" means any
magistrate or any police officer not below the rank of
Assistant
Superintendent.
Declaration by *Minister
84.-(1) When a society is declared to be an unlawful society by an order of the *Minister, the following consequences shall ensue:-
(a) the property of the society within Fiji shall forthwith vest in an officer appointed by the *Minister;
(b) the officer appointed by the *Minister shall proceed to wind up the affairs of the society, and after satisfying and providing for all debts and liabilities of the society and the cost of the winding up, if there shall then be any surplus assets shall prepare and submit to the *Minister a scheme for the application of such surplus assets;
(c) such scheme, when submitted for approval, may be amended by the *Minister in such way as he shall think proper in the circumstances of the case;
(d) the approval of the *Minister to such a scheme shall be denoted by the endorsement thereon of a memorandum of such approval signed by the *Minister, and, upon this being done, the surplus assets, the subject of the scheme, shall be held by such officer upon the terms and to the purposes thereby prescribed;
(e) for the purpose of the winding up, the officer appointed by the *Minister shall have all the powers vested in the Official Receiver for the purpose of the discovering of the property of a debtor and the realization thereof.
*Amended by Order 8th October, 1970
(2) The *Minister may, for the
purpose of enabling a society to wind up its own affairs, suspend the operation
of this section for
such period as to him shall seem
expedient.
*Amended by Order
8th
October, 1970
(3)
The provisions of subsection (1) shall not apply to any property seized at any
time under section
83.
*Amended by Order 8th October, 1970
Forfeiture of insignia, etc.
85.
Subject to the provisions of section
84,
the insignia, banners, arms, books, papers, documents and other property
belonging to an unlawful society shall be forfeited to
Her Majesty, and shall be
dealt with in such manner as the *Minister may
direct.
*Amended
by Order 8th October, 1970.
Definitions of unlawful assembly and riot
86.
When three or more persons assemble with intent to commit an offence, or, being
assembled with intent to carry out some common purpose,
conduct themselves in
such a manner as to cause persons in the neighbourhood reasonably to fear that
the persons so assembled will
commit a breach of the peace, or will by such
assembly needlessly and without any reasonable occasion provoke other persons to
commit
a breach of the peace, they are an unlawful
assembly.
It
is immaterial that the original assembling was lawful if, being assembled, they
conduct themselves with a common purpose in such
a manner as
aforesaid.
Riot
When
an unlawful assembly has begun to execute the purpose for which it assembled by
a breach of the peace and to the terror of the
public, the assembly is called a
riot, and the persons assembled are said to be riotously
assembled.
Punishment of unlawful assembly
87.
Any person who takes part in an unlawful assembly is guilty of a misdemeanour,
and is liable to imprisonment for one year.
Punishment of riot
88.
Any person who takes part in a riot is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Making proclamation for rioters to disperse
89.
Any magistrate or, in his absence, any officer of police or special constable
not below the rank of Assistant Superintendent, in
whose view twelve or more
persons are riotously assembled, or who apprehends that a riot is about to be
committed by twelve or more
persons assembled within his view, may make or cause
to be made a proclamation in the Queen's name, in such form as he thinks fit,
commanding the rioters or persons so assembled to disperse
peaceably.
(Amended
by 16 of 1960, s.
5.)
Dispersion of rioters after proclamation made
90.
If upon the expiration of a reasonable time after such proclamation made, or
after the making of such proclamation has been prevented
by force, twelve or
more persons continue riotously assembled together, any person authorised to
make proclamation, or any police
officer or constable, or any other person
acting in aid of such person, police officer or special constable may do all
things necessary
for dispersing the persons so continuing assembled, or for
apprehending them or any of them, and, if any person makes resistance,
may use
all such force as is reasonably necessary for overcoming such resistance, and
shall not be liable in any criminal or civil
proceeding for having, by use of
such force, caused harm or death to any
person.
(Amended
by 16 of 1960, s.
6.)
Rioting after proclamation
91.
If a proclamation is made, commanding the persons engaged in a riot, or
assembled with the purpose of committing a riot, to disperse,
every person who,
at or after the expiration of a reasonable time for the making of such
proclamation, takes or continues to take
part in the riot or assembly, is guilty
of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for five years.
Preventing or obstructing the making of proclamation
92.
Any person who forcibly prevents or obstructs the making of such proclamation as
is in section
89
mentioned, is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for ten years;
and if the making of the proclamation is so prevented,
every person who, knowing
that it has been so prevented, takes or continues to take part in the riot or
assembly, is liable to imprisonment
for five years.
Rioters demolishing buildings, etc.
93.
Any persons who, being riotously assembled together, unlawfully pull down or
destroy, or begin to pull down or destroy any building,
railway, machinery or
structures are guilty of a felony, and each of them is liable to imprisonment
for life.
Rioters damaging buildings, machinery, etc.
94.
Any persons who, being riotously assembled together, unlawfully damage any of
the things in section
93
mentioned, are guilty of a felony, and each of them is liable to imprisonment
for seven years.
Riotously interfering with railway, vehicle or vessel
95.
All persons are guilty of a misdemeanour who, being riotously assembled,
unlawfully and with force prevent, hinder or obstruct the
loading or unloading
of any railway, vehicle or vessel, or the starting or transit of any railway or
vehicle, or the sailing or navigation
of any vessel, or unlawfully and with
force board any railway, vehicle or vessel with intent to do so.
Prohibition of the carrying of offensive weapons without lawful authority or reasonable excuse
96.
(1) Any person who without lawful authority or reasonable excuse, the proof
whereof shall lie on him, has with him in any public
place any offensive weapon
is guilty of a
misdemeanour.
(2)
Where any person is convicted of an offence under subsection (1) the court may
make an order for the forfeiture or disposal of
any weapon in respect of which
the offence was
committed.
(3)
In this section "offensive weapon" means any article made or adapted for use for
causing injury to the person, or intended by
the person having it with him for
such use by
him.
(Section
inserted by 16 of 1960, s.
7)
Prohibition on manufacture, sale, etc., of flick knives, gravity knives and knuckle dusters
97.-(1)
Any person who manufactures, sells or hires, or exposes for sale or hire, or
offers for sale or hire, or lends or gives to any
person a flick knife, gravity
knife*, swordstick or knuckle duster shall be guilty of an offence and shall be
liable on conviction
to imprisonment for six months or to a fine of one hundred
dollars or to both such fine and
imprisonment.
*Inserted
by Ordinance No. 12 of
1969.
(2)
Where any person is convicted of an offence contrary to subsection (1) the court
shall make an order for the forfeiture or disposal
of all flick knives, gravity
knives, swordsticks and knuckle dusters found in the possession of such
person.
(3)
In this section-
"flick knife" means any knife which has a blade which opens automatically by hand pressure applied to a button, spring or other device in or attached to the handle of the knife;
"gravity knife" means any knife which has a blade which is released from the handle or sheath thereof by the force of gravity or the application of centrifugal force and which, when released, is locked in place by means of a button, spring, lever or other device;
"knuckle duster" means any solid contraption designed or adapted to be gripped in the fist or fitted to or over one or more fingers and equipped with any projection or flat striking surface peculiarly adapted for causing injury to the person:
Provided
that nothing in this section shall apply to any ring which is a
bona
fide signet
ring or to any ring the projection of which consists of a precious or
semi-precious stone or stones or other purely ornamental
object.
(Section
inserted by 50 of 1961, s.
2.)
Going armed in public
98.
Any person who goes armed in public without lawful occasion in such a manner as
to cause terror to any person is guilty of a misdemeanour,
and his arms may be
forfeited.
Forcible entry
99.
Any person who, in order to take possession thereof, enters on any lands or
tenements in a violent manner, whether such violence
consists in actual force
applied to any other person or in threats or in breaking open any house or in
collecting an unusual number
of people, is guilty of the misdemeanour termed
forcible
entry.
It
is immaterial whether he is entitled to enter on the land or not, provided that
a person who enters upon lands or tenements of
his own, but which are in the
custody of his servant or bailiff, does not commit the offence of forcible
entry.
Forcible detainer
100.
Any person who, being in actual possession of land without colour of right,
holds possession of it, in a manner likely to cause
a breach of the peace or
reasonable apprehension of a breach of the peace, against a person entitled by
law to the possession of
the land is guilty of the misdemeanour termed forcible
detainer.
Affray
101.
Any person who takes part in a fight in a public place is guilty of a
misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for one year.
Challenge to fight a duel
102.
Any person who challenges another to fight a duel, or attempts to provoke
another to fight a duel, or attempts to provoke any person
to challenge another
to fight a duel, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Threatening violence
103.
Any person who with intent to alarm any person in a dwelling-house, discharges
loaded firearms or commits any other breach of the
peace, is guilty of a
misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for *three years, with or without
corporal punishment.
*
Amended by Act No. 15 of 1973
Assembling for the purpose of smuggling
104.
Any persons who assemble together, to the number of two or more, for the purpose
of unshipping, carrying or concealing any goods
subject to customs duty and
liable to forfeiture under any law relating to the customs, are guilty of a
misdemeanour, and each of
them is liable to a fine not exceeding two hundred
dollars or to imprisonment for six months.
*Throwing or projecting objects, etc.
105.
Any person who wilfully throws or in any other way projects any object, fluid or
substance at any dwelling-house, vehicle or person
is guilty of an offence and
is liable to imprisonment for three years, with or without corporal
punishment.
* Amended by
Act No. 15 of 1973
---------------------------
Division
II-Offences against Administration
of
Lawful
Authority
CHAPTER XI-CORRUPTION AND THE ABUSE OF OFFICE
Official corruption
106.
Any person who-
(a) being employed in the public service, and being charged with the performance of any duty by virtue of such employment, corruptly asks for, solicits, receives or obtains, or agrees or attempts to receive or obtain, any property or benefit of any kind for himself or any other person on account of anything already done or omitted to be done or to be afterwards done or omitted to be done, by him in the discharge of the duties of his office; or
(b) corruptly gives, confers or procures, or promises or offers to give or confer, or to procure. or attempt to procure, to, upon, or for any person employed in the public service, or to, upon, or for any other person, any property or benefit of any kind on account of any such act or omission on the part of the person so employed,
is
guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for seven years.
Extortion by public officers
107.
Any person who, being employed in the public service, takes or accepts from any
person for the performance of his duty as such officer,
any reward beyond his
proper pay and emoluments, or any promise of such reward, is guilty of a
misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment
for three years.
Public officers receiving property to show favour
108.
Any person who, being employed in the public service, receives any property or
benefit of any kind for himself or any other person,
on the understanding,
express or implied, that he shall favour the person giving the property or
conferring the benefit, or any one
in whom that person is interested, in any
transaction then pending, or likely to take place, between the person giving the
property
or conferring the benefit, or any one in whom he is interested, and any
person employed in the public service, is guilty of a misdemeanour,
and is
liable to imprisonment for six months.
Officers charged with administration of property of a special character or with special duties
109.
Any person who, being employed in the public service, and being charged by
virtue of his employment with any judicial or administrative
duties respecting
property of a special character, or respecting the carrying on of any
manufacture, trade or business of a special
character, and having acquired or
holding, directly or indirectly, a private interest in any such property,
manufacture, trade or
business, discharges any such duties with respect to the
property, manufacture, trade or business in which he has such interest or
with
respect to the conduct of any person in relation thereto, is guilty of a
misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for one
year.
False claims by officials
110.
Any person who, being employed in the public service, in such a capacity as to
require him or enable him to furnish returns or statements
touching any sum
payable or claimed to be payable to himself or to any other person, or touching
any other matter required to be
certified for the purpose of any payment of
money or delivery of goods to be made to any person, makes a return or statement
touching
any such matter which is, to his knowledge, false in any material
particular, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Abuse of office
111.
Any person who, being employed in the public service, does or directs to be
done, in abuse of the authority of his office, any arbitrary
act prejudicial to
the rights of another, is guilty of a
misdemeanour.
If
the act is done or directed to be done for purpose of gain, he is guilty of a
felony, and is liable to imprisonment for three
years.
A
prosecution for any offence under this or either of sections
109
or
110
shall not be instituted except by or with the sanction of the *Director of
Public Prosecutions.
*
Amended by Order 8th October, 1970.
False certificates by public officers
112.
Any person who, being authorised or required by law to give any certificate
touching any matter by virtue whereof the rights of
any person may be
prejudicially affected, gives a certificate which is, to his knowledge, false in
any material particular, is guilty
of a misdemeanour.
Unauthorised administration of oaths
113.
Any person who administers an oath, or takes a solemn declaration or affirmation
or affidavit, touching any matter with respect
to which he has not by law any
authority to do so is guilty of a
misdemeanour:
Provided
that this section shall not apply to an oath, declaration, affirmation or
affidavit administered by or taken before a magistrate
or a justice of the peace
in any matter relating to the preservation of the peace or the punishment of
offences or relating to inquiries
respecting sudden deaths, nor to an oath,
declaration, affirmation or affidavit administered or taken for some purpose
which is lawful
under the laws of another country, or for the purpose of giving
validity to an instrument in writing which is intended to be used
in another
country.
False assumption of authority
114.
Any person who-
(a) not being a judicial officer, assumes to act as a judicial officer; or
(b) without authority assumes to act as a person having authority by law to administer an oath or take a solemn declaration or affirmation or affidavit or to do any other act of a public nature which can only be done by persons authorised by law to do so; or
(c) represents himself to be a person authorised by law to sign a document testifying to the contents of any register or record kept by lawful authority, or testifying to any fact or event, and signs such document as being so authorised. when he is not, and knows that he is not. in fact, so authorised,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour.
Personating public officers
115.
Any person who-
(a) personates any person employed in the public service on an occasion when the latter is required to do any act or attend in any place by virtue of his employment; or
(b) falsely represents himself to be a person employed in the public service, and assumes to do any act or to attend in any place for the purpose of doing any act by virtue of such employment,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for three
years.
Threat of injury to persons employed in public service
116.
Whoever holds out any threat of injury to any person employed in the public
service, or to any person in whom he believes that person
employed in the public
service to be interested, for the purpose of inducing that person employed in
the public service to do any
act, or to forbear or delay to do any act connected
with the exercise of the public functions of such person employed in the public
service, is guilty of a
misdemeanour.
A
prosecution for an offence under this section shall not be instituted except by
or with the sanction of the *Director of Public
Prosecutions.
* Amended
by Order 13th November, 1970.
CHAPTER
XII-PERJURY AND FALSE STATEMENTS
AND
DECLARATIONS
Perjury
117.-(1)
Any person lawfully sworn as a witness in a judicial proceeding who wilfully
makes a statement material in that proceeding which
he knows to be false or does
not believe to be true is guilty of the misdemeanour termed perjury, and is
liable to imprisonment for
seven
years.
*(2)
Any person lawfully sworn as an interpreter, who wilfully in the course, or
proposed course, of his duties as such, makes any
misstatement, or actively or
by omission misinterprets any statement whether or not that statement is
material in any judicial proceeding
is guilty of perjury and is liable to
imprisonment for seven
years.
*Inserted by
Ordinance No. 12 of
1969.
(3)
Where a statement made for the purpose of a judicial proceeding is not made
before the tribunal itself but is made on oath before
a person authorised by law
to administer an oath to the person who makes the statement and to record or
authenticate the statement
it shall, for the purposes of this section, be
treated as having been made in a judicial
proceeding.
(4)
The question whether a statement on which perjury is assigned was material is a
question of law to be determined by the court
of trial.
False statements on oath made otherwise than in a judicial proceeding
118.
Any person who-
(a) being required or authorised by law to make any statement on oath for any purpose and being lawfully sworn (otherwise than in a judicial proceeding) wilfully makes a statement which is material for that purpose and which he knows to be false or does not believe to be true; or
(b) wilfully uses any false affidavit for the Bills of Sale Act,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
(Cap. 225)
False statements, etc. with reference to marriage
119.
Any person who-
(a) for the purpose of procuring a marriage or a certificate or licence for marriage knowingly and wilfully makes a false oath or makes or signs a false declaration, notice or certificate required under any Act for the time being in force relating to marriage; or
(b) knowingly and wilfully makes or knowingly and wilfully causes to be made for the purpose of being inserted in any register of marriage a false statement as to any particular required by law to be known and registered relating to any marriage; or
(c) forbids the issue of any certificate or licence for marriage by falsely representing himself to be a person whose consent to the marriage is required by law knowing such representation to be false,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
False statements, etc. as to births or deaths
120.-(1)
Any person who-
(a) wilfully makes any false answer to any question put to him by any registrar of births or deaths relating to the particulars required to be registered concerning any birth or death or wilfully gives to any such registrar any false information concerning any birth or death or the cause of any death; or
(b) wilfully makes any false certificate or declaration under or for the purposes of any Act relating to the registration of births or deaths or, knowing any such certificate or declaration to be false, uses the same as true or gives or sends the same as true to any person; or
(c) wilfully makes, gives or uses any false statement or declaration as to a child born alive as having been still-born or as to the body of a deceased person or a still-born child in any coffin or falsely pretends that any child born alive was still-born; or
(d) makes any false statement with intent to have the same inserted in any register of births or deaths,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
(2)
A prosecution under this section shall not be commenced more than three years
after the commission of the offence.
False statutory declarations and other false statements without oath
121.
Any person who knowingly and wilfully makes (otherwise than on oath) a statement
false in a material particular and the statement
is made-
(a) in a statutory declaration; or
(b) in an abstract, account, balance sheet, book, certificate, declaration, entry, estimate, inventory, notice, report, return or other document which he is authorised or required to make, attest or verify by any Act for the time being in force; or
(c) in any oral declaration or oral answer which he is required to make by, under or in pursuance of any Act for the time being in force,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour.
False declarations, etc. to obtain registration, etc. for carrying on a vocation
122.
Any person who-
(a) procures or attempts to procure himself to be registered on any register or roll kept under or in pursuance of any Act for the time being in force of persons qualified by law to practise any vocation or calling; or
(b) procures or attempts to procure a certificate of the registration of any person on any such register or roll as aforesaid,
by
wilfully making or producing or causing to be produced, either verbally or in
writing, any declaration, certificate or representation
which he knows to be
false or fraudulent, is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment
for twelve months.
Aiders, abettors, suborners, etc.
123.-(1)
Every person who aids, abets, counsels, procures or suborns another person to
commit an offence against any of sections
117
to
122
inclusive is liable to be proceeded against, tried and punished as if he were a
principal
offender.
(2)
Every person who incites or attempts to procure or suborn another person to
commit an offence against any of the six preceding
sections of this Code is
guilty of a misdemeanour.
Corroboration
124.
A person shall not be liable to be convicted on any offence against any of
sections
117
to
123
inclusive or of any offence declared by any other Act to be perjury or
subornation or perjury or to be punishable as perjury or subornation
of perjury
solely upon the evidence of one witness as to the falsity of any statement
alleged to be false.
Fabricating evidence
125.
Any person who, with intent to mislead any tribunal in any judicial
proceeding-
(a) fabricates evidence by any means other than perjury or subornation of perjury; or
(b) knowingly makes use of such fabricated evidence,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
Inconsistent or contradictory statements
126.-(1)
Where two or more inconsistent or contradictory statements of fact or alleged
fact, material to the issue or matter in question,
have been wilfully made on
oath by one and the same witness in any judicial proceeding or proceedings,
whether before the same court
or tribunal or person or not, such witness shall
be guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for six
months.
(2)
Upon the trial of any person for an offence under this section, it shall not be
necessary to prove the falsity of either of the
inconsistent or contradictory
statements, but, upon proof that both the statements were made by him, the
court, if satisfied that
the statements, or either of them, were or was made
with intent to deceive the court, tribunal or person before whom the statements
or either of them were or was made, shall convict the accused.
Proof of certain proceedings on which perjury is assigned
127.
On a prosecution-
(a) for perjury alleged to have been committed on the trial of an information for felony or misdemeanour; or
(b) for procuring or suborning the commission of perjury on any such trial,
the
fact of the former trial shall be sufficiently proved by the production of a
certificate containing the substance and effect (omitting
the formal parts) of
the information and trial purporting to be signed by the Chief Registrar or
other person having the custody
of the records of the court where the
information was tried or by the deputy of that Chief Registrar or other person
without proof
of the signature or official character of the clerk or persons
appearing to have signed the certificate.
Forms and ceremonies of oath immaterial
128.
For the purposes of this Chapter the forms and ceremonies used in administering
an oath are immaterial if the court or person before
whom the oath is taken has
power to administer an oath for the purpose of verifying the statement in
question if the oath has been
administered in a form and with ceremonies which
the person taking the oath has accepted without objection or has declared to be
binding on him.
CHAPTER
XIII-OTHER OFFENCES RELATING
TO
THE
ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE
Deceiving witnesses
129.
Any person who practises any fraud or deceit, or knowingly makes or exhibits any
false statement, representation, token or writing,
to any person called or to be
called as a witness in any judicial proceeding, with intent to affect the
testimony of such person
as a witness, is guilty of a
misdemeanour.
Destroying evidence
130.
