WITNESS
WITNESS
WITNESS
All persons shall be competent to testify unless the Court considers that they
are prevented from understanding the question put to them, or from giving
rational answer to those questions, by tender years, extreme old age, disease,
whether of body and mind, or any other cause of the same kind.
Reliability of witness
Evidence of child witness is not reliable who is under the influence of tutoring.
Changan Dame v. State of Gujarat, 1994
(i) The deposition of a child witness may require corroboration, but in case his
desposition inspires the confidence of the court and there is not
embellishment or improvement therein the court may rely upon his evidence.
Only in case there is evidence on record to show that a child has been
turtored, the court can reject statement partly or fully. Ramesh v. State of
Madhya Pradesh, 2011
(ii) Evidence of child witness is not required to be rejected per se; but Court as
a rule of prudence considers such evidence with close scrutiny and only on
being convinced about the quality and reliability can record conviction based
thereon. Golla Yelugu Govinda v. State of Andhra Pradesh
(iii) Child witnesses are amenable to tutoring and often live in a world of make
belief. Though, it is an established principle that child witnesses are dangerous
witnesses. They are liable to be influenced easily, shaped and moulded. But, it
is also an accepted norm, that if after carefully scaling their evidence, the court
comes to the conclusion, that there is an impression of truth in it. Ratan Singh
Dalsukhbhai Nayak V. State of Gujrat AIR 2004.
It is the prerogative of the Criminal Courts to decide the cases and the question
of acceptance of evidence of witnesses on sound common sense. When they
find witnesses to be wholly independent they endeavour to search the reason
as to why their evidence should not be accepted. Ordinarily it is a safe and
sound rule of appreciation of evidence to accept the testimony of an
independent witness provided it is in consonance with probabilities. It is better
if it corroborates the inbuilt guarantees, which ensure the truthfulness of the
prosecution case similar to the instance of accused person and the presence of
injured eyewitnesses etc. Shravan Dashrath Datrange v. State of Maharashtra,
1997
A witness who is unable to speak may give his evidence in any other manner in
which he can make it intelligible, as by writing or by signs; but such writing
must be written and the signs made in open Court. Evidence so given shall be
deemed to be oral evidence:
Deaf and dumb witness: When a deaf and dumb person is examined in the
Court, the Court has to exercise due caution and take care to ascertain before
he is examined that he possesses the requisite amount of intelligence and that
he understands the nature of oath. On being satisfied on this the witness may
be administered oath by appropriate means and that also be with the
assistance of interpreter. However in case a person can read and write it is
most desirable to adopt that method being more satisfactory than any sign
language. Law requires that there must be a record of signs and not the
interpretation of signs. Darshan Singh v. State of Rajasthan, 2012
No Judge or Magistrate shall, except upon the special order of some Court of
which he is subordinate, be compelled to answer any questions as to his own
conduct in Court as such Judge or Magistrate, or as to anything which came to
his knowledge in Court as such Judge or Magistrate but he may be examined as
to other matters which occurred in his presence whilst he was so acting.
133. Accomplice.
Categories of Accomplice:
1. Principal offender of First Degree and Second Degree: The principal offender
of first degree is a person who actually commits the crime. The principal
offender of the second degree is a person who either abets or aids the
commission of the crime.
2. Accessories before the fact: They are the person who abet, incite, procure,
or counsel for the commission of a crime and they do not themselves
participate in the commission of the crime.
3. Accessories after the fact: They are the persons who receive or comfort or
protect persons who have committed the crime knowing that they have
committed the crime. If they help the accused in escaping from punishments
or help him from not being arrested, such person are known as harbourers.
These persons can be accomplices because all of them are the participants in
the commission of the crime in some way or the other. Therefore anyone of
them can be an accomplice.
Section 118 of the Indian Evidence Act says about competency of witness.
Competency is a condition precedent for examining a person as witness and
the sole test of competency laid down is that the witness should not be
prevented from understanding the questions posed to him or from giving
rational answers expected out of him by his age, his mental and physical state
or disease. At the same time Section 133 describes about competency of
accomplices. In case of accomplice witnesses, he should not be a co-accused
under trial in the same case and may be examined on oath.
These are the two provisions dealing with the same subject. Section 114 of the
Indian Evidence Act says that the court may presume that an accomplice is
unworthy of any credit unless corroborated in material particulars.
Section 133 of the Indian Evidence Act says that an accomplice shall be a
competent witness as against the accused person and a conviction the accused
based on the testimony of an accomplice is valid even though it is not
corroborated in material particulars.
(ii) Every approver comes to give evidence in some such manner seeking to
purchase his immunity and that is why to start with he is an unreliable person
and the rule of caution calling for material corroboration is constantly kept in
mind by the court by time worn judicial practice. Ravinder Singh v. State of
Punjab, 1975
The accused was tried for the offence of murder and the jury found him guilty
on the evidence of the approver corroborated in material particulars. It was
contended that there was misdirection because the jury were not told of the
double test in relation to the approver’s evidence laid down in Sarwan Singh
case.
