Law of Evidence Proved, Disproved, Not Proved
Law of Evidence Proved, Disproved, Not Proved
Law of Evidence Proved, Disproved, Not Proved
Nalanchira, Thiruvananthapuram
PAPER-05
LAW OF EVIDENCE
ASSIGNMENT
TABLE OF CASES
CONTENT
1. INTRODUCTION ………………………………………………………………………. 4
3. CONCLUSION.............................................................................. 7
4. BIBLIOGRAPHY............................................................................. 8
4
INTRODUCTION
The term ‘evidence’ means anything by which the alleged matter of fact
is either established or disproved, anything that make the thing in question
evident to the court is evidence. Evidence plays a vital role in our legal
system and the Indian Evidence Act 1872 states which all can be admissible
in the court of law.
Proved:
Disproved:
Whenever it is directed by the Act that the court shall presume in the
absence of a fact it shall regard facts as disproved unless and until it is
proved. However Section 4 directs that a fact shall be presumed, the court
must regard such fact as proved unless and until it is disproved. 4
Not Proved:
The term ‘not proved’ indicates a state of mind between two states of
mind (“proved” and “disproved”) when one is unable to say precisely how
the matter stands.
4
Parbhoo and Ors v Emperor
5
Emperor v Shafi Ahmed Nabi Ahmed (1929 31 BOMLR 515)
6
Abdul Rashid Khan v PAKA Shahil Hamid (2000 10 SCC 636)
7
Bhano v Babu Singh (1998 Cr.LJ 4768 (Raj))
7
CONCLUSION
Evidence plays a vital role in our legal system; Indian Evidence Act
1872 contains set of rules and allies issues governing admissibility of
evidence in the Indian courts of law. Evidence covers the burden of proof,
admissibility, relevance, etc; and among them the admissibility of a fact
tends to stand apart as this determines if the court acknowledges the
evidence or not. To conclude, the mentioned proved, disproved and not
proved is a basic concept that has a crucial role and is a determining fact in
every case.
8
BIBLIOGRAPHY
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