Any person who, knowing that any book, document or thing of any kind whatsoever
is or may be required in evidence in a judicial
proceeding, wilfully removes or
destroys it or renders it illegible or indecipherable or incapable of
identification, with intent
thereby to prevent it from being used in evidence,
is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Conspiracy to defeat justice and interference with witnesses
131.
Any person commits a misdemeanour who-
(a) conspires with any other person to accuse any person falsely of any crime or to do anything to obstruct, prevent, pervert or defeat the course of justice; or
(b) in order to obstruct the due course of justice, dissuades, hinders or prevents any person lawfully bound to appear and give evidence as a witness from so appearing and giving evidence, or endeavours to do so; or
(c) obstructs or in any way interferes with or knowingly prevents the execution of any legal process, civil or criminal; or
*(d) in any way obstructs, prevents, perverts or defeats, or attempts to obstruct, prevent, pervert or defeat, the course of justice.
*Inserted by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
Compounding felonies
132.
Any person who asks, receives or obtains, or agrees or attempts to receive or
obtain, any property or benefit of any kind for himself
or any other person upon
any agreement or understanding that he will compound or conceal a felony, or
will abstain from, discontinue
or delay a prosecution for a felony, or will
withhold any evidence thereof is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Compounding penal actions
133.
Any person who, having brought, or under pretence of bringing, an action against
another person under the provisions of a penal
Act in order to obtain from him a
penalty for any offence committed or alleged to have been committed by him,
compounds the action
without the order or consent of the court in which the
action is brought or is to be brought, is guilty of a
misdemeanour.
(Amended
by Ordinance 37 of 1966, s. 5.)
Advertisements for stolen property
134.
Any person who-
(a) publicly offers a reward for the return of any property which has been stolen or lost, and in the offer makes use of any words purporting that no questions will be asked, or that the person producing such property will not be seized or molested; or
(b) publicly offers to return to any person who may have bought or advanced money by way of loan upon any stolen or lost property the money so paid or advanced, or any other sum of money or reward for the return of such property; or
(c) prints or publishes any such offer,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour.
Corruptly taking a reward
135.
Any person who corruptly takes any money or reward, directly or indirectly,
under pretence or upon account of helping any person
to recover any property
which has, under circumstances which amount to felony or misdemeanour, been
stolen or obtained in any way
whatsoever, or received, is (unless he has used
all due diligence to cause the offender to be brought to trial for the same)
guilty
of felony, and is liable to imprisonment for seven years.
Offences relating to judicial proceedings
136.-(1)
Any person who-
(a) within the premises in which any judicial proceeding is being had or taken, or within the precincts of the same, shows disrespect, in speech or manner, to or with reference to such proceeding, or any person before whom such proceeding is being had or taken; or
(b) having been summoned to give evidence in a judicial proceeding, fails to attend; or
(c) being present at a judicial proceeding and being called upon to give evidence, refuses to be sworn or to make an affirmation; or
(d) having been sworn or affirmed, refuses without lawful excuse to answer a question or to produce a document; or
(e) having attended a judicial proceeding to give evidence, remains in the room in which such proceeding is being had or taken after the witnesses have been ordered to leave such room; or
*(f) having been ordered by the court to remain within the premises in which any judicial proceeding is being heard or taken or within the precincts thereof departs from such premises or precincts without the leave of the court; or
*Inserted by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
(g) causes an obstruction or disturbance in the course of a judicial proceeding; or
(h) while a judicial proceeding is pending, makes use of any speech or writing misrepresenting such proceeding or capable of prejudicing any person in favour of or against any parties to such proceeding, or calculated to lower the authority of any person before whom such proceeding is being had or taken; or
(i) publishes a report of the evidence taken in any judicial proceeding which has been directed to be held in private; or
(j) attempts wrongfully to interfere with or influence a witness in a judicial proceeding, either before or after he has given evidence, in connexion with such evidence; or
(k) dismisses a servant because he has given evidence on behalf of a certain party to a judicial proceeding; or
(l) wrongfully retakes possession of land from any person who has recently obtained possession by a writ of court; or
(m) commits any other act of intentional disrespect to any judicial proceeding, or to any person before whom such proceeding is being had or taken,
is
guilty of an offence, and is liable to imprisonment for three
months.
(2)
When an offence against paragraphs (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (g), (h) or (m) of
subsection (1) is committed in view of the court,
other than a magistrate's
court *presided over by a third class magistrate, the court may cause the
offender to be detained in custody,
and at any time before the rising of the
court on the same day may take cognizance of the offence and sentence the
offender to a
fine not exceeding forty dollars or in default of payment to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding one
month.
*Amended by
Ordinance No. 12 of
1969.
(3)
The provisions of this section shall be deemed to be in addition to and not in
derogation from the power of the Supreme Court
to punish for contempt of
court.
CHAPTER
XIV-RESCUES AND ESCAPES AND
OBSTRUCTING
OFFICERS
OF COURT OF LAW
Rescue
137.
Any person, who by force rescues or attempts to rescue from lawful custody any
other person-
(a) is, if such last-named person is under sentence of death or imprisonment for life, or charged with an offence punishable with death or imprisonment for life, guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life; and
(b) is, if such other person is imprisoned on a charge or under sentence for any offence other than those specified above, guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for seven years; and
(c) is, in any other case, guilty of a misdemeanour.
If
the person rescued is in the custody of a private person, the offender must have
notice of the fact that the person rescued is
in such custody.
Escape
138.
Any person who, being in lawful custody, escapes from such custody, is guilty of
a misdemeanour.
Aiding prisoners to escape
139.
Any person who-
(a) aids a prisoner in escaping or attempting to escape from lawful custody; or
(b) conveys anything or causes anything to be conveyed into a prison with intent to facilitate the escape of a prisoner; or
(c) being an officer of the Prisons Service or other person lawfully placed in charge of any prisoner, knowingly or wilfully permits, or connives at, †or by his negligence causes or contributes to the escape of a prisoner from lawful custody,
† Inserted by Act No. 11 of 1971
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
Removal, etc. of property under lawful seizure
140.
Any person who, when any property has been attached or taken under the process
of authority of any court, knowingly, and with intent
to hinder or defeat the
attachment or process, receives, removes, retains, conceals or disposes of such
property, is guilty of a
felony, and is liable to imprisonment for three
years.
Obstructing court officers
141.
Any person who wilfully obstructs or resists any person lawfully charged with
the execution of an order or warrant of any court,
is guilty of a misdemeanour,
and is liable to imprisonment for one year.
CHAPTER
XV-MISCELLANEOUS OFFENCES
AGAINST
PUBLIC
AUTHORITY
Frauds and breaches of trust by persons employed in the public service
142.
Any person employed in the public service who, in the discharge of the duties of
his office, commits any fraud or breach of trust
affecting the public, whether
such fraud or breach of trust would have been criminal or not if committed
against a private person,
is guilty of a misdemeanour.
False information to public servant
143.
Whoever gives to any person employed in the public service any information which
he knows or believes to be false, intending thereby
to cause, or knowing it to
be likely that he will thereby cause such person employed in the public
service-
(a) to do or omit anything which such person employed in the public service ought not to do or omit if the true state of facts respecting which such information is given were known to him; or
(b) to use the lawful power of such person employed in the public service to the injury or annoyance of any person,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for *twelve
months.
*Amended by
Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
Disobedience of lawful orders
144.
Everyone who disobeys any order, warrant or command duly made, issued or given
by any court, officer or person acting in any public
capacity and duly
authorised in that behalf, is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable, unless
any other penalty or mode of proceeding
is expressly prescribed in respect of
such disobedience, to imprisonment for two years.
Division III.-Offences Injurious to the Public in General
CHAPTER XVI-OFFENCES RELATING TO RELIGION
Insult to religion of any class
145.
Any person who destroys, damages or defiles any place of worship or any object
which is held sacred by any class of persons with
the intention of thereby
insulting the religion of any class of persons or with the knowledge that any
class of persons is likely
to consider such destruction, damage or defilement as
an insult to their religion, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Disturbing religious assemblies
146.
Any person who voluntarily causes disturbance to any assembly lawfully engaged
in the performance of religious worship or religious
ceremony, is guilty of a
misdemeanour.
Trespassing on burial places
147.
Every person who, with the intention of wounding the feelings of any person or
of insulting the religion of any person, or with
the knowledge that the feelings
of any person are likely to be wounded, or that the religion of any person is
likely to be insulted
thereby, commits any trespass in any place of worship or
in any place of sepulture, or in any place set apart for the performance
of
funeral rites or as a depository for the remains of the dead, or offers any
indignity to any human corpse, or causes disturbance
to any persons assembled
for the purpose of funeral ceremonies, is guilty of a
misdemeanour.
Writing or uttering words with intent to wound religious feelings
148.
Any person who, with the deliberate intention of wounding the religious feelings
of any other person, writes any word, or any person
who, with the like
intention, utters any word or makes any sound in the hearing of any other person
or makes any gesture or places
any object in the sight of any other person, is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for one
year.
CHAPTER XVII-OFFENCES AGAINST MORALITY
Definition of rape
149.
Any person who has unlawful carnal knowledge of a woman or girl, without her
consent, or with her consent if the consent is obtained
by force or by means of
threats or intimidation of any kind, or by fear of bodily harm, or by means of
false representations as to
the nature of the act, or in the case of a married
woman, by personating her husband, is guilty of the felony termed
rape.
Punishment of rape
150.
Any person who commits the offence of rape is liable to imprisonment for life,
with or without corporal punishment.
Attempted rape
151.
Any person who attempts to commit rape is guilty of a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for seven years, with or without corporal
punishment.
Abduction
152.
Any person who, with intent to marry or carnally know a woman of any age, or to
cause her to be married or carnally known by any
other person, takes her away,
or detains her, against her will, is guilty of a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for seven years,
with or without corporal
punishment.
Abduction of girl under eighteen years of age with intent to have carnal knowledge
153.
Any person who, with intent that any unmarried girl under the age of eighteen
years shall be unlawfully and carnally known by any
man, whether such carnal
knowledge is intended to be with any particular man or generally, takes or
causes to be taken such girl
out of the possession and against the will of her
father or mother, guardian or any other person having the lawful care or charge
of her, is guilty of a
misdemeanour:
Provided
that it shall be a sufficient defence to any charge under this section if it
shall be made to appear to the court that the
person so charged had reasonable
cause to believe and did in fact believe that the girl was of or above the age
of eighteen years.
Indecent assaults on females
154.-(1)
Any person who unlawfully and indecently assaults any woman or girl is guilty of
a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for
five years, with or without corporal
punishment.
(2)
It is no defence to a charge for an indecent assault on a girl under the age of
sixteen years to prove that she consented to the
act of
indecency.
(3)
It shall be a sufficient defence to a charge for an indecent assault on a girl
under the age of sixteen years to prove that she
consented to the act of
indecency and that the person so charged had reasonable cause to believe and did
in fact believe that the
girl was of or above the age of sixteen
years.
(Inserted
by 16 of 1960, s. 9.)
Indecently insulting or annoying females
(4)
Whoever, intending to insult the modesty of any woman or girl, utters any word,
makes any sound or gesture, or exhibits any object,
intending that such word or
sound shall be heard, or that such gesture or object shall be seen, by such
woman or girl, or whoever
intrudes upon the privacy of a woman or girl by doing
an act of a nature likely to offend her modesty, is guilty of a misdemeanour,
and is liable to imprisonment for one
year.
(Amended
by 11 of 1948, s. 2, and by 21 of 1950, s. 3.).
Defilement of girl under thirteen years of age
155.-(1)
Any person who unlawfully and carnally knows any girl under the age of thirteen
years is guilty of a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for life, with or
without corporal
punishment.
(2)
Any person who attempts to have unlawful carnal knowledge of any girl under the
age of thirteen years is guilty of a misdemeanour,
and is liable to imprisonment
for *five years, with or without corporal
punishment.
*Amended by
Ordinance No. 12 of
1969.
(3)
It is no defence to a charge for unlawful carnal knowledge of a girl under the
age of thirteen years to prove that she consented
to the act.
Defilement of girl between thirteen and sixteen years of age
156.-(1)
Any person who-
(a) unlawfully and carnally knows or attempts to have unlawful carnal knowledge of any girl being of or above the age of thirteen years and under the age of sixteen years; or
Defilement of idiots or imbeciles
(b) unlawfully and carnally knows or attempts to have unlawful carnal knowledge of any female *person suffering from severe subnormality under circumstances which do not amount to rape but which prove that the offender knew at the time of the commission of the offence that the woman or girl was *a person suffering from severe subnormality,
*Amended by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969
is guilty of a misdemeanour,
and is liable to imprisonment for *five years, with or without corporal
punishment:
*Amended by Ordinance No. 12 of
1969
Provided
that it shall be a sufficient defence to any charge under paragraph (a) if it
shall be made to appear to the court before
whom the charge shall be brought
that the person so charged had reasonable cause to believe and did in fact
believe that the girl
was of or above the age of sixteen
years.
(2)
No prosecution shall be commenced for an offence under paragraph (a) of
subsection (1) more than twelve months after the commission
of the
offence.
(3)
It is no defence to any charge under paragraph (a) of subsection (1) to prove
that the girl consented to the act.
Procuration
157.-(1)
Any person who-
(a) procures or attempts to procure any girl or woman under the age of twenty-one years, not being a common prostitute or of known immoral character, to have unlawful connection, either in Fiji or elsewhere, with any other person or persons; or
(b) procures or attempts to procure any woman or girl to become, either in Fiji or elsewhere, a common prostitute; or
(c) procures or attempts to procure any woman or girl to leave Fiji, with intent that she may become an inmate of or frequent a brothel elsewhere; or
(d) procures or attempts to procure any woman or girl to leave her usual place of abode in Fiji (such place not being a brothel), with intent that she may for the purposes of prostitution become an inmate of or frequent a brothel either in Fiji or elsewhere,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for two years, with or
without corporal
punishment:
Provided
that no person shall be convicted of any offence under this section upon the
evidence of one witness only, unless such witness
be corroborated in some
material particular by evidence implicating the accused.
Consent no defence
(2)
It is no defence to any charge under this section to show that the girl or woman
procured was procured with her consent.
Procuring defilement of woman by threats or fraud or administering drugs
158.
Any person
who-
(a) by threats or intimidation procures or attempts to procure any woman or girl to have any unlawful carnal connection either in Fiji or elsewhere; or
(b) by false pretences or false representations procures any woman or girl, not being a common prostitute or of known immoral character, to have any unlawful carnal connection, either in Fiji or elsewhere; or
(c) applies, administers to, or causes to be taken by any woman or girl any drug, matter or thing, with intent to stupefy or overpower so as thereby to enable any person to have unlawful carnal connection with such woman or girl,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for two years, with or
without corporal
punishment:
Provided
that no person shall be convicted of an offence under this section upon the
evidence of one witness only, unless such witness
be corroborated in some
material particular by evidence implicating the accused.
Householder permitting defilement of girl under thirteen years of age on his premises
159.
Any person who, being the owner or occupier of premises, or having or acting or
assisting in the management or control thereof,
induces or knowingly suffers any
girl under the age of thirteen years to resort to or be upon such premises for
the purpose of being
unlawfully and carnally known by any man, whether such
carnal knowledge is intended to be with any particular man or generally, is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for five years, with or
without corporal
punishment:
Provided
that it shall be a sufficient defence to any charge under this section if it
shall be made to appear to the court before
whom the charge shall be brought
that the person so charged had reasonable cause to believe and did in fact
believe that the girl
was of or above the age of sixteen years.
Householder permitting defilement of girl under sixteen years of age on his premises
160.
Any person who, being the owner or occupier of premises, or having or acting or
assisting in the management or control thereof,
induces or knowingly suffers any
girl of or above the age of thirteen years and under the age of sixteen years to
resort to or be
upon such premises for the purpose of being unlawfully and
carnally known by any man, whether such carnal knowledge is intended to
be with
any particular man or generally, is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to
imprisonment for two years, with or without
corporal
punishment:
Provided
that it shall be a sufficient defence to any charge under this section if it
shall be made to appear to the court before
whom the charge is brought that the
person so charged had reasonable cause to believe and did in fact believe that
the girl was of
or above the age of sixteen years.
Detention with intent or in brothel
161.
(1) Any person who detains any woman or girl against her will-
(a) in or upon any premises with intent that she may be unlawfully and carnally known by any man. whether any particular man or generally; or
(b) in a brothel,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for two years, with or
without corporal punishment.
Constructive detention by withholding clothes
(2)
When a woman or girl is in or upon any premises for the purpose of having any
unlawful carnal connection, or is in any brothel,
a person shall be deemed to
detain such woman or girl in or upon such premises or in such brothel if, with
intent to compel or induce
her to remain in or upon such premises or in such
brothel, such person withholds from such woman or girl any wearing apparel or
other
property belonging to her, or where wearing apparel has been lent or
otherwise supplied to such woman or girl by or by the directions
of such person,
such person threatens such woman or girl with legal proceedings if she takes
away with her the wearing apparel so
lent or
supplied.
No
legal proceedings, whether civil or criminal, shall be taken against any such
woman or girl for taking away or being found in possession
of any such wearing
apparel as was necessary to enable her to leave such premises or
brothel.
Selling minors under the age of sixteen years for immoral purposes
162.-(1)
Any parent or any other person having the custody, charge or care of a minor
under the age of sixteen years who sells, lets
for hire or otherwise disposes of
such minor with intent that such minor shall at any age be employed or used for
the purpose of
prostitution or illicit sexual intercourse with any person or for
any unlawful and immoral purpose, or knowing it to be likely that
such minor at
any age will be employed or used for any such purpose, is guilty of a
misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for
two years, with or without
corporal
punishment.
(2)
When a minor under the age of sixteen years is sold, let for hire or otherwise
disposed of to a common prostitute or other person
of known immoral character,
the parent or person so disposing of such minor shall, until the contrary is
proved, be deemed to have
disposed of such minor with the intent mentioned in
this section.
Buying minors under the age of sixteen years for immoral purposes
163.-(1)
Any person who buys, hires or otherwise obtains possession of any minor under
the age of sixteen years with intent that such
minor shall at any age be
employed or used for the purpose of prostitution or illicit sexual intercourse
with any person or for any
unlawful and immoral purpose or knowing it to be
likely that such minor at any age will be employed or used for any such purpose,
is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for two years, with
or without corporal
punishment.
(2)
Any common prostitute or other person of known immoral character who buys, hires
or otherwise obtains possession of a minor under
the age of sixteen years shall,
until the contrary is proved, be deemed to have obtained possession of such
minor with the intent
mentioned in this section.
Power of search
164.-(1)
If it appears to any magistrate, on information made before him on oath by any
parent, relative or guardian of any woman or
girl or other person who, in the
opinion of the magistrate, is acting
bona
fide in the
interests of any woman or girl, that there is reasonable cause to suspect that
such woman or girl is unlawfully detained for
immoral purposes by any person in
any place within the jurisdiction of such magistrate, such magistrate may issue
a warrant authorising
the person named therein to search for, and, when found,
to take to and detain in a place of safety such woman or girl until she
can be
brought before a magistrate; and the magistrate before whom such woman or girl
is brought may cause her to be delivered up
to her parents or guardians, or
otherwise dealt with as circumstances may permit and
require.
(2)
A magistrate issuing such warrant may, by the same or any other warrant, cause
any person accused of so unlawfully detaining such
woman or girl to he
apprehended and brought before a magistrate and proceedings to be taken for
punishing such person according to
law.
(3)
A woman or girl shall be deemed to be unlawfully detained for immoral purposes
if she is so detained for the purpose of being
unlawfully and carnally known by
any man, whether any particular man or generally; and-
(a) either is under the age of sixteen years; or
(b) if she is of or over the age of sixteen years and under the age of twenty-one years, is so detained against her will or against the will of her father or mother or of any person having the lawful care or charge of her; or
(c) if she is of or over the age of twenty-one years and is so detained against her will.
(4)
Any person authorised by warrant under this section to search for any woman or
girl so detained as aforesaid may enter (if need
be, by force) any house,
building or other place mentioned in the warrant, and may remove such woman
therefrom.
(5)
Every warrant issued under this section shall be addressed to and executed by
some officer of police who shall be accompanied
by the parent, relative or
guardian or other person making the information if such person so desires,
unless the magistrate shall
otherwise direct.
Authority of court as to custody of girls
165.
Where on the trial of any offence under sections
149
to
164
inclusive it is proved to the satisfaction of the court that the seduction,
prostitution or unlawful detention of any female under
the age of twenty-one
years has been caused, encouraged or favoured by her father, mother, guardian,
master or mistress, the court
may divest such father, mother, guardian. master
or mistress of all authority over her and appoint any person or persons willing
to take charge of such female to be her guardian until she has attained the age
of twenty-one years or any age below this as the
court may direct and the court
may from time to time rescind or vary such order by the appointment of any other
person or persons
as such guardian or in any other respect.
Male person living on earnings of prostitution or persistently soliciting
166.-(1)
Every male person who-
(a) knowingly lives wholly or in part on the earnings of prostitution; or
(b) in any public place persistently solicits or importunes for immoral purposes,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour. In the case of a second or subsequent conviction under
this section the court may, in addition to any
term of imprisonment awarded,
sentence the offender to corporal
punishment.
