सं Samvidhan

Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023

Section 335

Making a false document

Why this exists

Forgery causes harm precisely because it deceives people about who really created or authorised a document. This section carefully defines the different ways a false document can be created, whether by fabricating it outright, altering a genuine one, or tricking someone into signing something they don't understand, so that the later forgery offence has a clear and complete legal foundation covering both paper documents and electronic records.

How courts read it

Courts have clarified that not every false statement or denial about a document amounts to forgery. What matters is whether the document was made to falsely appear as though created or authorised by someone who, in fact, did not create or authorise it. For instance, a person who signs a genuine document in their own name but later denies its content or claims it was signed under different circumstances is not necessarily guilty of forgery, because the document was not made to impersonate someone else's authorship; forgery requires deception about who really stands behind the document.

Common misconceptions
  • Myth: Any lie written in a document is automatically forgery.
    Fact: Forgery specifically requires making a document falsely appear to have been created or authorised by someone who did not really create or authorise it; a document that is genuine in authorship but contains a false statement may be a different offence, not necessarily forgery.