In the present case it appears that at an early stage an
application was filed styled as an ‘application under Section 65 of
the Evidence Act’ seeking ‘permission’ to prove the contents of a
lease deed by secondary evidence. A copy of this application is at
page 59, Exhibit “G”.
7. Section 65 of the Evidence Act reads thus:
“65. Cases in which secondary evidence relating to
documents may be given.— Secondary evidence may be
given of the existence, condition, or contents of a
document in the following cases:—
(a) When the original is shown or appears to be in the
possession or power—
of the person against whom the document is sought
to be proved, or of any person out of reach of, or not
subject to, the process of the Court, or
of any person legally bound to produce it,
and when, after the notice mentioned in section 66, such
person does not produce it;
(b) when the existence, condition or contents of the
original have been proved to be admitted in writing by the
person against whom it is proved or by his representative
in interest;
(c) when the original has been destroyed or lost, or
when the party offering evidence of its contents cannot, for
any other reason not arising from his own default or
neglect, produce it in reasonable time;
(d) when the original is of such a nature as not to be
easily movable;
(e) when the original is a public document within the
meaning of section 74;
(f) when the original is a document of which a certified
copy is permitted by this Act, or by any other law in force in
India to be given in evidence;
(g) when the original consists of numerous accounts or
other documents which cannot conveniently be examined
in Court, and the fact to be proved is the general result of
the whole collection.
In cases (a), (c) and (d), any secondary evidence of
the contents of the document is admissible.
In case (b), the written admission is admissible.
In case (e) or (f), a certified copy of the document,
but no other kind of secondary evidence, is admissible.
In case (g), evidence may be given as to the general
result of the documents by any person who has examined
them, and who is skilled in the examination of such
documents.”
As is clear, this Section does not speak of any ‘application’ at all. It
only speaks, as Vazifdar J said, of the nature of the evidence adduced
as secondary evidence.
8. In this context, Section 63 is also to be noticed:
“63. Secondary evidence.— Secondary evidence means
and includes—
(1) certified copies given under the provisions
hereinafter contained;
(2) copies made from the original by mechanical
processes which in themselves insure the accuracy of the
copy, and copies compared with such copies;
(3) copies made from or compared with the original;
(4) counterparts of documents as against the parties
who did not execute them;
(5) oral accounts of the contents of a document given
by some person who has himself seen it.”
9. The result of such applications, which as I have noted are
misconceived and not maintainable, is that exceedingly peculiar
orders are passed either allowing or disallowing the leave sought.
When leave is granted, apparently secondary evidence is then led
but that leave is, as we have seen, completely unnecessary and a
party may always place before the Trial Court secondary evidence as
contemplated by the Evidence Act without such leave. The result of
disallowing the application is even more serious because the
evidence in question is wholly excluded from consideration without
the slightest examination of the proposed secondary evidence.
There is no question of examining the secondary evidence first at
the stage of considering the application for leave. If the secondary
evidence is sufficient to prove the document, then the document
must be admitted into evidence. One of two things happen on any
such application: either the secondary evidence is not considered,
and the document is shut out, which is wrong, or the evidence is
considered twice over, once for the so-called ‘leave’ and then again
at the time of admitting the document.
10. This is no way to conduct the trial. Conceivably, it might
result in a document that might otherwise be admissible and proved
by secondary evidence being wholly left out only because of an order
of this kind on an application that in itself is misconceived and not
contemplated in law. This procedure wastes scarce judicial time and
achieves nothing. When a party goes to trial, he may have direct or
primary evidence of some documents, and secondary evidence of
others. It is for him to decide which of these he can best prove by
what evidence.
11. Take the two situations under Section 65(a) and (c). In the
first, notice is given to the other side to produce an original; the
other side does not produce the notice. Section 66 requires such a
notice, but also contains exceptions. One of these is in sub-clause
(2), “when, from the nature of the case, the adverse party must
know that he will be required to produce it”. There are others.
Therefore, it is not in every case that such a notice is compulsory. A
simple example is that of a letter by the party A to party B. The
original is with party B. He knows, or must know, from the nature of
the case, that he will be required to produce the original. He does
not. No notice is necessary, and party A can straightaway produce
his office copy of that letter. No ‘leave’ or ‘permission’ is required to
do this. Under Section 65(c), where the original is lost, the party
seeking to adduce secondary evidence must depose that the original
is lost and must also depose to the other conditions set out in that
sub-clause, viz., that he is not guilty of default or neglect. The
section itself says that in a case under 65(c), any evidence of the
contents is admissible. Again, there is simply no question of ‘leave’
being required.