(2)
Where a male person is proved to live with or to be habitually in the company of
a prostitute or is proved to have exercised control,
direction or influence over
the movements of a prostitute in such a manner as to show that he is aiding,
abetting or compelling her
prostitution with any other person, or generally, he
shall unless he shall satisfy the court to the contrary be deemed to be
knowingly
living on the earnings of prostitution.
Woman living on earnings of prostitution or aiding, etc. for gain prostitution of another woman
167.
Every woman who knowingly lives wholly or in part on the earnings of
prostitution, or who is proved to have, for the purpose of
gain, exercised
control, direction or influence over the movements of a prostitute in such a
manner as to show that she is aiding,
abetting or compelling her prostitution
with any person, or generally, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
*Loitering or soliciting for the purposes of prostitution
168.-(1)
Any common prostitute who loiters or solicits in any public place shall be
guilty of an
offence.
(2)
Any person who, in any public place, solicits for immoral purposes shall be
guilty of an
offence.
(3)
Any person guilty of an offence under the provisions of either of the
subsections (1) or (2) shall be liable on conviction, in
respect of a first
offence, to a fine not exceeding fifty dollars and in respect of a subsequent
offence, to a fine not exceeding
fifty dollars or to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding three months or to both such fine and
imprisonment.
(4)
Any police officer may arrest without warrant any person he finds in any public
place whom he reasonably suspects to be committing
an offence under the
provisions of this
section.
(5)
For the purposes of this section, "public place" includes the doorways and
entrances of premises abutting on any public way and
any around adjoining and
open to any public
place.
*Inserted by Act
No. 11 of 1971.
Suspicious premises
169.
If it is made to appear to a magistrate by information on oath that there is
reason to suspect that any house or any part of a house
is used by a woman or
girl for purposes of prostitution, and that any person residing in or
frequenting the house is living wholly
or in part on the earnings of the
prostitute, or is exercising control, direction or influence over the movements
of the prostitute,
the magistrate may issue a warrant authorising any police
officer to enter and search the house and to arrest such person.
Brothels
170.
Any person who-
(a) keeps or manages or acts or assists in the management of a brothel; or
(b) being the tenant, lessee or occupier of any premises knowingly permits such premises or any part thereof to be used as a brothel or for the purposes of habitual prostitution; or
(c) being the lessor or landlord of any premises or the agent of such lessor or landlord lets the same or any part thereof with the knowledge that such premises or some part thereof are or is to be used as a brothel or is wilfully a party to the continued use of such premises or any part thereof as a brothel,
is
guilty of a
misdemeanour.
(Amended
by 12 of 1969, s. 24.)
Conspiracy to defile
171.
Any person who conspires with another to induce any woman or girl, by means of
any false pretence or other fraudulent means, to
permit any man to have unlawful
carnal knowledge of her is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for
three years, with
or without corporal punishment.
Attempts to procure abortion
172.
Any person who, with intent to procure the miscarriage of a woman, whether she
is or is not with child, unlawfully administers to
her or causes her to take any
poison or other noxious thing, or uses any force of any kind, or uses any other
means whatsoever, is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for
fourteen years.
Abortion by woman with child
173.
Any woman who, being with child, with intent to procure her own miscarriage,
unlawfully administers to herself any poison or other
noxious thing, or uses any
force of any kind, or uses any other means whatsoever, or permits any such thing
or means to be administered
or used to her, is guilty of a felony, and is liable
to imprisonment for seven years.
Supplying drugs or instruments to procure abortion
174.
Any person who unlawfully supplies to or procures for any person any thing
whatsoever, knowing that it is intended to be unlawfully
used with intent to
procure the miscarriage of a woman, whether she is or is not with child, is
guilty of a felony, and is liable
to imprisonment for three
years.
Unnatural offences
175.
Any person who-
(a) has carnal knowledge of any person against the order of nature; or
(b) has carnal knowledge of an animal; or
(c) permits a male person to have carnal knowledge of him or her against the order of nature,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen years, with or
without corporal punishment.
Attempts to commit unnatural offences and indecent assaults
176.
Any person who attempts to commit any of the offences specified in section
175,
or who is guilty of any assault with intent to commit the same, or of any
indecent assault upon any male person, is guilty of a
felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for seven years, with or without corporal
punishment.
Indecent practices between males
177.
Any male person who, whether in public or private, commits any act of gross
indecency with another male person, or procures another
male person to commit
any act of gross indecency with him, or attempts to procure the commission of
any such act by any male person
with himself or with another male person,
whether in public or private, is guilty of a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for
five years, with or without corporal punishment.
Incest by males
178.-(1)
Any male person who has carnal knowledge of a female person, who is to his
knowledge his granddaughter, daughter, sister or
mother, is guilty of a felony,
and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years:
Provided
that if it is alleged in the information or charge and proved that the female
person is under the age of thirteen years,
the offender shall be liable to
imprisonment for life.
Consent immaterial
(2)
It is immaterial that the carnal knowledge was had with the consent of the
female person.
Attempt
(3)
If any male person attempts to commit any such offence as aforesaid he is guilty
of a misdemeanour.
Order for guardianship
(4)
On the conviction before any court of any male person of an offence under this
section, or of an attempt to commit the same, against
any female under the age
of twenty-one years, it shall be in the power of the court to divest the
offender of all authority over
such female, and, if the offender is the guardian
of such female, to remove the offender from such guardianship, and in any such
case to appoint any person or persons to be the guardian or guardians of such
female during her minority or any less period, and
the court may at any time
vary or rescind the order by the appointment of any other person as such
guardian, or in any other respect.
Incest by females
179.
Any female person of or above the age of sixteen years who with consent permits
her grandfather, father, brother or son to have
carnal knowledge of her (knowing
him to be her grandfather, father, brother or son, as the case may be) is guilty
of a felony, and
is liable to imprisonment for seven years.
Test of relationship
180.
In sections
178
and
179
the expressions "brother" and "sister" respectively include half-brother and
half-sister, and the provisions of the said sections
shall apply whether the
relationship between the person charged with an offence and the person with whom
the offence is alleged to
have been committed is or is not traced through lawful
wedlock.
Sanction of *Director of Public Prosecutions
181.
No prosecution for an offence under sections
178
or
179
shall be commenced without the sanction of the *Director of Public
Prosecutions.
*Amended by
Order 8th October, 1970.
Knowledge of age of female immaterial
182.
Except as otherwise expressly stated, it is immaterial in the case of any of the
offences committed with respect to a woman or girl
under a specified age, that
the accused person did not know that the woman or girl was under that age, or
believed that she was not
under that age.
Definition of carnal knowledge
183.
Whenever, upon the trial for any offence punishable under this Code, it may be
necessary to prove carnal knowledge, it shall not
be necessary to prove the
actual emission of seed in order to constitute a carnal knowledge, but the
carnal knowledge shall be deemed
complete upon proof of penetration
only.
CHAPTER XVIII-OFFENCES RELATING TO MARRIAGE
Fraudulent pretence of marriage
184.
Any person who wilfully and by fraud causes any woman who is not lawfully
married to him to believe that she is lawfully married
to him and to cohabit or
have sexual intercourse with him in that belief, is guilty of a felony, and is
liable to imprisonment for
ten years.
Bigamy
185.
Any person who, having a husband or wife living, goes through a ceremony of
marriage which is void by reason of its taking place
during the life of such
husband or wife, is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for five
years:
Provided
that this section shall not extend to any person whose marriage with such
husband or wife has been declared void by a court
of competent jurisdiction, nor
to any person who contracts a marriage during the life of a former husband or
wife, if such husband
or wife, at the time of the subsequent marriage, shall
have been continually absent from such person for the space of seven years,
and
shall not have been beard of by such person as being alive within that
time.
Marriage ceremony fraudulently gone through without lawful marriage
186.
Any person who dishonestly or with fraudulent intention goes through the
ceremony of marriage, knowing that he is not thereby lawfully
married, is guilty
of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for five years
CHAPTER
XIX-NUISANCES AND OTHER
MISCELLANEOUS
OFFENCES
Common nuisance
187.
Any person who does an act not authorised by law or omits to discharge a legal
duty and thereby causes any common injury, or danger
or annoyance. or obstructs
or causes inconvenience to the public in the exercise of common rights, commits
the misdemeanour termed
a common nuisance, and is liable to imprisonment for one
year.
It
is immaterial that the act or omission complained of is convenient to a larger
number of the public than it inconveniences, but
the fact that it facilitates
the lawful exercise of their rights by a part of the public may show that it is
not a nuisance to any
of the public,
Traffic in obscene publications
188.-(1)
Any person who-
(a) for the purpose of or by way of trade or for the purpose of distribution or public exhibition, makes, produces or has in his possession any one or more obscene writing, drawings, prints, paintings, printed matter, pictures, posters, emblems, photographs, cinematograph films, or any other obscene objects, or any other object tending to corrupt morals; or
(b) for any of the purposes above-mentioned imports, conveys or exports, or causes to he imported, conveyed or exported, any such matters or things, or in any manner whatsoever puts any of them in circulation; or
(c) carries on or takes in any business, whether public or private, concerned with any such matters or things, or deals in any such matters or things in any manner whatsoever, or distributes any of them or exhibits any of them publicly, or makes a business of lending any of them; or
(d) advertises or makes known by any means whatsoever with a view to assisting the circulation of, or traffic in any such matters or things, that a person is engaged in any of the acts referred to in this section, or advertises or makes known how, or from whom, any such matters or things can be procured either directly or indirectly; or
(e) publicly exhibits any indecent show or performance or any show or performance tending to corrupt morals,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for two years or to a
fine of two hundred
dollars.
(2)
If, in respect of any of the offences specified in paragraphs (a), (b), (c), or
(d) of subsection (1), any constituent element
thereof is committed in Fiji,
such commission shall be sufficient to render the person accused of such offence
triable therefor in
Fiji.
(3)
A court, on convicting any person of an offence against this section, may order
to be destroyed any matter or thing made, possessed
or used for the purpose of
such
offence.
(4)
A court may, on the application of the *Director of Public Prosecutions or a
Crown Counsel or a Superintendent of Police, order
the destruction of any
obscene matter or thing to which this section relates, whether any person may or
may not have been convicted
under the provisions of this section in respect of
such obscene matter or thing.
Offences in connexion with street and house to house collections
189.-(1)
In this section-
"collection" means an appeal to the public or any class of the public, made by means of visits from house to house or by soliciting in public ways or other public places, or by both such means, to give money or other property, not being money or property due or about to fall due from the donors under or by virtue of any written law, contract or other legal obligation;
"collector" means, in relation to a collection, a person who makes such an appeal by either of the said means;
"house" includes a place of business;
"promoter" means, in relation to a collection, a person who causes others to act as collectors for the purposes of a collection.
(2)
No person shall assist or take part in a collection without the written
authority of the promoter (if any) of such collection.
Every person so
authorised shall produce such written authority forthwith for inspection on
demand being made by any police officer
or any person solicited by such
collector.
(3)
No collection shall be made in any part of the carriageway of any
street.
(4)
No collection shall be made in any place whatsoever to the obstruction,
annoyance or intimidation of any
person.
(5)
Except with the permission of a gazetted officer of the police or district
officer not more than two persons shall act as collectors
at the same
place.
(6)
No collector shall carry any collecting box, receptacle or tray which does not
bear displayed prominently thereon the name of
the fund for which the collection
is being
made.
(7)
No person in connexion with any collection shall display or use a written
authority or other document or thing intended, calculated
or likely to cause any
person to believe that the person displaying or using the same is an authorised
collector for the purposes
of a collection when such is not the
case.
(8)
A police officer in uniform may require any person whom he believes to be acting
as a collector for the purposes of a collection
to declare to him immediately
his name and address, and such person shall comply with such
requirement.
(9)
A police officer may arrest without warrant any person contravening, or failing
to comply with the provisions of subsection (3),
(4), (5) or
(8).
(10)
Any person contravening or failing to comply with any of the provisions of this
section shall be guilty of an offence and shall
be liable to a fine not
exceeding, one hundred dollars or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six
months or to both such fine
and
imprisonment.
(Section
inserted by 16 of 1960, s. 10)
Unlawful use of locomotives etc.
190.
Any person who unlawfully or without the permission of some person authorised to
give it uses or travels upon any locomotive, carriage
or truck in or upon any
railway or tramline, is guilty of an offence, and is liable to a fine of ten
dollars or to imprisonment for
two months.
Inciting dogs to attack
191.
Any person who incites a dog or other animal to attack, worry or put in bodily.
fear any other person or any animal, is guilty of
an offence, and is liable to
imprisonment for two months or to a fine of twenty dollars.
Wearing of uniform without authority prohibited
192.-(
1) Any person who, not being a person serving in Her Majesty's naval military or
air forces, or in any constabulary or police
force in the United Kingdom, or in
any country or territory of the Commonwealth, wears without the permission of
the *Minister the
uniform of any of those forces, or any dress having the
appearance or bearing any of the regimental or other distinctive marks of
such
uniform, is guilty of an offence, and is liable to imprisonment for one month or
to a fine of twenty,
dollars:
* Amended by
Order 8th October,
1970.
Provided
that nothing in this section shall prevent any person from wearing any uniform
or dress in the course of a stage play performed
in any place in which stage
play's may lawfully, be publicly performed, or in the course of a music-hall or
circus performance, or
in the course of any
bona
fide
military representation
Bringing contempt on uniform
(2)
Any person who unlawfully wears the uniform of any of the forces aforesaid, or
any dress having the appearance or bearing any
of the regimental or other
distinctive marks of any such uniform, in such a manner or in such circumstances
as to be likely, to bring
contempt on that uniform, or employs any other person
so to wear such uniform or dress, is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable
to
imprisonment for three months or to a fine of forty dollars.
Importation and sale of uniform, etc., without authority prohibited
(3)
Any person who, not being in the service of Fiji or having previously received
the written permission of the *Minister so to do,
imports or sells or has in his
possession for sale any such uniform as aforesaid, or the buttons or badges
appropriate thereto, is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment
for six months, or to a fine of two hundred
dollars.
*Amended by
Order 8th October, 1970.
Forfeiture of uniform, etc. on conviction
(4)
When any person has been convicted of any offence under this section, the
uniform, dress, button, badge or other thing in respect
of which the offence has
been committed shall be forfeited unless the *Minister otherwise
orders.
*Amended by Order
8th October, 1970.
Negligent act likely to spread infection of disease dangerous to life
193.
Any person who unlawfully or negligently does any act which is, and which he
knows or has reason to believe to be, likely to spread
the infection of any
disease dangerous to life, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Adulteration of food or drink intended for sale
194.
Any person who subjects any article of food or drink to such treatment as to
make such article noxious as food or drink or of less
nutritive value, intending
to sell such article as food or drink, or knowing it to be likely that the same
will be sold as food or
drink, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Sale of noxious food or drink
195.-(1)
Any person who sells, or offers or exposes for sale, as food or drink. any
article which has been rendered or has become noxious,
or is in a state unfit
for food or drink, knowing or having reason to believe that the same is noxious
as food or drink, is guilty
of a
misdemeanour.
(2)
Any person selling any article which has been rendered or has become noxious
shall be taken to have knowledge that the same is
noxious until the contrary be
proved.
Fouling air
196.
Any person who voluntarily vitiates the atmosphere in any place so as to make it
noxious to the health of persons in general dwelling
or carrying on business in
the neighbourhood or passing along a public way, is guilty of a
misdemeanour.
Criminal trespass
197.-(1)
Any person who-
(a) enters into or upon property in the possession of another with intent to commit an offence or to intimidate or annoy any person lawfully in possession of such property:
†Provided that the ‡Minister responsible for Fijian affairs may certify that a person or persons are lawfully in possession of native land;
†Inserted by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969
‡Amended by Order 13th November, 1970.
(b) having lawfully entered into or upon such property unlawfully remains
there
with intent thereby to intimidate, insult or annoy any such person or with
intent to commit any offence; or
(c) unlawfully persists in coming or remaining upon such property after being warned not to come thereon or to depart therefrom:
*Provided that the †Minister responsible for Fijian affairs may give such a warning in relation to native land,
*Inserted by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969
†Amended by Order 13th November, 1970
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for three
months.
If
the property upon which the offence is committed is any building, tent or vessel
used as a human dwelling, or any building used
as a place of worship, or as a
place for the custody of property, the offender is liable to imprisonment for
one
year.
(2)
Any person who enters by night any dwelling-house, or any verandah or passage
attached thereto, or any yard, garden or other land
adjacent to or within the
cartilage of such dwelling-house, without lawful excuse, is guilty of a
misdemeanour, and is liable to
imprisonment for one year.
(Amended by 11 of 1948, s. 3)
Division IV. Offences Against the Person
CHAPTER XX-MURDER AND MANSLAUGHTER
Manslaughter
198.
Any person who by an unlawful act or omission causes the death of another person
is guilty of the felony termed manslaughter. An
unlawful omission is an omission
amounting to culpable negligence to discharge a duty tending to the preservation
of life or health,
whether such omission is or is not accompanied by an
intention to cause death or bodily harm.
Murder
199.-(1)
Any person who of malice aforethought causes the death of another person by an
unlawful act or omission is guilty of
murder:
Provided
that it shall be manslaughter, and shall not be murder, for a person acting in
pursuance of a suicide pact between him and
another to kill the
other.
(2)
Where it is shown that a person charged with the murder of another killed the
other, it shall be for the defence to prove that
the person charged was acting
in pursuance of a suicide pact between him and the
other.
(3)
For the purposes of this section "suicide pact" means a common agreement between
two or more persons having for its object the
death of all of them, whether or
not each is to take his own life, but nothing done by a person who enters into a
suicide pact shall
be treated as done by him in pursuance of the pact unless it
is done while he has the settled intention of dying in pursuance of
the
pact.
(Inserted by
6 of 1959, s. 5, and amended by 17 of 1966, s. 5, and 28 of 1972, s.
2).
Punishment of murder
200.
Any person convicted of murder shall be sentenced to imprisonment for
life.
(Substituted
by Act 4 of 1979, s. 2.)
Punishment of manslaughter
201.
Any person who commits the felony of manslaughter is liable to imprisonment for
life.
Malice aforethought
202.
Malice aforethought shall be deemed to be established by evidence proving any
one or more of the following circumstances:
(a) an intention to cause the death of or to do grievous harm to any person, whether such person is the person actually killed or not;
(b) knowledge that the act or omission causing death will probably cause the death of or grievous harm to some person, whether such person is the person actually killed or not, although such knowledge is accompanied by indifference whether death or grievous bodily harm is caused or not, or by a wish that it may not be caused.
(Amended by Ordinance 6 of 1959, s. 6.)
Killing on provocation
203.
When a person who unlawfully kills another under circumstances which, but for
the provisions of this section, would constitute murder,
does the act which
causes death in the heat of passion caused by sudden provocation as hereinafter
defined, and before there is time
for his passion to cool, he is guilty of
manslaughter only.
Provocation defined
204.
The term "provocation" means, except as hereinafter stated, any wrongful act or
insult of such a nature as to be likely, when done
to an ordinary person, or in
the presence of an ordinary person to another person who is under his immediate
care, or to whom he
stands in a conjugal, parental, filial or fraternal
relation, or in the relation of master or servant, to deprive him of the power
of self-control and to induce him to commit an assault of the kind which the
person charged committed upon the person by whom the
act or insult is done or
offered.
When
such an act or insult is done or offered by one person to another, or in the
presence of another to a person who is under the
immediate care of that other,
or to whom the latter stands in any such relation as aforesaid, the former is
said to give to the latter
provocation for an
assault.
A
lawful act is not provocation to any person for an
assault.
An
act which a person does in consequence of incitement given by another person in
order to induce him to do the act and thereby to
furnish an excuse for
committing an assault is not provocation to that other person for an
assault.
An
arrest which is unlawful is not necessarily provocation for an assault, but it
may be evidence of provocation to a person who believes
and has reasonable
grounds for believing the arrest to be
unlawful.
(Amended
by Ordinance 16 of 1960, s. 11)
Infanticide
205.
Where a woman by any wilful act or omission causes the death of her child being
a child under the age of twelve months, but at the
time of the act or omission
the balance of her mind was disturbed by reason of her not having fully
recovered from the effect of
giving birth to the child or by reason of the
effect of lactation consequent upon the birth of the child, then,
notwithstanding that
the circumstances were such that but for the provisions of
this section the offence would have amounted to murder, she shall be guilty
of
felony, to wit, infanticide, and may for such offence be dealt with and punished
as if she had been guilty of manslaughter of
the child.
Causing death defined
206.
A person is deemed to have caused the death of another person although his act
is not the immediate or the sole cause of death in
any of the following
cases:
(a) if he inflicts bodily injury on another person in consequence of which that other person undergoes surgical or medical treatment which causes death. In this case it is immaterial whether the treatment was proper or mistaken, if it was employed in good faith and with common knowledge and skill; but the person inflicting the injury is not deemed to have caused the death if the treatment which was its immediate cause was not employed in good faith or was so employed without common knowledge or skill;
(b) if he inflicts bodily injury on another which would not have caused death if the injured person had submitted to proper surgical or medical treatment or had observed proper precautions as to his mode of living;
(c) if by actual or threatened violence he causes such other person to perform an act which causes the death of such person, such act being a means of avoiding such violence which in the circumstances would appear natural to the person whose death is so caused;
(d) if by any act or omission he hastened the death of a person suffering under any disease or injury which apart from such act or omission would have caused death;
(e) if his act or omission would not have caused death unless it had been accompanied by an act or omission of the person killed or of other persons.
When child deemed to be a person
207.
A child becomes a person capable of being killed when it has completely
proceeded in a living state from the body of its mother,
whether it has breathed
or not, and whether it has an independent circulation or not, and whether the
navel-string is severed or
not.
Limitation as to time of death
208.
A person is not deemed to have killed another if the death of that person does
not take place within a year and a day of the cause
of
death.
Such
period is reckoned inclusive of the day on which the last unlawful act
contributing to the cause of death was
done.
When
the cause of death is an omission to observe or perform a duty, the period is
reckoned inclusive of the day on which the omission
ceased.
When
the cause of death is in part an unlawful act, and in part an omission to
observe or perform a duty, the period is reckoned inclusive
of the day on which
the last unlawful act was done or the day on which the omission ceased,
whichever is the later.
CHAPTER XXI-DUTIES RELATING TO THE PRESERVATION OF LIFE AND HEALTH
Responsibility of person who has charge of another
209.
It is the duty of every person having charge of another who is unable by reason
of age, sickness, unsoundness of mind, detention
or any other cause to withdraw
himself from such charge, and who is unable to provide himself with the
necessaries of life, whether
the charge is undertaken under a contract or is
imposed by law, or arises by reason of any act, whether lawful of unlawful, of
the
person who has such charge, to provide for that other person the necessaries
of life; and he shall be deemed to have caused any consequences
which adversely
affect the life or health of the other person by reason of any omission to
perform that duty.
Duty of head of family
210.
It is the duty of every person who, as head of a family, has charge of a child
under the age of fourteen years, being a member of
his household, to provide the
necessaries of life for such child; and he shall be deemed to have caused any
consequences which adversely
affect the life or health of the child by reason of
any omission to perform that duty, whether the child is helpless or
not.
Duty of masters
211.
It is the duty of every person who as master or mistress has contracted to
provide necessary food, clothing or lodging for any servant
or apprentice under
the age of sixteen years to provide the same; and he or she shall be deemed to
have caused any consequences which
adversely affect the life or health of the
servant or apprentice by reason of any omission to perform that
duty.
Duty of persons doing dangerous acts
212.
It is the duty of every person who, except in a case of necessity, undertakes to
administer surgical or medical treatment to any
other person, or to do any,
other lawful act which is or may be dangerous to human life or health, to have
reasonable skill and to
use reasonable care in doing such act; and he shall be
deemed to have caused any consequences which adversely affect the life or
health
of any person by reason of any omission to observe or perform that
duty.
Duty of persons in charge of dangerous things
213.
It is the duty of every person who has in his charge or under his control
anything, whether living or inanimate, and whether moving
or stationary, of such
a nature that, in the absence of care or precaution in its use or management,
the life, safety or health of
any person may be endangered, to use reasonable
care and take reasonable precaution to avoid such danger; and he shall be deemed
to have caused any consequences which adversely affect the life or health of any
person by reason of any omission to perform that
duty.
CHAPTER XXII-OFFENCES CONNECTED WITH MURDER AND SUICIDE
Attempt to murder
214.
Any person who-
(a) attempts unlawfully to cause the death of another; or
(b) with intent unlawfully to cause the death of another does any act, or omits to do any act which it is his duty to do, such act or omission being of such a nature as to be likely to endanger human life,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life.
Attempt to murder by convict
215.
Any person who, being under sentence of imprisonment for three years or more,
attempts to commit murder, is liable to imprisonment
for life, with or without
corporal punishment.
Accessory after the fact to murder
216.
Any person who becomes an accessory after the fact to murder is guilty of a
felony, and is liable to imprisonment for seven years.
Conspiracy to murder
217.
Any person who conspires with any other person to kill any person, whether such
person is in Fiji or elsewhere, is guilty of a felony,
is liable to imprisonment
for fourteen years.
*Suicide to cease to be offence
218.
The rule of law whereby, it is a crime for a person to commit suicide is hereby
abrogated.
*Inserted by
Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
*Liability for complicity in another's suicide
219.-(1)
Any person who wilfully aids, abets, counsels or procures the suicide of
another, or an attempt by another to commit suicide,
shall be guilty of an
offence and shall be liable on conviction to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding fourteen
years.
(2)
If on the trial of an indictment for murder or manslaughter it is proved that
the accused aided, abetted, counselled or procured
the suicide of the person in
question, the accused may he found guilty of that
offence.
*Inserted by
Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
Concealing the birth of children
220.
Any person who, when a woman is delivered of a child, endeavours by any secret
disposition of the dead body of the child to conceal
the birth, whether the
child died before, at, or after its birth is guilty of a
misdemeanour.
Killing unborn child
221.-(1)
Any person who, with intent to destroy the life of a child capable of being born
alive, by any wilful act causes a child to die
before it has an existence
independent of its mother is guilty of the felony of child destruction, and is
liable to imprisonment
for
life:
Provided
that no person shall be found guilty of an offence under this section unless it
is proved that the act which caused the death
of the child was not done in good
faith for the purpose of preserving the life of the
mother.
(2)
For the purposes of this section, evidence that a woman had at any material time
been pregnant for a period of twenty-eight weeks
or more shall be
prima
facie proof
that she was at that time pregnant of a child capable of being born
alive.
CHAPTER XXIII-OFFENCES ENDANGERING LIFE AND HEALTH
Disabling in order to commit felony or misdemeanour
222.
Any person who, by any means calculated to choke, suffocate or strangle, and
with intent to commit or to facilitate the commission
of a felony, or
misdemeanour, or to facilitate the flight of an offender after the commission or
attempted commission of a felony
or misdemeanour, renders or attempts to render
any person incapable of resistance, is guilty of a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment
for life, *with or without corporal
punishment.
* Inserted by
Act No. 15 of 1973.
Stupefying in order to commit felony or misdemeanour
223.
Any person who, with intent to commit or to facilitate the commission of a
felony or misdemeanour, or to facilitate the flight of
an offender after the
commission or attempted commission of a felony, or misdemeanour, administers or
attempts to administer any,
stupefying or overpowering drug or thing to any
person, is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for
life.
Acts intended to cause grievous harm or prevent arrest
224.
Any person who, with intent to maim, disfigure or disable any person, or to do
some grievous harm to any person, or to resist or
prevent the lawful arrest or
detention of any person-
(a) unlawfully wounds or does any grievous harm to any person by any means whatsoever; or
(b) unlawfully attempts in any manner to strike any person with any kind of projectile or with a spear, sword, knife, or other dangerous or offensive weapon; or
(c) unlawfully causes any explosive substance to explode; or
(d) sends or delivers any explosive substance or other dangerous or noxious thing to any person; or
(e) causes any such substance or thing to be taken or received by any person; or
(f) puts any corrosive fluid or any destructive or explosive substance in any place; or
(g) unlawfully casts or throws any such fluid or substance at or upon any person, or otherwise applies any such fluid or substance to the person of any person,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life, *with or without
corporal punishment.
*
Inserted by Act No. 15 of 1973.
Preventing escape from wreck
225.
Any person who unlawfully-
(a) prevents or obstructs any person who is on board of, or is escaping from, a vessel which is in distress or wrecked, in his endeavours to save his life; or
(b) obstructs any person in his endeavours to save the life of any person so situated,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life.
Intentionally endangering safety of persons travelling by railway
226.
Any person who, with intent to injure or to endanger the safety of any person
travelling by any railway, whether a particular person
or not-
(a) places anything on the railway; or
(b) deals with the railway, or with anything whatsoever upon or near the railway, in such manner as to affect or endanger the free and safe use of the railway or the safety of any such person; or
(c) shoots or throws anything at, into, or upon or causes anything to come into contact with any person or thing on the railway; or
(d) shows any light or signal, or in any way deals with any existing light or signal, upon or near the railway; or
(e) by any omission to do any act which it is his duty to do causes the safety of any person to be endangered,
*is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life, with or without
corporal
punishment.
*Inserted by
Act No. 15 of 1973
Grievous harm
227.
Any person who unlawfully †and maliciously does grievous harm to another
is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment
for seven years, *with or
without corporal
punishment.
†Inserted
by Ordinance No. 12 of
1969.
*Inserted by Act
No. 15 of 1973
Attempting to injure by explosive substances
228.
Any person who unlawfully, and with intent to do any harm to another, puts any
explosive substance in any place whatsoever, is guilty
of a felony, and is
liable to imprisonment for fourteen years, *with or without corporal
punishment.
*Inserted by
Act No. 15 of 1973
Maliciously administering poison with intent to harm
229.
Any person who unlawfully, and with intent to injure or annoy another, causes
any poison or noxious thing to be administered to,
or taken by, any person, and
thereby, endangers his life, or does him grievous harm, is guilty of a felony,
and is liable to imprisonment
for fourteen years.
Unlawful wounding
230.
Any person who unlawfully wounds another is guilty of *an offence, and is liable
to imprisonment for two years with or without corporal
punishment.
*Inserted by
Act No. 15 of 1973
Unlawful poisoning
231.
Any person who unlawfully and with intent to injure or annoy any person causes
any poison or other noxious thing to be administered
to, or taken by, any person
is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for three years, *with or
without corporal
punishment.
*Inserted by
Act No. 15 of 1973
†Witchcraft and sorcery
232.
Any person who-
(a) holds himself out as being able to cause by supernatural means, fear, annoyance or injury to another person in mind, person or property; or
(b) pretends to exercise or who practises, whether on an isolated occasion or otherwise, witchcraft or sorcery,
shall
be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to imprisonment for
five
years.
†Inserted
by Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
Failure to supply necessaries
233.
Any person who, being charged with the duty of providing for another the
necessaries of life, without lawful excuse fails to do so,
whereby the life of
that other person is or is likely to be endangered, or his health is or is
likely to be permanently injured,
is guilty of a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for three years.
Surgical operation
234.
A person is not criminally responsible for performing in good faith and with
reasonable care and skill a surgical operation upon
any person for his benefit,
or upon an unborn child for the preservation of the mothers life, if the
performance of the operation
is reasonable, having regard to the patient's state
at the time, and to all the circumstances of the case.
Excess of force
235.
Any person authorised by law or by the consent of the person injured by him to
use force is criminally responsible for any excess,
according to the nature and
quality of the act which constitutes the excess.
Consent
236.
Notwithstanding anything contained in section
235,
consent by a person to the causing of his own death or his own maim does not
affect the criminal responsibility of any person by
whom such death or maim is
caused.
CHAPTER XXIV-CRIMINAL RECKLESSNESS AND NEGLIGENCE
Reckless or negligent acts
237.
Any person who, in a manner so rash or negligent as to endanger human life or to
be likely to cause harm to any other person-
(a) drives any vehicle or rides on any public way; or
(b) navigates, or takes part in the navigation or working of, any vessel; or
(c) does any act with fire or any combustible matter, or omits to take precautions against any probable danger from any fire or any combustible matter in his possession; or
(d) omits to take precautions against any probable danger from any animal in his possession; or
(e) gives medical or surgical treatment to any person whom he has undertaken to treat; or
(f) dispenses, supplies, sells, administers or gives away any medicine poisonous or dangerous matter; or
(g) does any act with respect to, or omits to take proper precautions against any probable danger from, any machinery of which he is solely or partly in charge; or
(h) does any act with respect to, or omits to take proper precautions against any probable danger from, any explosive in his possession,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour.
Causing death by reckless or dangerous driving of motor vehicle
238. (1) Any
person who causes the death of another person by the driving of a motor vehicle
on a road recklessly, or at a speed or in a
manner which is dangerous to the
public, having regard to all the circumstances of the case, including the
nature, condition and
use of the road, and the amount of traffic which is
actually at the time, or which might reasonably be expected to be, on the road,
is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable on conviction to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding five years.
(Inserted
by 25 of 1957, s. 12.)
*(2)
The provisions of sections
30,
31,
32
and
42
of the Traffic Act relating to disqualifications from holding or obtaining a
driving licence, the endorsement of holding driving
licences and restrictions on
prosecution shall apply to prosecutions under the provisions of subsection
(1).
(Cap.
176.)
*Inserted by
Ordinance No. 12 of 1969.
Other negligent acts causing harm
239.
Any, person who unlawfully does any act, or omits to do any act which it is his
duty to do, not being an act or omission specified
in section
237,
by which act or omission harm is caused to any person, is guilty of a
misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for six
months.
(Amended
by 37 of 1966, s. 5)
Dealing in poisonous substances in negligent manner
240.
Whoever does with any poisonous substance, any act in a manner so rash or
negligent as to endanger human life, or to be likely to
cause hurt or injury to
any other person, or knowingly or negligently omits to take such care with any
poisonous substance in his
possession as is sufficient to guard against probable
danger to human life from such poisonous substance, is guilty of a misdemeanour,
and is liable to imprisonment for six months, or to a fine of two hundred
dollars.
Endangering safety of persons travelling by railway
241.
Any person who, by, any unlawful act or omission not specified in section
226,
causes the safety, of any person travelling by any railway to he endangered, is
guilty of a misdemeanour.
Exhibition of false light, mark or buoy
242.
Any person who exhibits any false light, mark or buoy, intending or knowing it
to be likely that such exhibition will mislead any
navigator, is liable to
imprisonment for seven years.
Conveying person by water for hire in unsafe or overloaded vessel
243.
Any person who knowingly or negligently conveys, or causes to be conveyed, for
hire, any person by water in any vessel, when that
vessel is in such a state or
so loaded as to be unsafe, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
CHAPTER XXV-ASSAULTS
Common assault
244.
Any person who unlawfully assaults another is guilty of a misdemeanour, and, if
the assault is not committed in circumstances for
which a greater punishment is
provided in this Code, is liable to imprisonment for one year.
Assault causing actual bodily harm
245.
Any person who commits an assault occasioning actual bodily harm is guilty of a
misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for five
years, *with or without
corporal
punishment.
*Inserted by
Act No. 15 of 1973
Assaults on magistrates and other persons protecting wreck
246.
Any person who assaults and strikes or wounds any magistrate, officer or other
person lawfully authorised in or on account of the
execution of his duty in or
concerning the preservation of any vessel in distress, or of any vessel or goods
or effects wrecked,
stranded or cast on shore, or lying under water, is guilty
of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for seven years.
Assaults punishable with five years imprisonment
247.
Any person who-
(a) assaults any person with intent to commit a felony or to resist or prevent the lawful apprehension or detainer of himself or of any other person for any offence; or
(b) assaults, resists or wilfully obstructs any police officer in the due execution of his duty, or any person acting in aid of such officer; or
(c) assaults any person in pursuance of any unlawful combination or conspiracy to raise the rate of wages, or respecting any trade, business or manufacture or respecting any person concerned or employed therein; or
(d) assaults, resists or obstructs any person engaged in lawful execution of process, or in making a lawful distress with intent to rescue any property lawfully taken under such process or distress; or
(e) assaults any person on account of any act done by him in the execution of any duty imposed on him by law,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for five
years.
CHAPTER XXVI-OFFENCES AGAINST LIBERTY
Definition of kidnapping and abduction
248.
For the purposes of this Chapter-
(a) any person who conveys any person beyond the limits of Fiji without the consent of that person, or of some person legally authorised to consent on behalf of that person, is said to kidnap that person; and
(b) any person who by force compels, or by any deceitful means induces, any person to go from any place, is said to abduct that person.
Punishment for kidnapping
249.
Any person who kidnaps any person is guilty of a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for seven years.
Kidnapping or abducting in order to murder
250.
Any person who kidnaps or abducts any person in order that such person may be
murdered, or may be so disposed of as to be put in
danger of being murdered, is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for ten years.
Kidnapping or abducting with intent to confine person
251.
Any person who kidnaps or abducts any person with intent to cause that person to
be secretly and wrongfully confined, is guilty of
a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for seven years.
Kidnapping or abducting in order to subject person to grievous harm, slavery, etc.
252.
Any person who kidnaps or abducts any person in order that such person may be
subjected, or may be so disposed of as to be put in
danger of being subjected,
to grievous harm, or slavery, or to the unnatural lust of any person, or knowing
it to be likely that
such person will be so subjected or disposed of, is guilty
of a felony. and is liable to imprisonment for ten years.
Wrongfully concealing or keeping in confinement kidnapped or abducted person
253.
Any person who, knowing that any person has been kidnapped or has been abducted,
wrongfully conceals or confines such person, is
guilty of a felony, and shall be
punished in the same manner as if he had kidnapped or abducted such person with
the same intention
or knowledge, or for the same purpose, as that with or for
which he conceals or detains such person in confinement.
Child stealing
254.
Any person who unlawfully, either by force or fraud, leads, or takes away, or
decoys, or entices away, or detains any child under
the age of fourteen years,
with intent to deprive any parent, guardian, or other person having the lawful
care or charge of such
child, or the possession of such child, or with intent to
steal any article upon or about the person of such child, to whomsoever
such
article may belong; and any person who with any such intent, receives or
harbours any such child, knowing the same to have been
by force or fraud led,
taken, decoyed, enticed away, or detained, as in this section before mentioned,
is guilty of a felony, and
is liable to imprisonment for seven
years:
Provided
that no person who shall have claimed in good faith any right to the possession
of such child, or shall be the mother or
shall have claimed to be the father of
an illegitimate child, shall be liable to be prosecuted by virtue hereof, on
account of the
getting possession of such child, or taking such child out of the
possession of any person having the lawful charge thereof.
Abduction of girls under sixteen
255.
Any person who unlawfully takes or causes to be taken any unmarried girl, being
under the age of sixteen years, out of the possession
and against the will of
her father or mother, or of any other person having the lawful care or charge of
her, is guilty of a
misdemeanour.
(Amended
by 29 of 1945, s. 2).
Punishment for wrongful confinement
256.
Whoever wrongfully confines any person is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is
liable to imprisonment for one year or to a fine of four
hundred
dollars.
Unlawful compulsory labour
257.
Any person who unlawfully compels any person to labour against the will of that
person is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Division V.-Offences Relating to Property
CHAPTER XXVII-LARCENY, EMBEZZLEMENT AND CONVERSION
Things capable of being stolen
258.-(1)
Every inanimate thing which has value and is the property of any person, and if
adhering to the realty then after severance
therefrom, is capable if being
stolen:
Provided
that, save as hereinafter expressly provided with respect to fixtures, growing
things, and ore from mines, anything attached
to or forming part of the realty
is not capable of being stolen by the person who severs the same from the
realty, unless after severance
he has abandoned possession
thereof.
(2)
Every tame creature, whether tame by nature or wild by nature and subsequently
tamed, which is the property of any person, is
capable of being
stolen.
(3)
Creatures wild by nature, of a kind which is not ordinarily found in a condition
of natural liberty in Fiji, which are the property
of any person, and which are
usually kept in a state of confinement, are capable of being stolen, whether
they are actually in confinement
or have escaped from
confinement.
(4)
Creatures wild by nature, of a kind which is ordinarily found in a condition of
natural liberty in Fiji, which are the property
of any person, are capable of
being stolen while they are in confinement, and while they are being actually
pursued after escaping
from confinement, but not at any other
time.
(5)
A creature wild by nature is deemed to be in a state of confinement so long as
it is in a den, cage, sty, tank or other small
enclosure, or is otherwise so
placed that it cannot escape, and that its owner can take possession of it at
pleasure.
(6)
Wild creatures in the enjoyment of their natural liberty are not capable of
being stolen, but their dead bodies are capable of
being
stolen:
Provided
that the carcass of a creature wild by nature and not reduced into possession
while living is not capable of being stolen
by the person who has killed such
creature, unless after killing it he has abandoned possession of the
carcass.
(7)
Everything produced by or forming part of the body of a creature capable of
being stolen is capable of being stolen.
Definition of theft
259.-(1)
A person steals who, without the consent of the owner, fraudulently and without
a claim of right made in good faith, takes and
carries away anything capable of
being stolen with intent, at the time of such taking, permanently to deprive the
owner
thereof:
Provided
that a person may be guilty of stealing any such thing notwithstanding that he
has lawful possession thereof, if, being a
bailee or part owner thereof, he
fraudulently converts the same to his own use or the use of any person other
than the
owner.
(2) (a)
The expression "takes" includes obtaining the possession-
(i) by any trick;
(ii) by intimidation;
(iii) under a mistake on the part of the owner with knowledge on the part of the taker that possession has been so obtained; or
(iv) by finding, where at the time of the finding the finder believes that the owner can be discovered by taking reasonable steps.
(b) The expression -carries "away" includes any removal of anything from the place which it occupies, but in the case of a thing attached, only if it has been completely detached.
