Criminal Breach of Trust Under Section 316 BNS: Punishment, Ingredients, and Case Law (2026)

Last verified: 2026-06-03

Criminal Breach of Trust Under Section 316 BNS: Punishment, Ingredients, and Case Law (2026)

A commercial supplier delivered goods to a buyer on credit. The invoices were genuine, the delivery was real, and the only thing missing was payment. When the money did not come, the buyer (the complainant company in the criminal case that followed) did not do what you might expect. It did not file a civil recovery suit.

Instead, it persuaded the local police to register an FIR alleging criminal breach of trust and cheating against the supplier. Overnight, what had been an unpaid invoice turned into the threat of arrest, anticipatory-bail applications, and a criminal trial.

Think about how that feels from the supplier’s side. You sold goods, you were not paid, and now you are the accused. The summons arrives, your name sits in a police record, and clients hear about it. The pressure to simply pay up and make the criminal case disappear becomes enormous, which is, of course, exactly why the FIR was filed in the first place.

This is one of the most familiar abuses in Indian criminal practice: a routine commercial dispute repackaged as a crime to squeeze the other side.

And once the machinery starts, it is hard to stop. The supplier’s defence rested on a single legal question that most competitor explainers barely touch. When goods are sold, who owns them? And can “entrustment”, the gateway element of criminal breach of trust, even exist after a completed sale?

The Supreme Court answered that question in August 2024, just weeks after the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 had replaced the Indian Penal Code. In Delhi Race Club (1940) Ltd. v. State of Uttar Pradesh, (2024) 10 SCC 690, the Court held that where ownership passes by a completed sale, there is no entrustment, and without entrustment, criminal breach of trust under Section 316 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 (the successor to Section 406 of the Indian Penal Code) simply cannot lie.

The Court went further. It criticised the routine police habit of mechanically clubbing criminal breach of trust with cheating, when the two offences are, in law, mutually exclusive. You cannot be both deceived from the start and trusted from the start. It is one or the other.

That ruling captures the whole architecture of this offence in a single fact pattern. Criminal breach of trust is not about non-payment, and it is not about a broken promise. It is about betraying a trust over property you were lawfully handed but never owned.

The supplier owned nothing once the sale completed, so there was nothing entrusted, so there was no crime. That is the spine of everything that follows.

Here is the short answer before the detail.


Criminal breach of trust under Section 316 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 (BNS) is the dishonest misappropriation or conversion of property that was lawfully entrusted to a person, or used or disposed of in violation of law or contract. It carries up to five years’ imprisonment, a fine, or both. In force since 1 July 2024, Section 316 BNS consolidates the former Sections 405 to 409 of the Indian Penal Code.

That definition does a lot of work, and every phrase in it has been litigated for over a century. The sections below unpack each one: what counts as entrustment, what the punishment is for each category of offender, how criminal breach of trust differs from cheating, how it is proved under the new evidence law, and how a complaint is filed and defended in 2026.


Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *