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Admissibility of Evidence

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Admissibility Basics - Court's Green Light

  • Definition: Evidence legally allowed in court proceedings.
  • Governing Law: Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA), 2023.
  • Pillars of Admissibility:
    • Relevance (R): Connects to case facts (BSA provisions on relevance).
    • Reliability (R): Trustworthy & credible.
    • Legality (L): Not excluded by law (e.g., hearsay). 📌 Mnemonic: RRL
  • Judge: Decides admissibility; acts as gatekeeper.
  • Forensic Evidence & BSA:
    • Expert Opinion: BSA provisions (basis for forensic testimony).
    • Electronic Records: BSA Sec 61 (digital evidence).
    • Govt. Expert Reports: BNSS provisions (e.g., Chemical Examiner, Serologist reports often directly admissible).
  • Expert Witness: Must be qualified; opinion based on sound scientific principles.

    ⭐ BSA allows expert opinions on science, art, handwriting, or finger impressions when the court needs specialized knowledge.

  • Definition (Sec 39, BSA): Person specially skilled (science, art, medicine). Opinion on specialized subjects is relevant.
  • Role: Aids court on technical issues beyond its knowledge.
    • Impartial, objective opinion with strict adherence to ethical guidelines.
    • Ordinary witness: facts; Expert: opinion based on reliable methods.
  • Qualifications:
    • Special study, practice, observation, or experience.
    • Competency is key, not just formal degrees.
    • Clear disclosure of methodologies and independence from parties.
  • Duties in Court:
    • Clearly present opinion and its basis.
    • Confine testimony to expertise.
    • Assist court impartially, not a party.
    • Withstand cross-examination.
  • Medical Expert: Vital for injury, death, mental state, poisoning cases. Interprets medical facts.
  • Admissibility & Weight:
    • Court decides admissibility (relevance, necessity, expert competency, method reliability).
    • Weight depends on credibility, reasoning, supporting data.

⭐ Expert testimony is advisory opinion evidence. It doesn't replace court's judgment but must be considered. (Sec 40 BSA: Facts bearing upon expert opinions are relevant).

Key Evidence Types - Case Clinchers

  • DNA Evidence:
    • Sources: Blood, semen, saliva, hair root, tissues.
    • Analysis: DNA fingerprinting (STR profiling).
    • Significance: High individual specificity. Sec. 30, 31 BNSS.
  • Fingerprints (Dactylography):
    • Principle: Unique, persistent. Patterns: Loop, Arch, Whorl (📌 LAW).
    • Identification: Holistic approach considering totality of ridge detail and quality of comparison.
    • Types: Latent, Patent, Plastic.
  • Firearms & Ballistics:
    • Evidence: Firearm, bullets, cartridge cases, Gunshot Residue (GSR).
    • GSR components: 📌 LAB (Lead, Antimony, Barium).
    • Significance: Links weapon & ammunition to suspect/scene.
  • Trace Evidence:
    • Principle: Locard's Exchange Principle ("Every contact leaves a trace").
    • Examples: Hair (without root primarily for mitochondrial DNA, with root for nuclear DNA), fibers, glass, paint, soil.
  • Digital Evidence:
    • Sources: Mobile phones, computers, CCTV, GPS.
    • Admissibility: Sec. 61, Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam.
  • Medical Records & Expert Testimony:
    • Injury reports, autopsy findings, age estimation.
    • Crucial for corroborating events and establishing cause/manner of death/injury.

⭐ Under Sec. 39 BSA, expert opinion on identity of handwriting, fingerprints, or scientific questions is relevant, forming a cornerstone for admissibility of forensic reports.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Expert opinion: Admissible under Sec 39 BSA when court needs specialized skill.
  • Govt. expert reports: Admissible under Sec 232 BNSS without formal proof (e.g., chemical examiner).
  • Relevancy and Reliability: Key principles governing the admissibility of all evidence.
  • Chain of Custody: Must be unbroken for physical and digital evidence to be admissible in court.
  • Dying Declaration (Sec 26 BSA): Admissible if person is dead and statement relates to cause of their death.
  • Confessions to Police: Generally inadmissible (Sec 22, 23 BSA); admissible if before a Magistrate (Sec 183 BNSS).

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