(c) The expression "owner" includes any part owner, or person having possession or control of, or a special property in, anything capable of being stolen.
Stealing and embezzlement by co-partners, etc.
260.
If any person, who is a member of any co-partnership or is one of two or more
beneficial owners of any property, steals or embezzles
any such property of or
belonging to such co-partnership or to such beneficial owners he is liable to be
dealt with, tried, and punished
as if he had not been or was not a member of
such co-partnership or one of such beneficial owners.
Husband and wife
261.
(1) A wife has the same remedies and redress under this Division for the
protection and security of her own separate property as
if such property
belonged to her as a feme
sole:
Provided
that no proceedings under this Division shall be taken by any wife against her
husband while they are living together as
to or concerning any property claimed
by her, nor while they are living apart as to or concerning any act done by the
husband while
they were living together concerning property claimed by the wife,
unless such property has been wrongfully taken by the husband
when leaving or
deserting or about to leave or desert his wife or for the purpose of giving it
to a
paramour.
(2)
A wife doing an act with respect to any property of her husband, which, if done
by the husband in respect to property of the wife,
would make the husband liable
to criminal proceedings by the wife under this Division, shall be in like manner
liable to criminal
proceedings by her husband.
General punishment for theft
262.-(1)
Stealing for which no special punishment is provided under this Code or any
other Act for the time being in force is simple
larceny and a felony punishable
with imprisonment for five
years.
(2)
Any person who commits the offence of simple larceny after having been
previously convicted of felony, is liable to imprisonment
for ten
years.
(3)
Any person who commits the offence of simple larceny, or any offence made
punishable like simple larceny, after having been previously
convicted of any
misdemeanour punishable under this Chapter or under Chapter XXXV, is liable to
imprisonment for seven years.
Larceny of will
263.
Any person who steals any will, codicil or other testamentary instrument, either
of a dead or a living person, is guilty of a felony,
and is liable to
imprisonment for life.
Larceny of documents of title and other legal documents
264.
Any person who steals the whole or any part of-
(a) any document of title to lands; or
(b) any record, writ, return, panel, petition, process, interrogatory, deposition, affidavit, rule, order, warrant of attorney, or any original document of or belonging to any court of record, or relating to any cause or matter, civil or criminal, begun, depending, or terminated in any such court; or
(c) any original document relating to the business of any office or employment under Her Majesty, and being or remaining in any office appertaining to any court of justice, or in Government House, or in any Government or public office,
is
guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for five years.
Larceny of electricity
265.
Any person who maliciously or fraudulently abstracts, causes to be wasted or
diverted, consumes or uses any electricity is guilty
of a felony, and is liable
to be punished as in the case of simple larceny.
Larceny of ore
266.
Any person who steals, or severs with intent to steal, the ore of any metal, or
any lapis calaminaris manganese, mundick wad, black
cawke, black lead, coal or
cannel coal, from any mine, bed or vein thereof, is guilty of a felony, and is
liable to imprisonment
for two years.
Larceny of postal packets
267.
Any person who-
(a) steals a mail bag; or
(b) steals from a mail bag, post office, office of the post office, or mail, any postal packet in course of transmission by post; or
(c) steals any chattel, money or valuable security out of a postal packet in course of transmission by post; or
(d) stops a mail with intent to rob the mail,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for three
years.
Embezzlement by officer of post office
268.
Any person who, being an officer of the post office, steals or embezzles a
postal packet in course of transmission by post, is guilty
of a felony and is
liable-
(a) if the postal packet contains any chattel, money or valuable security, to imprisonment for life; and
(b) in all other cases to imprisonment for seven years.
Definitions relating to larceny and embezzlement of postal packets
269.
For the purposes of sections
267
and
268-
(a) a postal packet shall be deemed to be in course of transmission by post from the time of its being delivered to a post office to the time of its being delivered to the person to whom it is addressed;
(b) the delivery of a postal packet of any description to a letter carrier or other person authorised to receive postal packets of that description for the post shall be a delivery to a post office; and
(c) the delivery of a postal packet at the house or office of the person to whom the packet is addressed or to him or to his servant or agent or other person considered to be authorised to receive the packet according to the usual manner of delivering that person's postal packets shall be a delivery to the person addressed.
Larceny in dwelling-house
270.
Any person who steals in any dwelling-house any 1 chattel, money 1 or valuable
security-
(a) if the value of the property stolen amounts to *not less than ten dollars; or
*Amended by Act No. 11 of 1971.
(b) if he by any menace or threats puts any person being in such dwelling-house in bodily fear,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen
years.
Larceny from the person
271.
Any person who steals any chattel, money or valuable security from the person of
another is guilty of a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for fourteen
years.
Larceny from ship, dock, etc.
272.
Any person who steals-
(a) any goods in any vessel barge or boat of any description in any haven or any port of entry or discharge or upon any navigable river or canal or in any creek or basin belonging to or communicating with any such haven, port, river or canal; or
(b) any goods from any dock, wharf or quay adjacent to any such haven, port, river, canal, creek, or basin; or
(c) any, part of any vessel in distress, wrecked, stranded, or cast on shore, or any goods, merchandise or articles of any kind belonging to such Vessel,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen
years.
Larceny by tenant or lodger
273.
Any person who, being a tenant or lodger, or the husband or wife of any tenant
or lodger, steals any chattel or fixture let to be
used by such person in or
with any house or lodging is guilty of a felony, and is liable-
(a) if the value of such chattel of fixture exceeds the sum of ten dollars, to imprisonment for seven years; and
(b) in all other cases, to imprisonment for two years.
Larceny and embezzlement by clerks or servants
274.
Any person who-
(a) being a clerk or servant or person employed in the capacity of a clerk or servant-
(i) steals any chattel, money or valuable security belonging to or in the possession or power of his master or employer; or
(ii) fraudulently embezzles the whole or any part of any chattel, money or valuable security delivered to or received or taken into possession by him for or in the name or on the account of his master or employer; or
(b) being employed in the public service of Her Majesty-
(i) steals any chattel, money or valuable security belonging to or in the possession of Her Majesty or entrusted to or received or taken into possession by such person by virtue of his employment; or
(ii) embezzles or in any manner fraudulently applies or disposes of for any purpose whatsoever except for the public service any chattel, money or valuable security, entrusted to or received or taken into possession by him by virtue of his employment; or
*(c) being appointed to any office or service by or under the Fijian Affairs Board or the Fiji Marine Board or by or under a town council, district council or other public body-
(i) fraudulently applies or disposes of any chattel, money or valuable security received by him (whilst employed in such office or service) for or on account of the Fijian Affairs Board or the Fijian Marine Board or for or on account of any town council, district council or other public body or department, for his own use or any use or purpose other than that for which the same was paid, entrusted to, or received by him; or
(ii) fraudulently withholds, retains or keeps back the same, or any part thereof, contrary to any lawful directions or instructions which he is required to obey in relation to his office or service aforesaid,
* Amended by 14 of 1975. s. 6
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen
years.
Larceny of cattle
275.
Any person who steals any horse, cattle or sheep is guilty of a felony, and is
liable to imprisonment for fourteen years.
Larceny of dog
276.
Any person who steals any dog is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable for a
first offence to imprisonment for six months or to
a fine of fifty dollars, and
for a subsequent offence to imprisonment for eighteen months.
Larceny of creatures not the subject of larceny at common law
277.
Any person who steals any bird, beast, or other animal ordinarily kept in a
state of confinement, or for any domestic purpose, not
being the subject of
larceny at common law, is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to
imprisonment for six months or to a fine
of fifty dollars.
Larceny of fish
278.-(1)
Subject to subsection (2)-
(a) Any person who unlawfully and wilfully takes or destroys any fish in any water which runs through or is in any land adjoining or belonging to the dwelling-house of any person being the owner of such water, or having a right of fishery therein, is guilty of a misdemeanour; and
(b) any person who unlawfully and wilfully takes or destroys, or attempts to take or destroy, any fish in any water not being such as hereinbefore mentioned, but which is private property, or in which there is any private right of fishery,
is
guilty of an offence, and is liable to a fine of ten dollars.
(2)
Nothing in this section contained shall extend to any person angling between the
beginning of the last hour before sunrise and
the expiration of the first hour
after sunset, but any person who, by angling between the beginning of the last
hour before sunrise
and the expiration of the first hour after sunset,
unlawfully and wilfully takes or destroys, or attempts to take or destroy, any
fish in any such water, is guilty of an offence, and is liable-
(a) in the case of the water mentioned in paragraph (a) of subsection (1), to a fine of ten dollars; and
(b) in the case of the water mentioned in paragraph (b) of subsection (1), to a fine of four dollars.
Conversion
279.-(1)
Any person who-
(a) being entrusted either solely or jointly with any other person with any power of attorney for the sale or transfer of any property, fraudulently sells, transfers, or otherwise converts the property or any part thereof to his own use or benefit, or the use or benefit of any person other than the person by whom he was entrusted; or
(b) being a director, member or officer of any company or other body incorporated by or under the provisions of any Act, fraudulently takes or applies for his own use or benefit, or for any use or purposes other than the use or purposes of such company or other body, any of the property of such company or other body; or
(c) (i) being entrusted either solely or jointly with any other person with any property in order that he may retain in safe custody or apply, pay, or deliver, for any purpose or to any person, the property or any part thereof or any proceeds thereof; or
(ii) having either solely or jointly with any other person received any property for or on account of any other person, fraudulently converts to his own use or benefit, or the use or benefit of any other person, the property or any part thereof or any proceeds thereof,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
(Amended
by 37 of 1966, s.
5.)
(2)
Nothing in paragraph (c) of subsection (1) applies to or affects any trustee
under any express trust created by a deed or will,
or any mortgage of any
property, real or personal, in respect of any act done by the trustee or
mortgagee in relation to the property
comprised in or affected by any such trust
or mortgage.
CHAPTER XXVIII-STEALING AND DAMAGING TREES, FIXTURES, ETC.
Larceny of trees
280.
Any person who steals, or cuts, breaks, roots up or otherwise destroys or
damages, with intent to steal, the whole or any part of
any tree, sapling or
shrub, or any underwood, wheresoever the same may be respectively growing, the
stealing of such article or articles
or the injury done being to the amount of
ten cents at the least, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Larceny of fences
281.
Any person who steals, or cuts, breaks, or throws down, with intent to steal,
any part of any live or dead fence or any metal or
wooden post, pale, wire or
rail set up or used as a fence, or any stile or gate any part thereof
respectively, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Larceny of fruit and vegetables
282.
Any person who steals, destroys, roots up or damages, with intent to steal, any
plant, root, fruit, or vegetable production, used
for the food of man or beast,
or for medicine, or for distilling, or for dyeing, or for or in the course of
any manufacture, and
growing in any garden, orchard, pleasure ground, hot-house,
green-house or conservatory, or in any land, open or enclosed, is guilty
of a
misdemeanour.
Damaging fixtures, trees, etc. with intent to steal
283.
Any person who-
(a) steals, or, with intent to steal, rips, cuts, severs, or breaks-
(i) any glass or woodwork belonging to any building; or
(ii) any metal or utensil or fixture, fixed in or to any building; or
(iii) anything made of metal fixed in any land being private property, or as a fence to any dwelling-house, garden or area, or in any square or street, or in any place dedicated to public use or ornament, or in any burial-ground; or
(b) steals, or, with intent to steal, cuts, breaks, roots up or otherwise destroys or damages the whole or any part of any tree, sapling, shrub, or underwood growing-
(i) in any place whatsoever the value of the article stolen or injury done being to the amount of ten cents at the least, after two previous convictions of any such offence under section 280; or
(ii) in any park, pleasure ground, garden, orchard, or avenue, or in any ground adjoining or belonging to any dwelling-house, the value of the article stolen or the injury done exceeding the amount of two dollars; or
(iii) in any place whatsoever, the value of the article stolen or the injury done exceeding the amount of ten dollars; or
(c) steals, or with intent to steal, destroys or damages any plant, root, fruit, or vegetable production growing in any garden, orchard, pleasure ground, nursery ground, hot-house, green-house or conservatory, after a previous conviction of any such offence under section 282,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to be punished as in the case of simple
larceny.
CHAPTER XXIX-OTHER OFFENCES ALLIED TO STEALING
Fraudulent destruction of documents
284.
Any person who, for any fraudulent purpose, destroys, cancels or obliterates the
whole or any part of any valuable security, other
than a document of title to
lands, is guilty of a felony, of the same nature and in the same degree, and
punishable in the same manner,
as if he had stolen any chattel of like value
with the share, interest or deposit to which the security so stolen may relate,
or
with the money due on the security so stolen, or secured thereby and
remaining unsatisfied, or with the value of the goods or other
valuable thing
represented, mentioned, or referred to in or by the security.
Fraudulent destruction of documents of title
285.
Any person who, for any fraudulent purpose, destroys, cancels, obliterates or
conceals the whole of any part of any document of title
to lands, is guilty of a
felony, and is liable to imprisonment for three years.
Fraudulent destruction of wills
286.-(1)
Any person who, either during the life of the testator, or after his death, for
any fraudulent purpose destroys, cancels, obliterates
or conceals, the whole or
any part of any will, codicil or other testamentary instrument, whether the same
shall relate to real or
personal estate, or to both, is guilty of a felony, and
is liable to imprisonment for
life.
(2)
Nothing in this or section
285
mentioned, nor any proceeding, conviction, or judgment to be had or taken
thereupon, shall, prevent, lessen or impeach any remedy
at law or in equity,
which any party aggrieved by any such offence might or would have had if this
Code had not been passed; but
no conviction of any such offender shall be
received in evidence in any action at law or suit in equity against him; and no
person
shall be liable to be convicted of any of the felonies in this and
section
285
mentioned by any evidence whatsoever, in respect of any act done by him, if he
shall, at any time previously to his being charged
with such offence, have first
disclosed such act or oath, in consequence of any compulsory process of any
court of law or equity
in any action, suit or proceeding which shall have been
bona
fide
instituted by any party aggrieved; or if he shall have first disclosed the same
in any compulsory examination or deposition before
any court upon the hearing of
any matter in bankruptcy or insolvency.
Fraudulent destruction of record, writ, etc.
287.
Any person who, for any fraudulent purpose, takes from its place of deposit for
the time being, or from any person having the lawful
custody thereof, or
unlawfully and maliciously cancels, obliterates, injures or destroys the whole
or any part of any record, writ,
return, panel, process, interrogatory,
deposition, affidavit, rule, order, or warrant of attorney, or of any original
document whatsoever
of or belonging to any court of record, or relating to any
matter, civil or criminal, begun, depending or terminated in any such
court, or
of any bill, petition, answer, interrogatory, deposition, affidavit, order or
decree, or of any original document whatsoever
of or belonging to any court of
equity, or relating to any cause or matter begun, depending or terminated in any
such court, or of
any original document in anywise relating to the business of
any office or employment under Her Majesty, and being or remaining in
any office
appertaining to any court of justice, or in Government House, or in any
Government or public office, is guilty of a felony,
and is liable to
imprisonment for three years.
Miners removing ore
288.
Any person who, being employed in or about any mine, takes, removes or conceals
any ore of any metal, or any lapis calamianris,
manganese, mundick or other
mineral found or being in such mine, with intent to defraud any proprietor of or
any adventurer in such
mine, or any workman or miner employed therein, is guilty
of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for two years.
Killing animals with intent to steal
289.
Any person who wilfully kills any animal with intent to steal the carcass, skin,
or any part of the animal killed, is guilty of a
felony, and is liable to the
same punishment as if he had stolen such animal, provided that the offence of
stealing the animal so
killed would have amounted to felony.
Larceny of or dredging for oysters
290.(1)
Any person who unlawfully and wilfully uses any dredge, or any net, instrument
or engine whatsoever within the limits of any oyster
bed, laying or fishery,
being the property of any other person and sufficiently marked out or known as
such, for the purpose of taking
oysters or oyster brood, although none shall be
actually taken, or unlawfully and wilfully with any net, instrument or engine
drags
upon the ground or soil of any such fishery, is guilty of a misdemeanour,
and is liable to imprisonment for three
months:
Provided
that nothing in this section shall prevent any person from catching or fishing
for any floating fish within the limits of
any oyster fishery with any net,
instrument or engine adapted for taking floating fish
only.
(2)
It shall be sufficient in any charge or information to describe either by name
or otherwise the bed, laying or fishery in which
any of the said offences have
been committed without stating the same to be in any particular
district.
Factors obtaining advances on the property of their principals
291.-(1)
Any person who, being a factor or agent entrusted, either solely, or jointly
with any other person, for the purpose of sale
or otherwise, with the possession
of any goods or of any document of title to goods, contrary to or without the
authority of his
principal in that behalf, for his own use or benefit, or the
use or benefit of any person other than the person by whom he was so
entrusted,
and in violation of good faith-
(a) consigns, deposits, transfers or delivers any goods or document of title so entrusted to him as and by way of a pledge, lien or security for any money or valuable security borrowed or received, or intended to be borrowed or received, by him; or
(b) accepts any advance of any money or valuable security on the faith of any contract or agreement to consign, deposit, transfer or deliver any such goods or document of title,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years:
Provided
that no such factor or agent shall be liable to any prosecution for consigning,
depositing, transferring or delivering any
such goods or documents of title, in
case the same shall not be made a security for or subject to the payment of any
greater sum
of money than the amount which, at the time of such consignment,
deposit, transfer or delivery, was justly due and owing to such
agent from his
principal, together with the amount of any bill of exchange drawn by or on
account of such principal and accepted
by such factor or
agent.
(2)
(a) Any factor or agent entrusted as aforesaid and in possession of any document
of title to goods shall be deemed to have been
entrusted with the possession of
the goods represented by such document of title.
(b) Every contract pledging or giving a lien upon such document of title as aforesaid shall be deemed to be a pledge of and lien upon the goods to which the same relates.
(c) Any such factor or agent as aforesaid shall be deemed to be in possession of such goods or documents whether the same are in his actual custody or are held by any other person subject to his control, or for him or on his behalf.
(d) Where any loan or advance is made in good faith to any factor or agent entrusted with and in possession of any such goods or documents of title on the faith of any contract or agreement in writing to consign, deposit, transfer or deliver such goods or documents of title, and such goods or documents of title are actually received by the person making such loan or advance, without notice that such factor or agent was not authorised to make such pledge or security, every such loan or advance shall be deemed to be a loan or advance on the security of such goods or documents of title and within the meaning of this section, though such goods or documents of title are not actually received by the person making such loan or advance till the period subsequent thereto.
(e) Any payment made whether by money or bill of exchange or other negotiable security shall be deemed to be an advance within the meaning of this section.
(f) Any contract or agreement whether made direct with such factor or agent as aforesaid or with any person on his behalf shall be deemed to be a contract or agreement with such factor or agent.
(g) Any factor or agent entrusted as aforesaid, and in possession of any goods or documents of title to goods shall be deemed, for the purposes of this section, to have been entrusted therewith by the owner thereof, unless the contrary be shown in evidence.
Unlawful use of vehicles, animals, etc.
292.
Any person who unlawfully and without colour of right, but not so as to be
guilty of stealing, takes or converts to his own use or
to the use of any other
person, any draught or riding animal or any vehicle or cycle, however propelled,
or any vessel, is guilty
of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for
six months, or to a fine of one hundred dollars, or to both such imprisonment
and such fine.
CHAPTER XXX-ROBBERY AND EXTORTION
Robbery
293.-(1)
Any person who-
(a) being armed with any offensive weapon or instrument, or being together with one other person or more, robs, or assaults with intent to rob, any person; or
(b) robs any person and, at the time of or immediately before or immediately after such robbery, uses or threatens to use any personal violence to any person,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life, with or without
corporal
punishment.
(2)
Any person who robs any person is guilty of a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for fourteen years, *with or without corporal
punishment.
*
Inserted by, Act No. 15 of
1973.
(3)
Any person who assaults any person with intent to rob is guilty of a felony, and
is liable to imprisonment for five years, *with
or without corporal
punishment.
*
Inserted by, Act No. 15
of
1973.
Demanding money, etc. with menaces.
294.-(1)
Any person who-
(a) utters, knowing the contents thereof, any letter or writing demanding of any person with menaces, and without any reasonable or probable cause, any property or valuable thing; or
(b) utters, knowing the contents thereof, any letter or writing accusing or threatening to accuse any other person (whether living or dead) of any crime to which this section applies, with intent to extort or gain thereby any property or valuable thing from any person; or
(c) with intent to extort or gain any property or valuable thing from any person accuses or threatens to accuse either that person or any other person (whether living or dead) of any such crime,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life, with or without
corporal
punishment.
(2)
Any person who with intent to defraud or injure any other person-
(a) by any unlawful violence to or restraint of the person of another; or
(b) by accusing or threatening to accuse any person (whether living or dead) of any such crime or of any felony,
compels
or induces any person to execute, make, accept, endorse, alter, or destroy the
whole or any part of any valuable security,
or to write, impress, or affix the
name of any person, company, firm or co-partnership, or the seal of any body
corporate, company
or society upon or to any paper or parchment in order that it
may be afterwards made or converted into or used or dealt with as a
valuable
security, is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for
life.
