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(1) A person who has
once been tried by a Court of competent jurisdiction for an offence and convicted or acquitted of such
offence shall, while such conviction or acquittal remains in force, not be liable to be tried again for the same
offence, nor on the same facts for any other offence for which a different charge from the one made against
him might have been made under sub-section (1) of section 244, or for which he might have been convicted
under sub-section (2) thereof.
(2) A person acquitted or convicted of any offence may be afterwards tried, with the consent of the
State Government, for any distinct offence for which a separate charge might have been made against him
at the former trial under sub-section (1) of section 243.
(3) A person convicted of any offence constituted by any act causing consequences which, together
with such act, constituted a different offence from that of which he was convicted, may be afterwards tried
for such last-mentioned offence, if the consequences had not happened, or were not known to the Court to
have happened, at the time when he was convicted.
(4) A person acquitted or convicted of any offence constituted by any acts may, notwithstanding such
acquittal or conviction, be subsequently charged with, and tried for, any other offence constituted by the
same acts which he may have committed if the Court by which he was first tried was not competent to try
the offence with which he is subsequently charged.
(5) A person discharged under section 281 shall not be tried again for the same offence except with the
consent of the Court by which he was discharged or of any other Court to which the first-mentioned Court
is subordinate.
(6) Nothing in this section shall affect the provisions of section 26 of the General Clauses Act, 1897
(10 of 1897) or of section 208 of this Sanhita.
Explanation.—The dismissal of a complaint, or the discharge of the accused, is not an acquittal for the
purposes of this section.
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