Raghubir Singh v. State of Haryana :
No particular number of witness shall in any case be required for the proof of
any fact.
(i) It is well known principle of law that reliance can be based on the solitary
statement of a witness if the court comes to the conclusion that the said
statement is the true and correct version of the case of the prosecution. Raja
v. State, 1997
(ii) The courts are concerned with the merit of the statement of a particular
witness. They are not concerned with the number of witnesses examined by
the prosecution. Raja v. State, 1997
Quality of evidence-
It is the quality of the evidence and not the quantity of the evidence which is
required to be judged by the court to place credence on the statement. State
of Uttar Pradesh v. Kishanpal, 2008
Plurality of Witnesses
The Law of Evidence does not require any particular number of witnesses to be
examined in proof of a given fact. However, faced with the testimony of a
single witness the court may classify the oral testimony of a single witness, the
court may classify the oral testimony into three categories, namely
wholly reliable
wholly unreliable and
Neither wholly reliable nor wholly unreliable
Examination of a witness
Section 137 and 138 are so related to each other that it would be suitable to
deal with them together. There are three stages in which witnesses are
examined. These are examination in chief, cross examination, re-examination
under Section137 of Evidence Act. Section 138 of Evidence Act gives an order
of examination in chief, cross examination, re-examination. It also gives the
extent to which examination in chief, cross-examination and re-examination
may go. This Section does not deal with the admissibility of proof, but simply
establish that a witness shall first be examined in chief, then cross examined
and lastly re-examined.
Cross examination
Section 138 of the Indian Evidence Act provides a wide scope for cross
examination. What is spoken to in examination in chief is not to be controlled.
Section 138 of the Act clearly provides that examination in chief and cross
examination must relate to relevant facts in the opening part of the second
half of the Section. But the facts to which the witness had stated in his
examination in chief need not be controlled in cross examination. Therefore,
the question must be relevant to the fact in cross examination which was
necessary to be proved by that witness. If there is any difference in respect of
the relevancy of the facts was acceptable only to the dependability, character
and such other things concerning the witness.
All the questions are permissible which are asked to challenge the evidence in
examination in chief. There is no provision regarding cross examination should
be controlled and what is agreed by a witness and cannot clarify the answers
to challenge in cross examination. Every accused against him a prosecution
witness gives evidence is entitled to cross examine the prosecution’s lawyer.
Such a statement may be made in the cross examination of another witness or
in the examination in chief. An accused is entitled to put an additional question
to a prosecution witness by way of cross examination in respect of what he
had declared in answer to questions put to him in cross examination by the
other co accused.
When the evidence given by a witness is as such unreliable and on the face of
it is not acceptable his non cross examination cannot gather believability.
The specific fact that the witnesses examined by the opposite party have not
been effectively cross examined does not mean that the Court is not liable to
accept their evidence. Courts are not prevented from assessing the truth of
witnesses in the absence of any cross examination.
No opportunity is given to cross examine a witness. If there is no such
opportunity is given to cross examine a witness his proof must omit from
consideration. The evidence of witness is not produced for cross examination
but examined before the charge is framed is not admissible.
It was held that if in the deposition of the witnesses, there was no cross
examination because there was no record made, it can be said that, in fact,
the party entitled to cross examine did not cross examine and not that the
opportunity to cross examine was not admitted. But there are five exceptions
in this rule:
The apex court held that prosecution has prudence not to examine certain
witness so that proliferation of proof is avoided. Opposite illation cannot be
drawn from non examination of material evidence.
Re examination
The party re-examine the witness who called the witness may if he likes and
if it be essential. The re-examination must be confined to the explanation of
matters grow in cross examination. The proper intention for re examination
is by asking questions as may be proper to pull forward and explanation or
meaning of expression used by the witness in cross examination, if they are
questionable. New matters may be introduced only by the permission of the
court, and if that is done, the opposite party has a right to cross examine the
witness on that point.
Scope
Section 142 of Indian Evidence Act provides exceptions to the general rule
stated above. By the order of the Court, examiner may put leading questions in
examination in chief or re-examination.
Matters in which the opinion of the Court have already been proved. The Court
can allow a party examining his own witness to put leading questions by way of
cross examination. These are exceptions under Section 154 of Indian Evidence
Act.
Cases:
The apex court decided that “where the court gives permission to the
procecutor to cross examine his own witness thus characterizing him as,
hostile witness, that fact does not completely effaces his evidence. This
eveidence remains admissible in the trial and there is no legal bar to base a
conviction upon his testimony if corroborated by other reliable evidence”.