(3) This section applies to any crime punishable with death, or imprisonment for not less than seven years, or any assault with intent to commit any rape, or any attempt to commit any rape, or any solicitation, persuasion, promise, or threat offered or made to any person, whereby to move or induce such person to commit or permit the abominable crime of buggery, either with mankind or with any animal.
(4)
For the purposes of this Code it is immaterial whether any menaces or threats be
of violence, injury, or accusation to be caused
or made by the offender or by
any other person.
Demanding with menaces with intent to steal
295.
Any person who with menaces or by force demands of any person anything capable
of being stolen with intent to steal the same is guilty
of a felony, and is
liable to imprisonment for five years.
Threatening to publish with intent to extort
296.
Any person who with intent-
(a) to extort any valuable thing from any person; or
(b) to induce any person to confer or procure for any person any appointment or office of profit or trust-
(i) publishes or threatens to publish any libel upon any other person (whether living or dead); or
(ii) directly or indirectly threatens to print or publish, or directly or indirectly proposes to abstain from or offers to prevent the printing or publishing of any matter or thing touching any other person (whether living or dead),
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for two
years.
CHAPTER XXXI-BURGLARY, HOUSEBREAKING AND SIMILAR OFFENCES
Definitions of breaking and entering
297.
A person who breaks any part, whether external or internal, of a building, or
opens by unlocking, pulling, pushing, lifting, or
any other means whatsoever,
any door, window, shutter, cellar-flap, or other thing intended to close or
cover an opening in a building,
or an opening giving passage from one part of a
building to another, is deemed to break the
building.
A
person is deemed to enter a building as soon as any part of his body or any part
of any instrument used by him is within the
building.
A
person who obtains entrance into a building by means of any threat or artifice
used for that purpose, or by collusion with any person
in the building, or who
enters any chimney or other aperture of the building permanently left open for
any necessary purpose, but
not intended to be ordinarily used as a means of
entrance, is deemed to have broken and entered the building.
Sacrilege
298.
Any person who-
(a) breaks and enters any place of divine worship and commits any, felony therein; or
(b) breaks out of any place of divine worship having committed any felony therein,
is
guilty of the felony called sacrilege, and is liable to imprisonment for
fourteen years.
Burglary
299.
Any person who in the night-
(a) breaks and enters the dwelling-house of another with intent to commit any, felony therein; or
(b) breaks out of the dwelling-house of another, having-
(i) entered the said dwelling-house with intent to commit any felony therein; or
(ii) committed any felony in the said dwelling-house,
is
guilty of the felony called burglary, and is liable to imprisonment for life,
*with or without corporal
punishment.
*Inserted
by Act No. 15 of 1973.
House breaking and committing felony
300.
Any person who-
(a) breaks and enters any dwelling-house, or any building within the curtilage thereof and occupied therewith, or any school-house, shop, warehouse, counting-house, office, store, garage, pavilion, factory, or workshop, or any building belonging to Her Majesty, or to any Government department, or to any municipal or other public authority, and commits any felony therein; or
(b) breaks out of the same, having committed any felony therein,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen
years.
Entering a magazine with intent
301.-(1)
Any person who enters a magazine with intent to steal therein shall be guilty of
a felony and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
(2)
"magazine" in this section means any enclosed place regularly used for the
storage of arms, ammunition or explosives, including
a fixed container and a
fenced
enclosure.
(Amended
by 16 of 1960, s. 13.)
Housebreaking with intent to commit felony
302.-(1)
Any person who, with intent to commit any, felony, therein enters any,
dwelling-house in the night is guilty of an offence,
and is liable to
imprisonment for seven years, with or without corporal
punishment.
(2)
Any person who, with intent to commit any felony therein breaks and enters any
dwelling-house, place of divine worship or any
building within the curtilage, or
any school-house, shop, warehouse, counting-house, office, store, garage,
pavilion, factory workshop,
or any building belonging to Her Majesty, or to any
Government department, or to any municipal or other public authority is guilty
of an offence and is liable to imprisonment for seven years.
Being found by night armed or in possession of housebreaking implements
303.
Any person who is found by night-
(a) armed with any dangerous or offensive weapon or instrument, with intent to break or enter into any, building and to commit any felony therein; or
(b) having in his possession without lawful excuse (the proof whereof shall lie on such person) any key, picklock, crow, jack, bit or other implement of housebreaking; or
(c) having his face blackened or disguised with intent to commit any felony; or
(d) in any building with intent to commit any felony therein, is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable-
(i) if he has been previously convicted of any such misdemeanour or of any felony, to imprisonment for ten years; and
(ii) in all other cases to imprisonment for five years.
Forfeiture of housebreaking instruments
304.
When any person is convicted of an offence under this Chapter the court may
order that any instrument of housebreaking used in connection
with any offence
shall be forfeited to Her Majesty.
CHAPTER
XXXII-FRAUDS BY TRUSTEES AND PERSONS IN A POSITION OF
TRUST
AND
FALSE ACCOUNTING
Conversion by trustee
305.
Any person who, being a trustee of any property for the use or benefit either
wholly or partially of some other person, or for any
public or charitable
purpose, with intent to defraud converts or appropriates the same or any part
thereof to or for his own use
or benefit, or the use or benefit of any person
other than such person as aforesaid, or for any purpose other than such public
or
charitable purpose as aforesaid, or otherwise disposes of or destroys such
property or any part thereof, is guilty of a misdemeanour,
and is liable to
imprisonment for seven
years:
Provided
that no prosecution for any offence included in this section shall be
commenced-
(a) by any person without the sanction of the *Director of Public Prosecutions; or
*Amended by Order 8th October, 1970.
(b) by any person who has taken any civil proceedings against such trustee, without the sanction also of the court or judge before whom such civil proceedings have been had or are pending.
Director, etc. of any body corporate or public company wilfully destroying books, etc.
306.(1)
Any person who-
(a) being a director, manager, public officer or member of any body corporate or public company, with intent to defraud, destroys, alters, mutilates or falsifies any book, paper, writing, or valuable security belonging to the body corporate or public company, or makes or concurs in the making of any false entry, or omits or concurs in omitting any material particular in any book of account or other document; or
Or keeping fraudulent accounts
(b) being a director, manager or public officer of any body corporate or public company, as such receives, or possesses himself of, any of the property of such body corporate or public company, otherwise than in payment of a just debt or demand, and, with intent to defraud, omits to make, or to cause or direct to be made, a full and true entry thereof in the books and accounts of such body corporate or public company; or
Or publishing false statements
(c) being a director, manager or public officer of any body corporate or public company, makes, circulates or publishes, or concurs in making, circulating or publishing, any written statement or account which he knows to be false in any material particular, with intent to deceive or defraud any member, shareholder or creditor of such body corporate or public company, or with intent to induce any person to become a shareholder or partner therein, or to entrust or advance any, property to such body corporate or public company, or to enter into any security for the benefit thereof,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
No person exempt from answering questions in any court
(2)
Nothing contained in this section shall enable or entitle any person to refuse
to make a full and complete discovery by answer
to any question or interrogatory
in any civil proceeding in any court or upon the hearing of any matter in
bankruptcy or insolvency.
Compulsory statements not admissible in proceeding against person making same
(3)
A statement or admission made by any person in any compulsory examination or
deposition before any court on the hearing of any
matter in bankruptcy shall not
be admissible against that person in any proceeding in respect of any of the
misdemeanours referred
to in this section.
No remedy at law or in equity shall be affected
(4)
Nothing contained in this section, nor any proceeding, conviction or judgment to
be had or taken thereon against any person under
this section, shall prevent,
lessen or impeach any remedy at law or in equity which any party aggrieved by
any, offence against this
section might have had if this section had not been
passed, but no conviction of any such offender shall be received in evidence
in
any action at law or suit in equity against him, and nothing in this section
contained shall affect or prejudice any agreement
entered into, or security
given, by any trustee having for its object the restoration or repayment of any
trust Property misappropriated.
Fraudulent falsification of accounts
307.-(1)
Any clerk, officer or servant, or any person employed or acting in the capacity
of a clerk, officer or servant, who wilfully
and with intent to defraud
destroys, alters. mutilates or falsifies any book, paper, writing, valuable
security or account which
belongs to or is in the possession of his employer, or
which has been received by him for or on behalf of his employer, or who wilfully
and with intent to defraud makes, or concurs in omitting or altering, any
material particular from or in any such book or document
or account, is guilty
of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
(2)
It shall be sufficient in any information under this section to allege a general
intent to defraud without naming any particular
person intended to be
defrauded.
CHAPTER XXXIII-FALSE PRETENCES
Definition of false pretence
308.
Any representation made by words, writing or conduct, of a matter of fact,
either past or present, which representation is false
in fact, and which the
person making it knows to be false, or does not believe to be true, is a false
pretence.
False pretences
309.
Any person who by any false pretence-
(a) with intent to defraud, obtains from any other person any chattel, money, or valuable security, or causes or procures any money to be paid, or any chattel or valuable security to be delivered to himself or to any other person for the use or benefit or on account of himself or any other person; or
(b) with intent to defraud or injure any other person fraudulently causes or induces any other person-
(i) to execute, make, accept, endorse or destroy the whole or any part of any valuable security; or
(ii) to write, impress, or affix his name or the name of any other person, or the seal of any body corporate or society, upon any paper or parchment in order that the same may be afterwards made or converted into, or used or dealt with as, a valuable security,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for five
years.
Obtaining credit, etc. by false pretences
310.
Any, person who-
(a) in incurring any debt or liability obtains credit by any false pretence or by means of any other fraud; or
(b) with intent to defraud his creditors or any of them, makes or causes to be made any gift, delivery or transfer of or any charge on his property; or
(c) with intent to defraud his creditors or any of them, conceals, sells or removes any part of his property, after or within two months before the date of any unsatisfied judgment or order for payment of money obtained against him,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for one
year.
Obtaining registration, etc. by false pretence
311.
Any person who wilfully procures or attempts to procure for himself or any other
person any registration, licence or certificate
under any Act by any false
pretence, is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for one
year.
False declaration for passport
312.
Any person who makes a statement which is to his knowledge untrue for the
purpose of procuring a passport, whether for himself or
for any other person, is
guilty of a misdemeanour.
CHAPTER
XXXIV-RECEIVING PROPERTY STOLEN OR UNLAWFULLY
OBTAINED
AND
LIKE OFFENCES
Receiving
313.-(1)
Any person who receives any property knowing the same to have been stolen or
obtained in any way whatsoever under circumstances
which amount to felony or
misdemeanour, is guilty of an offence of the like degree (whether felony or
misdemeanour) and is liable-
(a) in the case of felony, to imprisonment for fourteen years; and
(b) in the case of misdemeanour, to imprisonment for seven years.
(2)
Any person who receives any mail bag, or any postal packet, or chattel, or
money, or valuable security, the stealing, or taking,
or embezzling, or
secreting whereof amounts to a felony or misdemeanour under the Post Office Act
or this Code, knowing the same
to have been so feloniously stolen, taken.
embezzled, or secreted, and to have been sent or to have been intended to be
sent by post,
is guilty of a felony or misdemeanour as the case may be and is
liable to the same punishment as if he had stolen, taken, embezzled
or secreted
the
same.
(Cap.
171.)
(3)
Every such person may be proceeded against on information and convicted, whether
the principal offender has or has not been previously
convicted, or is or is not
amenable to justice.
Receiving goods stolen outside Fiji
314.
Any person who, without lawful excuse, knowing the same to have been stolen or
obtained in any way whatsoever under such circumstances
that if the act had been
committed in Fiji the person committing it would have been guilty of felony or
misdemeanour, receives or
has in his possession any property so stolen or
obtained outside Fiji, is guilty of an offence of the like degree (whether
felony
or misdemeanour) and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
Evidence on charge of receiving stolen property
315.
Whenever any person is being proceeded against for receiving property knowing it
to have been stolen, or for having in his possession
stolen property, for the
purpose of proving guilty knowledge there may be given in evidence at any stage
of the proceedings-
(a) the fact that other property stolen within the period of twelve months preceding the date of the offence charged was found or had been in his possession; and
(b) the fact that within the five years preceding the date of the offence charged he was convicted of any offence involving fraud or dishonesty. This last-mentioned fact may not be proved unless-
(i) seven days notice in writing has been given to the offender that proof of such previous conviction is intended to be given; and
(ii) evidence has been given that the property in respect of which the offender is being tried was found or had been in his possession.
Compulsory disclosures not to afford evidence
316.-(1)
No person is liable to be convicted of any offence against sections
263,
264
(a),
279,
291 and
305
upon any evidence whatsoever in respect of any act done by him if, at any time
previously to his being charged with such offence,
he has first disclosed such
act on oath in consequence of any compulsory process of any court of law or
equity in any action, suit
or proceeding which has been
bona
fide
instituted by any person
aggrieved.
(2)
In any proceedings in respect of any offence against sections
263,
264
(a),
279,
291 and
305,
a statement or admission made by any person in any compulsory examination or
deposition before any court on the hearing of any matter
in bankruptcy is not
admissible in evidence against that person.
Division VI-Malicious Injuries to Property
CHAPTER XXXV-OFFENCES CAUSING INJURY TO PROPERTY
Arson
317.
Any person who wilfully and unlawfully sets fire to-
(a) any building or structure whatsoever, whether completed or not.. or
(b) any vessel, whether completed or not; or
(c) any stack of cultivated vegetable produce, or of mineral or vegetable fuel; or
(d) a mine, or the workings, fittings or appliances of a mine,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life.
Attempts to commit arson
318.
Any person who-
(a) attempts unlawfully to set fire to any such thing as is mentioned in section 317; or
(b) wilfully and unlawfully sets fire to anything which is so situated that any such thing as is mentioned in section 317 is likely to catch fire from it,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen
years.
Setting fire to crops and growing plants
319.
Any person who wilfully and unlawfully sets fire to-
(a) a crop of cultivated produce, whether standing, picked or cut; or
(b) a crop of hay or grass under cultivation, whether the natural or indigenous product of the soil or not, and whether standing or cut; or
(c) any standing trees, saplings, or shrubs, whether indigenous or not, under cultivation,
is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen years.
Attempting to set fire to crops, etc.
320.
Any person who-
(a) attempts unlawfully to set fire to any such thing as is mentioned in section 319; or
(b) wilfully and unlawfully sets fire to anything which is so situated that any such thing as is mentioned in section 319 is likely to catch fire from it,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
Casting away vessels
321.
Any person who-
(a) wilfully and unlawfully casts away or destroys any vessel, whether completed or not; or
(b) wilfully and unlawfully does any act which tends to the immediate loss or destruction of a vessel in distress; or
(c) with intent to bring a vessel into danger, interferes with any light, beacon, buoy, mark or signal used for purposes of navigation, or exhibits any false light or signal,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen
years.
Attempts to cast away vessels
322.
Any person who attempts unlawfully to cast away or destroy a vessel, whether
completed or not, or attempts unlawfully to do any
act tending to the immediate
loss or destruction of a vessel in distress, is guilty of a felony, and is
liable to imprisonment for
seven years.
Injuring animals
323.
Any person who wilfully and unlawfully kills, maims or wounds any animal or bird
capable of being stolen, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
Punishment for malicious injuries in general
324.-(1)
Any person who wilfully and unlawfully destroys or damages any property is
guilty of an offence, which, unless otherwise stated,
is a misdemeanour, and he
is liable, if no other punishment is provided, to imprisonment for two
years.
In special cases destroying or damaging an inhabited house or a vessel with explosives
(2)
If the property in question is a dwelling-house or a vessel, and the injury is
caused by the explosion of any explosive substance,
and if-
(a) any person is in the dwelling-house or vessel; or
(b) the destruction or damage actually endangers the life of any person, the offender is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life, with or without corporal punishment.
River bank or wall, or navigation works or bridges
(3)
(a) If the property in question is a bank or wall of a river, canal, aqueduct,
reservoir, or inland water, or work which appertains
to a dock, reservoir, or
inland water, and the injury causes actual danger of inundation or damage to any
land or building; or
(b) if the property in question is a railway or is a bridge, viaduct, or aqueduct which is constructed over a highway, railway., or canal, or over which a railway, highway or canal passes, and the property is destroyed; or
(c) if the property in question, being a railway, or being any, such bridge, viaduct, or aqueduct, is damaged, and the damage is done with intent to render the railway, bridge, viaduct or aqueduct, or the highway, railway or canal passing over or under the same, or any part thereof, dangerous or impassable, and the same or any part thereof is thereby rendered dangerous or impassable,
the
offender is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for
life.
Wills and registers
(4)
If the property in question is a testamentary instrument, whether the testator
is living, or dead, or a register which is authorised
or required by law to be
kept for authenticating or recording the title to any property., or for
recording births. Baptisms, marriages,
deaths or burials, or a copy of any part
of any such register which is required by law to be sent to any public officer,
the offender
is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen
years.
Wrecks
(5)
If the property in question is a vessel in distress or wrecked. or stranded, or
anything which belongs to such vessel, the offender
is guilty of a felony, and
is liable to imprisonment for seven years.
Railways
(6)
If the property in question is any part of a railway. or any work connected with
a railway" the offender is guilty of a felony,
and is liable to imprisonment for
fourteen years.
Other things of special value
(7)
(a) If the property in question, being a vessel, whether completed or not, is
destroyed; or
(b) if the property in question, being a vessel, whether completed or not, is damaged, and the damage is done with intent to destroy it or render it useless; or
(c) if the property in question is a light, beacon, buoy, mark or signal used for the purposes of navigation, or for the guidance of persons engaged in navigation; or
(d) if he property in question is a bank or wall of a river, canal, aqueduct, reservoir or inland water, or a work which appertains to a dock, canal, aqueduct, reservoir or inland water, or which is used for the purpose of lading or unlading goods; or
(e) if the property in question, being a railway, or being a bridge. viaduct or aqueduct which is constructed over a highway, railway or canal, or over which a highway, railway or canal passes, is damaged, and the damage is done with intent to render the railway, bridge, viaduct or aqueduct, or the highway, railway or canal passing over or under the same, or any part thereof, dangerous or impassable; or
(f) if the property in question, being anything in process of manufacture, or an agricultural or manufacturing machine, or a manufacturing implement, or a machine or appliance used or intended to be used for performing any process connected with the preparation of any agricultural or pastoral produce, is destroyed; or
(g) if the property in question, being any such thing, machine, implement or appliance as last aforesaid, is damaged, and the damage is done with intent to destroy the thing in question, or to render it useless; or
(h) if the property in question is a shaft or a passage of a mine, and the injury is done with intent to damage the mine or to obstruct its working; or
(i) if the property in question is a machine, appliance, apparatus, building, erection, bridge, or road, appertaining to or used with a mine, whether the thing in question is completed or not; or
(j) if the property in question, being a rope, chain or tackle of whatever material, which is used in a mine., or upon any way or work appertaining to or used with a mine, is destroyed; or
(k) if the property in question, being any such rope, chain or tackle, as last aforesaid, is damaged, and the damage is done with intent to destroy the thing in question or to render it useless; or
(l) if the property in question is a well, or bore for water, or the dam, bank, wall or floodgate of a millpond or pool,
the
offender is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
Deeds and records
(8)
If the property in question is a document which is deposited or kept in a public
office, or which is evidence of title to any
land or estate in land, the
offender is guilty, of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
Attempts to destroy property by explosives
325.
Any person who, unlawfully and with intent to destroy or damage any property,
puts any explosive substance in any place whatsoever,
is guilty of a felony, and
is liable to imprisonment for fourteen years.
Communicating infectious diseases to animals
326.
Any person who wilfully and unlawfully causes, or is concerned in causing, or
attempts to cause, any infectious disease to be communicated
to or among any
animal or animals capable of being stolen. is guilty of a felony, and is liable
to imprisonment for seven years.
Removing boundary marks with intent to defraud
327.
Any person who wilfully and unlawfully and with intent to defraud, removes or
defaces any object or mark which has been lawfully
erected or made as an
indication of the boundary of any land, is guilty of a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for three years.
Wilful damage, etc. to survey and boundary marks
328.
Any person who-
(a) wilfully removes, defaces or injures any survey mark or boundary mark which shall have been made or erected by or under the direction of any Government department or in the course of or the purposes of a Government survey; or
(b) being under an obligation to maintain in repair any boundary mark made or erected as aforesaid, neglects or refuses to repair the same; or
(c) wilfully removes, defaces, or injures any survey mark erected by or under the authority of any licensed surveyor or any mark erected by an intending applicant for any lease, licence or right under any *Act relating to mines or minerals,
*Amended by Order 13th November, 1970.
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for three months or to a
fine of forty dollars, and may further be ordered
by the court to pay the cost
of repairing or replacing the survey mark or boundary mark and of making any
survey rendered necessary
by the offender's act or neglect.
Penalties for damage, etc. to railway works
329.
Any person who-
(a) wilfully damages, injures or obstructs any work, way, road, building, turnstile, gate, toll bar, fence, weighing machine, engine, tender, carriage, wagon, truck, material, or plant, acquired for or belonging to any railway works; or
(b) pulls up, removes, defaces, or destroys, or in any way interferes with, any poles, stakes, pegs, lines, marks, or anything driven or placed in or upon the ground, trees, stones or buildings, or any other material, belonging to any railway works; or
(c) commits any nuisance or trespass in or upon any land, buildings, or premises, acquired for or belonging to any railway works; or
(d) wilfully molests, hinders or obstructs the officer in charge of any railway or his assistants or workmen in the execution of any work done or to be done in reference to the construction or maintenance of any such railway,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for three months, or to
a fine of forty dollars.
Criminal intimidation
330.
Any person who without lawful excuse-
(a) threatens another person or other persons whether individually or collectively, with any injury to his or their person or persons, reputation or property, or to the person, reputation or property of anyone in whom that person is or those persons are interested, with intent to cause alarm to that person or those persons, or to cause that person or those persons to do any act which that person is or those persons are not legally bound to do, or to omit to do any act which that person is or those persons are legally entitled to do, as the means of avoiding the execution of such threat; or
(b) directly or indirectly, knowingly causes a threat to be made to another person or other persons, whether individually or collectively, of any injury to his or their person or persons, reputation or property, or to the person, reputation or property of anyone in whom that person is or those persons are interested, with intent to cause alarm to that person or those persons, or to cause that person or those persons to do any act which that person is or those persons are not legally bound to do, or to omit to do any act which that person is or those persons are legally entitled to do, as the means of avoiding the execution of such threat,
is
guilty of a
misdemeanour.
If
the threat be to cause death or grievous hurt, or to cause the destruction of
any property by fire, or to cause an offence punishable
with death or with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to seven years or more, or impute
unchastity to a woman, he is guilty
of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment
for ten
years.
(Substituted
by 16 of 1960 s. 14.)
Division VII.-Forgery, Counterfeiting and Similar Offences
CHAPTER XXXVI-INTERPRETATION
Definitions for purposes of sections relating to forgery, etc.
331.-(1)
In this Division, unless the context otherwise requires-
"banknote" includes any note or bill of exchange of the Bank of England or of any other person, body corporate or company carrying on the business of banking in any part of the world, and includes "bank bill", "bank post bill", "bank note", "blank bank bill of exchange" and "blank bank post bill";
"currency note" includes any note issued under the Central Monetary Authority of Fiji Act, any currency note issued by Her Majesty's Treasury under any Act of the Imperial Parliament, and any currency note (by whatever name called) which is legal tender in the country in which it is issued;
(Cap. 210)
(Amended by 6 of 1959, s. 7.)
"die" includes any plate, type, tool, or implement whatsoever, and also any part of any die, plate, type, tool, or implement, and any stamp or impression thereof or any part of such stamp or impression;
"revenue paper" means any paper provided by the proper authority for the purpose of being used for stamps, licences, permits, post office money orders, or postal orders, or for any purpose whatsoever connected with the public revenue;
"seal" includes any stamp or impression of a seal or any stamp or impression made or apparently intended to resemble the stamp or impression of a seal as well as the seal itself;
"stamp" includes a stamp impressed by means of a die as well as an adhesive stamp;
"treasury bill" includes Exchequer bill, Exchequer bond, Exchequer debenture, and War bond.
(2)
References in this Division to any Government department shall, in relation to
any functions performed by that department, be
held to include references to any
other Government department by which the same functions were previously
performed.
Definition of forgery
332.-(1)
Forgery is the making of a false document in order that it may be used as
genuine, and in the case of the seals and dies mentioned
in this Division the
counterfeiting of a seal or die, and forgery with intent to defraud or deceive,
as the case may be, is punishable
as provided in this
Division.
(2)
It is immaterial in what language a document is expressed or in what place
within or without the Commonwealth it is expressed
to take
effect.
(3)
Forgery of a document may be complete even if the document when forged is
incomplete, or is not or does not purport to be such
a document as would be
binding or sufficient in
law.
(4)
The crossing on any cheque, draft on a banker, post office money order, postal
order, coupon, or other document the crossing of
which is authorised or
recognized by law, is a material part of such cheque, draft, order, coupon, or
document.
False document
333.-(1)
A document is false if the whole or any material part thereof purports to be
made by or on behalf or on account of a person
who did not make it nor authorise
its making; or if, though made by or on behalf or on account of the person by
whom or by whose
authority it purports to have been made, the time or place of
making, where either is material, or, in the case of a document identified
by
number or mark, the number or any distinguishing mark identifying the document,
is falsely stated therein; and in particular a
document is false-
(a) if any material alteration, whether by addition, insertion, obliteration, erasure, removal, or otherwise, has been made therein; or
(b) if the whole or some material part of it purports to be made by or on behalf of a fictitious or deceased person; or
(c) if, though made in the name of an existing person, it is made by him or by his authority with the intention that it should pass as having been made by some person, real or fictitious, other than the person who made or authorised it.
(2)
A document may be a false document for the purposes of this Division
notwithstanding that it is not false in any such manner as
is described in
subsection (1).
Intent to defraud
334.
An intent to defraud is presumed to exist if it appears that at the time when
the false document was made there was in existence
a specific person ascertained
or unascertained capable of being defrauded thereby, and this presumption is not
rebutted by proof
that the offender took or intended to take measures to prevent
such person from being defrauded in fact, nor by the fact that he
had or thought
he had a right to the thing to be obtained by the false document.
CHAPTER XXXVII-PUNISHMENT FOR FORGERY
Forgery of certain documents with intent to defraud
335.-(1)
Forgery of any of the following documents, if committed with intent to defraud,
is a felony, and punishable with imprisonment
for life-
(a) any will, codicil or other testamentary document, either of a dead or of a living person, or any probate or letters of administration, whether with or without the will annexed;
(b) any deed or bond, or any assignment at law or in equity of any deed or bond or any attestation of the execution of any deed or bond;
(c) any currency note or bank note, or any endorsement on or assignment of any bank note.
(2)
Forgery of any of the following documents, if committed with intent to defraud,
is a felony, and punishable with imprisonment
for fourteen years-
(a) any valuable security or assignment thereof or endorsement thereon, or, where the valuable security is a bill of exchange, any acceptance thereof;
(b) any document of title to lands or any assignment thereof or endorsement thereon;
(c) any document of title to goods or any assignment thereof or endorsement thereon;
(d) any power of attorney or other authority to transfer any share or interest in any stock, annuity , or public fund of the United Kingdom or any country or territory of the Commonwealth or of any foreign state or country or to transfer any share or interest in the debt of any public body, company or society, British or foreign, or in the capital stock of any such company or society, or to receive any dividend or money payable in respect of such share or interest or any attestation of any such power of attorney or other authority;
(e) any entry in any book or register which is evidence of the title of any person to any share or interest hereinbefore mentioned or to any dividend or interest payable in respect thereof;
(f) any policy of insurance or any assignment thereof or endorsement thereon;
(g) any charter-party or any assignment thereof;
(h) any certificate of the Commissioner of Inland Revenue or any other Commissioners acting in execution of any Income Tax Act for the time being in force.
Forgery of certain documents with intent to defraud or deceive
336.-(1)
Forgery of any of the following documents, if committed with intent to defraud
or deceive, is a felony, and punishable with
imprisonment for
life:
Any
document whatsoever having thereupon or affixed thereto the stamp or impression
of the Public Seal of Fiji, the Great Seal of
the United Kingdom, Her Majesty's
Privy Seal, any privy signet of Her Majesty, Her Majesty's Royal Sign Manual, or
any other of Her
Majesty's official
seals.
(2)
Forgery of any of the following documents, if committed with intent to defraud
or deceive, is a felony, and punishable with imprisonment
for fourteen
years:
(a) any, register or record of births, baptisms, namings, dedications, marriages, deaths, burials, or cremations, which now is, or hereafter may be, by law authorised or required to be kept in Fiji, relating to any birth, baptism, naming, dedication, marriage, death, burial, or cremation, or any part of any such register, or any certified copy of any such register, or of any part thereof;
(b) any copy of any register of baptisms, marriages, burials, or cremations, directed or required by law to be transmitted to any registrar or other officer;
(c) any certified copy of a record purporting to be signed by any officer having charge of public records in Fiji;
(d) any wrapper or label provided by or under the authority of the Commissioner of Inland Revenue or the Comptroller of Customs.
(3)
Forgery of any of the following documents, if committed with intent to defraud
or deceive, is a felony, and punishable with imprisonment
for seven
years:
(a) any official document whatsoever of or belonging to any court of justice, or made or issued by any judge, magistrate, officer or clerk of any such court;
(b) any register or book kept under the provisions of any law in or under the authority of any court of justice;
(c) any certificate, office copy or certified copy of any such document, register, or book or of any part thereof;
(d) any document which any magistrate is authorised or required by law to make or issue;
(e) any document which any person authorised to administer an oath under any law in force in Fiji is authorised or required by law to make or issue;
(f) any, document made or issued by a head of a Government department or law officer of the Crown, or any document upon which, by the law or usage at the time in force any court of justice or any officer might act;
(g) any document or copy of a document used or intended to be used in evidence in any court of record, or any document which is made evidence by law;
(h) any certificate or consent required by any Act for the celebration of marriage;
(i) any licence for the celebration of marriage which may be given by law;
(j) any certificate, declaration or order under any enactment relating to the registration of births or deaths;
(k) any register, book, builder's certificate, surveyor's certificate, certificate of registry, declaration, bill of sale, instrument of mortgage, or certificate of mortgage or sale, under Part 1 of the Merchant Shipping Act, 1894, of the United Kingdom or any entry or endorsement required by the said Part of the said Act to be made in or on any of those documents;
(l) any permit, certificate or similar document made or granted by or under the authority of the Comptroller of Customs or a collector or officer of Customs;
(m) any certificate not heretofore specified.
Making false entries in the books of the Chief Accountant
337.
Any person who wilfully makes any false entry in, or wilfully alters any word or
figure in, any of the books of account kept by
the Chief Accountant in which
books the accounts of the owners of any stock, annuities or other public funds
which now are, or hereafter
may be transferable at the Treasury are entered and
kept, or in any manner wilfully falsifies any of the accounts of any of such
owners in any of the said books, with intent in any of the cases aforesaid to
defraud, or who wilfully makes any transfer of any
share or interest of or in
any stock, annuity or other public fund which now is or hereafter may be
transferable at the Treasury
in the name of any person not being the true and
lawful owner of such share or interest with intent to defraud, is guilty of a
felony,
and is liable to imprisonment for life.
Forging copies of certificates of records
338.
Any person who, being the clerk of any court or other officer having the custody
of the records of any court, or being the deputy
of any such clerk or officer,
utters any false copy or certificate of any record knowing the same to be false,
and any person who
delivers, or causes to be delivered, to any person any paper
falsely purporting to be any such process, or a copy thereof, or to
be any
judgment, decree or order of any court of law, or a copy thereof, knowing the
same to be false, or acts or professes to act
under any such false process
knowing the same to be false, is guilty of a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for seven years.
Forging registers of births, baptisms, marriages, deaths or burials
339.
Any person who knowingly and unlawfully inserts, or causes or permits to be
inserted, in any register of births, baptisms, marriages,
deaths or burials
which now is or hereafter shall be by law authorised or required to be kept in
Fiji, or in any certified copy thereof,
any false entry of any matter relating
to any birth baptism, marriage, death or burial, or knowingly and unlawfully
gives any false
certificate relating to any birth, baptism, marriage, death or
burial, or certifies any writing to be a copy or extract from any
such register,
knowing such writing, or the part of such register whereof such copy or extract
shall be so given, to be false in
any material particular, or offers, utters,
disposes of or puts off any such register, entry, certified copy or certificate,
knowing
the same to be false, or offers, utters, disposes of or puts off any
copy of any entry in any such register, knowing such entry to
be false, is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life.
Making false entry in copies of register sent to registrar
340.
Any person who knowingly and wilfully inserts, or causes or permits to be
inserted, in any copy of any register directed or required
by law to be
transmitted to any registrar or other officer any false entry of any matter
relating to any baptism, birth, marriage,
or burial, or knowingly and wilfully
signs or verifies any copy of any register so directed or required to be
transmitted as aforesaid,
which copy is false in any part thereof, knowing the
same to be false, or for any fraudulent purpose takes from its place of deposit
or conceals, any such copy of any register, is guilty of a felony, and is liable
to imprisonment for life.
Forgery of other documents with intent to defraud or deceive a misdemeanour
341.-(1)
Forgery of any document, which is not made felony under this or any other Act
for the time being in force, if committed with
intent to defraud, is a
misdemeanour.
(2)
Forgery of any public document which is not made felony under this or any other
Act for the time being in force, if committed
with intent to defraud or deceive,
is a
misdemeanour.
(3)
Forgery of any passport is a misdemeanour.
Forgery of seals and dies
342.-(1)
Forgery of any of the following seals, if committed with intent to defraud or
deceive, is a felony, and punishable with imprisonment
for life:
(a) the Public Seal of Fiji, the Great Seal of the United Kingdom, Her Majesty's Privy Seal, any privy signet of Her Majesty, Her Majesty's Royal Sign Manual, or any other of Her Majesty's seals;
(b) the seal of any court of record;
(c) the seal of the office of the Registrar-General.
(2)
Forgery of any of the following seals, if committed with intent to defraud or
deceive, is a felony, and punishable with imprisonment
for fourteen
years:-
(a) the seal of any registry office relating to births, baptisms, marriages, or deaths;
(b) the seal of any burial authority or of any local authority performing the duties of a burial authority;
(c) the seal of or belonging to any office for the registry of deeds or titles to lands.
(3)
Forgery of any of the following seals, if committed with intent to defraud or
deceive, is a felony, and punishable with imprisonment
for seven
years:-
(a) the seal of any court of justice other than a court of record;
(b) the seal of a notary public.
(4)
Forgery, of any of the following dies, if committed with intent to defraud or to
deceive, is a felony, and punishable with imprisonment
for fourteen
years:-
(a) any die provided, made or used by the Commissioner of Inland Revenue or the Commissioner of Stamp Duties or the Comptroller of Customs;
(b) any die which is or has been required or authorised by law to be used for the marking or stamping of gold or silver plate, or gold or silver wares.
(5)
Forgery of any of the following dies, if committed with intent to defraud or
deceive, is a felony, and punishable with imprisonment
for seven
years
Any
stamp or die provided, made or used in pursuance of the Stamp Duties Act or the
Post Office
Act.
(Cap.
205) (Cap. 171)
Uttering
343.-(1)
Any person who knowingly and fraudulently utters any forged document, seal or
die is guilty of any offence of the like degree
(whether felony or misdemeanour)
and is liable to the same punishment as if he himself had forged the document,
seal or
die.
(2)
It is immaterial where the document, seal or die was forged.
Uttering cancelled or exhausted documents
344.
Any person who knowingly utters as and for a subsisting and effectual document,
any, document which has by any lawful authority
been ordered to be revoked,
cancelled or suspended, or the operation of which has ceased by effluxion of
time, or by death, or by
the happening of any other event, is guilty of any
offence of the same kind, and is liable to the same punishment, as if he had
forged
the document.
Demanding property on forged documents
345.
Any person who, with intent to defraud, demands, receives, or obtains, or causes
or procures to be delivered, paid or transferred
to any person, or endeavours to
receive or obtain or to cause or procure to be delivered, paid or transferred to
any person any money,
security for money or other property, real or
personal-
(a) under, upon, or by virtue of any forged instrument whatsoever, knowing the same to be forged; or
(b) under, upon, or by virtue of any probate or letters of administration, knowing the will, testament, codicil, or testamentary writing on which such probate or letters of administration have been obtained to have been forged, or knowing such probate or letters of administration to have been obtained by any false oath, affirmation or affidavit,
is
guilty of a felony. and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen
years.
Possession of forged documents, seals and dies
346.-(1)
Any person who, without lawful authority, or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused, imports into Fiji, or purchases
or receives from any person, or has
in his custody, or possession, a forged currency note or bank note, knowing the
same to be forged,
is guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for
fourteen
years.
(2)
Any person who, without lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused, and knowing the same to be forged,
has in his custody or
possession-
(a) any forged die required or authorised by law to be used for the marking of gold or silver plate, or of gold or silver wares, or any. ware of gold, silver or base metal bearing the impression of any such forged die; or
(b) any, forged stamp or die as defined by the Stamp Duties Act or the Post Office Act; or
(Cap. 205.) (Cap. 171.)
(c) any forged wrapper or label provided by or under the authority of the Commissioner of Inland Revenue, the Commissioner of Stamp Duties or the Comptroller of Customs,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen
years.
(3)
Any person who, without lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused, and knowing the same to be forged,
has in his custody, or
possession any forged stamp or die, resembling or intended to resemble either
wholly or in part any stamp
or die which at any time whatsoever has been or may,
be provided. made or used by or under the direction of the local authority for
the purposes of the Stamp Duties Act or the Post Office Act, is guilty of a
felony, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
(Cap.
205.) (Cap. 171.)
Making or having in possession paper or implements for forgery
347.
Any person who, without lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused-
(a) makes, uses, or knowingly has in his custody or possession. any, paper intended to resemble and pass as-
(i) special paper such as is provided and used for making any currency note, bank note or treasury bill; or
(ii) revenue paper; or
(b) makes, uses, or knowingly has in his custody or possession, any frame, mould, or instrument for making such paper, or for producing in or on such paper any words, figures, letters, marks, lines or devices peculiar to and used in or on any such paper; or
(c) engraves or in anywise makes upon any plate, wood, stone or other material any words, figures, letters, marks, lines or devices, the print whereof resembles in whole or in part any words, figures, letters, marks, lines or devices peculiar to and used in or on any currency note or bank note, or in or on any document entitling or evidencing the title of any person to any person to any share or interest in any public stock, annuity, fund or debt or any country or territory of the Commonwealth or of any foreign state, or in any stock, annuity, fund or debt of any body corporate, company or society, whether within or without Her Majesty's dominions; or
(d) uses or knowingly has in his custody or possession any plate, wood, stone, or other material, upon which any such words, figures, letters, marks, lines or devices have been engraved or in anywise made as aforesaid; or
(e) uses or knowingly has in his custody or possession any paper upon which any such words, figures, letters, marks, lines or devices have been printed or in anywise made as aforesaid,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
Purchasing or having in possession certain paper before it has been stamped and issued
348.
Any person who, without lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused, purchases, receives, or knowingly has
in his custody or
possession-
(a) any special paper provided and used for making currency notes, treasury bills or any revenue paper before such paper has been duly stamped, signed and issued for public use; or
(b) any die peculiarly used in the manufacture of any such paper; or
(c) any facsimile of the signature of any member of the Central Monetary Authority of Fiji, or of any person who has held office as such a member and whose signature appears on currency notes still in circulation; or
(d) any unfinished or incomplete note purporting to be issued by the Central Monetary Authority of Fiji,
is
guilty of a
misdemeanour.
(Amended
by 13 of 1977 s. 4).
Falsifying warrants for money payable under public authority
349.
Any person who. being employed in the public service, knowingly and with intent
to defraud makes out or delivers to any person a
warrant for the payment of any
money payable by public authority, for a greater or lesser amount than that to
which the person on
whose behalf the warrant is made out is entitled, is guilty,
of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for seven years.
Procuring execution of documents by false pretences
350.
Any person who, by means of any false and fraudulent representations as to the
nature, contents or operation of a document, procures
another to sign or execute
the document, is guilty of an offence of the same kind, and is liable to the
same punishment, as if he
had forged the document.
Letter written for certain persons to be signed, etc. by writer
351.-(1)
Any person who writes a letter or petition at the request or in the name of a
person who is unable to read the language in which
the letter or petition is
written, shall write thereon his own name and address; and his doing so shall
imply a statement by him
that he was instructed to write the letter or petition
by the said person, and that it conveys neither more nor less than the meaning
intended by that person, and (if it is or purports to be signed or executed by
him) that it was read over and explained to him and
that he fully understood the
contents thereof before he signed or executed it, and that the mark or signature
thereon which purports
to be his, is his mark or signature. If the writer does
not write his own name and address on such letter or petition, or if (having
done so), the statement implied as aforesaid is in any particular untrue, he is
guilty of an offence, and is liable to a fine of
ten
dollars.
(2)
For the purposes of this section "own name" means full, true and proper country
or native name, where a person has a country or
native name, otherwise a
person's true and proper surname and his Christian name if any.
CHAPTER
XXXVIII-OFFENCES RELATING TO COIN, AND
BANK
AND
CURRENCY NOTES
Definitions for purposes of sections relating to coin
352.
In this chapter-
(a) "copper coin" includes any coin of any metal or mixed metal not being a gold or silver coin;
(b) a coin shall be deemed to be current if it has been coined in any of Her Majesty's Mints, or is lawfully current, by virtue of any proclamation or otherwise, in any country or territory of the Commonwealth, whether within Fiji or otherwise, or is lawfully current in any foreign country;
(c) a coin apparently intended to resemble or pass for any current coin shall be deemed to resemble that current coin;
(d) a current coin which has been gilt, silvered, washed, coloured or cased over or in any manner altered so as to resemble any current coin of a higher denomination shall be deemed to be false or counterfeit coin resembling a current gold or silver coin.
Counterfeiting
353.-(1)
Any person who falsely makes or counterfeits any coin resembling any current
coin is guilty of a felony, and is liable-
(a) in a case where the coin resembles a current gold or silver coin, to imprisonment for life; and
(b) in a case where the coin resembles a current copper coin, to imprisonment for seven years.
(2)
The offence of falsely making or counterfeiting a coin is deemed to be complete
although the coin made or counterfeited is not
in a fit state to be uttered or
the making or counterfeiting thereof has not been finished or
perfected.
Gilding, silvering, filing and altering coin
354.
Any person who-
(a) gilds or silvers, or with any wash or materials capable of producing the colour or appearance of gold or silver or by any means whatsoever, washes, cases over or colours-
(i) any coin whatsoever resembling any current gold or silver coin; or
(ii) any current copper coin, with intent to make it resemble or pass for any current gold or silver coin; or
(iii) any piece of silver or copper or of coarse gold or coarse silver or of any metal or mixture of metals, being of a fit size and figure to be coined, with intent that it shall be coined into false and counterfeit coin resembling any current gold or silver coin; or
(b) gilds, or, with any wash or materials capable of producing the colour or appearance of gold or by any means whatsoever, washes, cases over or colours, any current silver coin with intent to make it resemble or pass for any current gold coin; or
(c) files or in any manner alters-
(i) any current silver coin with intent to make it resemble or pass for any current gold coin; or
(ii) any current copper coin with intent to make it resemble or pass for any current gold or silver coin,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for life.
Impairing gold or silver coin and unlawful possession of filing, etc.
355.-(1)
Any person who impairs, diminishes or lightens any current gold or silver coin
with intent that the coin so impaired, diminished
or lightened may pass for a
current gold or silver coin, is guilty of a felony, and is liable to
imprisonment for fourteen
years.
(2)
Any person who unlawfully has in his possession any filing or clipping, or any
gold or silver bullion, or any gold or silver in
dust, solution or otherwise,
which has been produced or obtained by impairing, diminishing or lightening any
current gold or silver
coin, knowing that it has been so produced or obtained,
is guilty of a felony and is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
Uttering and possession with intent to utter counterfeit coin
356.-(1)
Any person who tenders, utters or puts off any false or counterfeit coin
resembling any current coin knowing it to be false
or counterfeit, is guilty of
a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for one
year.
(2)
Any person who tenders, utters or puts off any false or counterfeit coin
resembling any current gold or silver coin, knowing it
to be false or
counterfeit, and-
(a) at the time of the tendering, uttering or putting off has in his possession, besides that coin, any other such false or counterfeit coin; or
(b) on the day of the tendering, uttering or putting off, or within the period of ten days next following, tenders, utters or puts off any other such false or counterfeit coin, knowing it to be false or counterfeit,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for two
years.
(3)
Any person who has in his possession three or more false or counterfeit, coins
resembling any current gold or silver coin, knowing
them to be false or
counterfeit, and with intent to utter or put off the said coins or any of them,
is guilty of a misdemeanour,
and is liable to imprisonment for five
years.
(4)
Any person who has in his possession three or more false or counterfeit coins
resembling any current copper coin, knowing them
to be false or counterfeit, and
with intent to utter or put off the said coins or any of them, is guilty of a
misdemeanour, and is
liable to imprisonment for one
year.
(5)
Any person who commits-
(a) any misdemeanour under subsection (1) in respect of a coin resembling a current gold or silver coin; or
(b) any misdemeanour under subsection (2) or subsection (3),
having
been previously convicted of any such misdemeanour or of any felony under this
chapter, is guilty of a felony, and is liable
to imprisonment for
life.
(6)
Any person who, with intent to defraud, tenders, utters or puts off as or for
any current gold or silver coin-
(a) any coin not being that current coin and being of less value than that current coin; or
(b) any medal or piece of metal or mixed metals resembling in size, figure and colour that current coin and being of less value than that current coin,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for one
year.
(7)
The offence of tendering, uttering or putting off a false or counterfeit coin is
deemed to be complete although the coin is not
in a fit state to be uttered or
the counterfeiting there of has not been finished or perfected.
Buying or selling, etc. counterfeit coin for lower value than its denomination
357.-(1)
Any person who, without lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused, buys, sells, receives, pays or puts
off, or offers to buy, sell.
receive, pay or put off, any false or counterfeit coin resembling any current
coin at or for a lower
rate or value than the false or counterfeit coin imports,
or apparently is intended to import, is guilty of a felony, and is
liable-
(a) in a case where the coin resembles a current gold or silver coin, to imprisonment for life; and
(b) in a case where the coin resembles a current copper coin, to imprisonment for seven years.
(2)
Any offence under this section shall be deemed to be complete although the coin
bought, sold, received, paid or put off, or offered
to be bought, sold,
received, paid or put off, is not in a fit state to be uttered, or the
counterfeiting thereof has not been finished
or perfected.
Importing and exporting counterfeit coin
358.-(1)
Any person who, without lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused-
(a) imports or receives into Fiji from beyond the seas any false or counterfeit coin resembling any current gold or silver coin, knowing it to be false or counterfeit; or
(b) exports from Fiji, or puts on board any ship, vessel or boat for the purpose of being so exported, any false or counterfeit coin resembling any current coin, knowing it to be false or counterfeit,
is
guilty, in the case of importing or receiving, of a felony, and, in the case of
exporting or putting on hoard, of a misdemeanour,
and is liable to imprisonment
for fourteen
years.
(2)
Nothing in this section shall affect the provisions relating to the importation
of coin and counterfeit coin contained in any
Customs Act for the time being in
force.
Making, possessing and selling medals resembling gold or silver coin
359.
Any person who, without lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused, makes, sells, offers for sale or has
in his possession for sale,
any medal, cast, coin, or other like thing made wholly or partially of metal or
any mixture of metals,
and either-
(a) resembling in size, figure and colour any current gold or silver coin; or
(b) having thereon a device resembling a device on any such current coin; or
(c) being so formed that it can, by gilding, silvering, colouring, washing or other like process be so dealt with as to resemble any such current coin,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for one
year.
Making, mending and having possession of coining implements.
360.-(1)
Any person who, without lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused, knowingly makes or mends, or begins
or proceeds to make or mend, or
buys or sells, or has in his possession, any puncheon, counter puncheon, matrix,
stamp, die, pattern
or mould in or upon which there is made or impressed, or
which will make or impress, or which is adapted and intended to make or
impress,
the figure, stamp or apparent resemblance of both or either of the sides of any
current gold or silver coin, or any part
of both or either of those sides, is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for
life.
(2)
Any person who, without lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused, makes or mends, or begins or proceeds
to make or mend, or buys or
sells, or has in his possession-
(a) any edger, edging or other tool, collar, instrument or engine adapted and intended for the marking of coin round the edges with letters, grainings or other marks or figures apparently resembling those on the edges of any current gold or silver coin, knowing it to be so adapted and intended as aforesaid; or
(b) any press for coinage, or any cutting engine for cutting by force of a screw or of any other contrivance round blanks out of gold, silver or other metal or mixture of metals, or any other machine, knowing the press to be a press for coinage or knowing the engine or machine to have been used or to be intended to be used for the false making or counterfeiting of any current gold or silver coin,
is
guilty of a felony, and is liable to imprisonment for
life.
(3)
Any person who, without lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused knowingly makes or mends, or begins
or proceeds to make or mend, or
buys or sells, or has in his possession, any instrument, tool or engine adapted
and intended for
the counterfeiting of any current copper coin, is guilty, of a
felony, and is liable to imprisonment for seven years.
Breaking up coin suspected to be counterfeit
361.-(1)
If any person suspects any coin tendered to him as current gold or silver coin
to have been diminished otherwise than by reasonable
wearing or to be
counterfeit, it shall he lawful for him to break the
coin.
(2)
If any coin when so broken appears to have been diminished otherwise than as
aforesaid or to be counterfeit the person tendering
it shall bear the loss
thereof, but if it is of due weight and appears to be lawful coin the person
breaking it shall receive it
at the rate it was coined
for.
(3)
If any dispute arises whether any coin so broken has been diminished otherwise
than as aforesaid or is counterfeit it shall be
heard and finally determined in
a summary manner by a
magistrate.
(4)
In this section reference to breaking shall include references to cutting,
bending and defacing.
Evidence of coin being counterfeit
362.
Where a person is charged with an offence against this Chapter the fact that a
coin produced in evidence against him is false or
counterfeit may be proved by
the evidence of any credible witness.
Defacing and uttering defaced coin
363.-(1)
Any person who defaces any current coin, whether the coin is or is not thereby
diminished or lightened, is guilty of a misdemeanour,
and is liable to
imprisonment for one
year.
(Amended
by 37 of 1966,
s.5.)
(2)
A tender of payment in money made in any coin which has been defaced is not
legal
tender.
(Amended
by 37 of 1966,
s.5.)
(3)
Any person who tenders utters or puts off any coin which has been defaced as
aforesaid is guilty of an offence, and is liable
to a fine of four
dollars:
Provided
that no proceedings shall be instituted under this subsection without the
consent of the *Director of Public
Prosecutions.
*Amended by
Order 8th October. 1970.
Melting down of currency
364.
Any person who melts down, breaks up or uses otherwise than as currency any coin
current for the time being in Fiji, is guilty of
a misdemeanour, and is liable
to imprisonment for six
months.
(Amended
by 37 of 1966, s.5.)
Mutilating or defacing currency notes
365.
Any person who, without lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused, mutilates or in any way defaces a currency
note, whether by
writing, printing, drawing or stamping thereon, or by attaching or affixing
thereto anything in the nature or form
of an advertisement, is guilty of a
misdemeanour, and is liable to a fine of forty dollars.
Imitation of currency
366.-(1)
Any person who, without lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof lies on
the accused, sells, or offers or exposes for sale,
any article which bears a
design in imitation of any currency note or bank note or coin in current use in
Fiji or elsewhere, is guilty
of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment
for six
months.
(2)
Any person who makes or causes to be made or uses for any purpose whatsoever any
document purporting to be, or in any way resembling,
or so nearly resembling as
to be calculated to deceive, any currency note, or any part thereof, is guilty
of a misdemeanour, and
is liable to a fine of ten dollars in respect of each
such
document.
(3)
Any person whose name appears on any document the making of which is an offence
under this section who refuses to disclose to
a police officer the name and
address of the person by whom it was printed or made, is guilty of a
misdemeanour, and is liable to
a fine of twenty
dollars.
(4)
Where the name of any person appears on any document in respect of which any
person is charged with an offence under this section
or on any other document
used or distributed in connexion with that document, it shall be
prima
facie
evidence that that person caused the document to be made.
*Evidence of counterfeiting, etc.
367.
Where a person is charged with an offence against this Chapter, a written report
in the form of an affidavit by a qualified coin,
bank note or currency note
expert shall be admitted in
evidence.
*Inserted by
Act No. 11 of 1971.
Forfeiture of forged bank notes, currency notes, etc.
368.
Where any forged bank note, currency note or any counterfeit coin or any
machinery, implement, utensil or material used or intended
to be used for the
forging of a bank note or currency note or for counterfeiting coin, is seized
under a search warrant or by any
police officer, the bank note, currency note,
counterfeit coin, machinery, implement, utensil or material, as the case may be,
shall
be delivered up to the Minister, or to any person authorised by him for
the purpose, by order of the court before which the offender
is tried or if
there is no trial by order of the court issuing the search warrant or by the
police officer seizing such note, coin,
machinery, implement, utensil or
material, and upon delivery to the Minister or to any person authorised by him,
such note, coin,
machinery, implement, utensil or material shall be deemed
forfeit.
(Substituted
by 6 of 1959, s. 8)
CHAPTER XXXIX-PERSONATION
Personation in general
369.
Any person who, with intent to defraud any person, falsely represents himself to
be some other person, living or dead, is guilty
of a
misdemeanour.
If
the representation is that the offender is a person entitled by will or
operation of law to any specific property and he commits
the offence to obtain
such property or possession thereof, he is liable to imprisonment for seven
years.
Falsely acknowledging deeds, recognisances, etc.
370.
Any person who. without lawful authority or excuse, the proof of which lies on
him, makes, in the name of any other person, before
any court or person lawfully
authorised to take such an acknowledgement, an acknowledgement of liability of
any kind, or an acknowledgement
of a deed or other instrument, is guilty of a
felony, and is liable to imprisonment for seven years.
Personation of a person named in a certificate
371.
Any person who utters any document which has been issued by lawful authority to
another person, and whereby that other person is
certified to be a person
possessed of any qualification recognized by law for any purpose, or to be the
holder of any office, or
to be entitled to exercise any profession, trade, or
business, or to be entitled to any right or privilege, or to enjoy any rank
or
status, and falsely represents himself to be the person named in the document,
is guilty of an offence of the same kind and is
liable to the same punishment as
if he had forged the document.
Lending, etc. certificate for personation
372.
Any person who, being a person to whom any document has been issued by lawful
authority whereby he is certified to be a person possessed
of any qualification
recognized by law for any purpose, or to be the holder of any office or to be
entitled to exercise any profession,
trade or business, or to be entitled to any
right or privilege, or to enjoy any rank or status, sells, gives or lends the
document
to another person with intent that that other person may represent
himself to be the person named therein, is guilty of a
misdemeanour.
Personation of person named in a testimonial of character
373.
Any person who, for the purpose of obtaining any employment, utters any document
of the nature of a testimonial of character given
to another person, is guilty
of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for one year.
Lending, etc. testimonial for personation
374.
Any person who, being a person to whom any such document as is mentioned in
section
373
has been given, gives, sells or lends such document to another person with
intent that that other person may utter such document
for the purpose of
obtaining any employment, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
CHAPTER XL-SECRET COMMISSIONS AND CORRUPT PRACTICES
Interpretation for purposes of sections dealing with corrupt practices, etc.
375.-(1)
For the purpose of this Chapter, the expression "consideration" includes
valuable consideration of any kind; the expression
"agent" includes any person
employed by or acting for another; and the expression "principal" includes an
employer.
*(2)
A person serving under the Crown or under any town council or under any other
public body having power to impose rates or entrusted
with the expenditure of
any Government funds or grants, and a member of any such town council or other
public body, is an agent within
the meaning of this
Chapter.
* Amended by Act
24 of 1976 s. 2
Corrupt practices
376.
If-
(a) any agent corruptly accepts or obtains, or agrees to accept or attempts to obtain, from any person, for himself or for any other person, any gift or consideration as an inducement or reward for doing or forbearing to do or for having done or forborne to do, any act in relation to his principal's affairs or business or for showing or forbearing to show favour or disfavour to any person in relation to his principal's affairs or business; or
(b) any person corruptly gives or agrees to give or offers any gift or consideration to any agent as an inducement or reward for doing or forbearing to do, of for having done or forborne to do, any act in relation to his principal's affairs or business, or for showing or forbearing to show favour or disfavour to any person in relation to his principal's affairs or business; or
(c) any person knowingly gives to any agent, or if any agent knowingly uses with intent to deceive his principal, any receipt or other document in respect of which the principal is interested, and which contains any statement which is false or erroneous or defective in any material particular, and which to his knowledge is intended to mislead the principal,
he
is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for two years or to a
fine of six hundred dollars.
Secret commission on government contracts
*377.
Any person committing an offence under this Chapter is, where the matter of
transaction in relation to which the offence was committed
was a contract or a
proposal for a contract with the Government or any Government department or a
town council or other public body
having power to impose rates or entrusted with
the expenditure of any Government funds or grants, or a sub-contract to execute
any
work comprised in such contract, liable to imprisonment for seven years, or
to a fine of one thousand
dollars.
* Amended by Act
24 of 1976 s. 2
Presumption as to corrupt practices
*378.
Where in any proceedings against a person for an offence under this Chapter it
is proved that any money, gift or other consideration
has been paid or given to
or received by a person in the employment of the Crown or any Government
department or a town council or
other public body having power to impose rates
or entrusted with the expenditure of any Government funds or grants, by or from
a
person or agent of a person holding or seeking to obtain a contract from the
Crown or any Government department or town council or
other public body having
power to impose rates or entrusted with the expenditure of any Government funds
or grants, the money, gift
or consideration shall be deemed to have been paid or
given and received corruptly as such inducement or reward as is mentioned in
this Chapter, unless the contrary is
proved.
* Amended by Act
24 of 1976 s. 2
Consent to prosecution
379.
A prosecution for an offence under this Chapter shall not he instituted without
the sanction of the
†Director
of Public
Prosecutions.
†Amended
by Order
8th
October, 1970.
Division
VIII.-Attempts and Conspiracies to Commit Crimes and
Accessories
After
the Fact
CHAPTER XLI-ATTEMPTS
Attempt defined
380.
When a person, intending to commit an offence, begins to put his intention into
execution by means adapted to its fulfilment, and
manifests his intention by
some overt act, but does not fulfil his intention to such an extent as to commit
the offence, he is deemed
to attempt to commit the
offence.
It
is immaterial, except so far as regards punishment, whether the offender does
all that is necessary on his part for completing
the commission of the offence,
or whether the complete fulfilment of his intention is prevented by
circumstances independent of his
will, or whether he desists of his own motion
from the further prosecution of his
intention.
It
is immaterial that by reason of circumstances not known to the offender it is
impossible in fact to commit the offence.
Attempts to commit offences
381.
Any person who attempts to commit a felony or misdemeanour is guilty of an
offence, which, unless otherwise stated, is a misdemeanour.
Punishment of attempts to commit certain felonies
382.
Any person who attempts to commit a felony of such a kind that a person
convicted of it is liable to the punishment of death or
imprisonment for a term
of fourteen years or upwards, with or without other punishment, is guilty of a
felony, and is liable, if
no other punishment is provided, to imprisonment for
seven years.
Soliciting or inciting others to commit offence in Fiji or elsewhere
383.
Any person who solicits or incites or attempts to procure another to do any act,
or make any omission, whether in Fiji or elsewhere,
of such a nature that, if
the act were done or the omission were made, an offence would thereby be
committed, under the laws of Fiji,
or the laws in force in the place where the
act or omission is proposed to be done or made, whether by himself or by that
other person,
is guilty of an offence of the same kind and is liable to the same
punishment as if he had himself attempted to do the same act or
make the same
omission in
Fiji:
Provided
that-
(a) if the act or omission is proposed to be done or made at a place not in Fiji, the punishment shall not exceed that which he would have incurred under the laws in force where the act or omission was proposed to be done or made, if he had himself attempted to do the proposed act or make the proposed omission;
(b) in the last-mentioned case, a prosecution shall not be instituted except at the request of the Government of the country having jurisdiction in the place where the act or omission was proposed to be done or made.
Neglect to prevent felony
384.
Every person who, knowing that a person designs to commit or is committing a
felony, fails to use all reasonable means to prevent
the commission or
completion thereof, is guilty of a misdemeanour.
CHAPTER XLII-CONSPIRACIES
Conspiracy to commit felony
385.
Any person who conspires with another to commit any felony, or to do any act in
any part of the world which if done in Fiji would
be a felony, and which is an
offence under the laws in force in the place where it is proposed to be done, is
guilty of a felony,
and is liable, if no other punishment is provided, to
imprisonment for seven years, or, if the greater punishment to which a person
convicted of the felony in question is liable is less than imprisonment for
seven years, then to such lesser punishment.
Conspiracy to commit misdemeanour
386.
Any person who conspires with another to commit a misdemeanour, or to do any act
in any part of the world which if done in Fiji
would be a misdemeanour, and
which is an offence under the laws in force in the place where it is proposed to
be done, is guilty
of a misdemeanour.
Other conspiracies
387.
Any person who conspires with another to effect any of the purposes following,
that is to say-
(a) to effect any unlawful purpose; or
(b) to effect any lawful purpose by any unlawful means,
is
guilty of a misdemeanour.
CHAPTER XLIII-ACCESSORIES AFTER THE FACT
Definition of accessories after the fact
388.
A person who receives or assists another who is, to his knowledge, guilty of an
offence, in order to enable him to escape punishment,
is said to become an
accessory after the fact to the
offence.
A
wife does not become an accessory after the fact to an offence of which her
husband is guilty by receiving or assisting him in order
to enable him to escape
punishment; or by receiving or assisting in her husband's presence and by his
authority another person who
is guilty of an offence in the commission of which
her husband has taken part, in order to enable that other person to escape
punishment:
nor does a husband become an accessory after the fact to an offence
of which his wife is guilty by receiving or assisting her in
order to enable her
to escape punishment.
Punishment of accessories after the fact to felonies
389.
Any person who becomes an accessory after the fact to a felony is guilty of a
felony, and is liable, if no other punishment is provided,
to imprisonment for
three years.
Punishment of accessories after the fact to misdemeanours
390.
Any person who becomes an accessory after the fact to a misdemeanour, is guilty
of a misdemeanour.
Controlled by Ministry of the Attorney-General
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