12. In the present case, by the impugned order, the plaintiffs were
ostensibly ‘permitted’ to lead secondary evidence with respect to a
certified copy of a registered lease deed but were disallowed to lead
secondary evidence in respect of a gift deed.
13. The entire order is one that cannot be sustained. It adopts a
procedure unknown to our law and jurisprudence and directly
contrary to decisions of this court.
REPORTABLE
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
WRIT PETITION NO. 11151 OF 2017
Karthik Gangadhar Bhat, Vs Nirmala Namdeo Wagh,
CORAM: G.S. PATEL, J
DATED: 3rd November 2017
1. Rule. Respondents waive service. By consent, Rule made
returnable forthwith and taken up for hearing and final disposal.
2. It is with great regret that I note that the Trial Courts
continue persistently to ignore settled law and binding precedents
on the question of leading secondary evidence. For reasons that are
entirely unclear, there seems to be an insistence on filing an
application for ‘permission’ to lead secondary evidence. This is
simply wrong.
3. It is settled law that no such application is at all maintainable
or even desirable. In Indian Overseas Bank v Triokal Textile Industries
& Ors.,
1
Vazifdar J (as he then was), in the context of a chamber
summons for such a leave filed on the Original Side, held that such a
chamber summons is not just unnecessary, it is misconceived. He
said it was neither necessary nor desirable; it is always open to the
party to lead secondary evidence before the Trial Court recording
evidence or hearing the matter without having to file such an
application. In paragraph 2, he said:
“2. A party desiring to lead secondary evidence must
do so before the Judge recording the evidence. It is the
Judge recording evidence who must decide, if any
objection as raised, whether or not to admit the
secondary evidence in evidence. If evidence is led
before a Commissioner the objection to secondary
evidence naturally can only be recorded and not
decided by the Commissioner. It is then the Judge
hearing the suit who decides the objection.”
1 AIR 2007 Bom 24 : 2006 (6) Bom CR 85.
(Emphasis added)
4. I myself have followed this decision (as I was bound to do) in
Anandji Virji Shah & Ors v Ritesh Sidhwani & Ors;
2 Ajaykumar
Krishnaprasad Seth v Maya Ramesh Belvetkar & Anr;3 MMTC Ltd v
Samarth Auto Care Pvt Ltd;
4
and Lajwanti v Jayshree P Madhwani &
Ors.
5
5. In Sumati & Ors v Yashodhara & Ors,
6
SB Shukre J had before
him a challenge to an order on a similar application. Though he
dismissed the challenge, some of these authorities were cited before
him, and he said in that context:
11. In the cases relied upon by the learned counsel for
the petitioners and referred to in the earlier paragraphs, it
has been held that for adducing secondary evidence it is
necessary for the party to prove existence and execution of
the original document and that conditions laid down in
Section 65 must be fulfilled before secondary evidence can
be admitted. This can be seen from the law settled by the
Hon’ble Apex Court in the cases of J. Yashoda and H.
Siddiqui (supra). Following this law only that learned Single
Judges of this Court in the judgments rendered in Luis
Sales de Andrade e Souza (jr.) & Anr. (supra) and Yeshwant
Rambhau Chondhe (supra) have held that foundational
2 Chamber Summons No. 1153 of 2015 in Suit No. 395 of 2007, decided
on 27th June 2016.
3 Chamber Summons No. 17 of 2016 in Testamentary Suit No. 18 of 2003
in Testamentary Petition No. 628 of 2001, decided on 13th October
2016.
4 Suit No. 427 of 1995, order dated 1st October 2014.
5 Testamentary Suit No. 6 of 2004, order dated 14th December 2016.
6 2016 (6) All MR 507.
evidence must be led and the Court should record a
satisfaction on the basis of such evidence that the originals
are lost or destroyed before admitting the secondary
evidence. In the cases of Indian Overseas Bank (supra)
and Anandji Virji Shah (supra), learned single judges of
this Court have held that any objection to secondary
evidence must be decided by the Judge recording the
evidence. In the cases of Bank of Baroda (supra) and
Ganpat Ghongade (supra) learned Single Judges of this
Court have followed the settled principle of law regarding
necessity of proving the existence and execution of the
original document before secondary evidence is admitted.
In the case of M. Chandra (supra), the Hon’ble Apex
Court has cleared doubt about the form of secondary
evidence holding that it may be adduced in any form in
which it is available, whether a copy, or copy of copy or
any other form subject to the condition that the copy is
proved to be a true copy of the original. Hon’ble
Supreme Court also observed that the exceptions to the
rule requiring primary evidence are designed to provide
relief in a case where a party is genuinely unable to
produce the original though there is no fault on its part.
12. The law discussed above would show that in
order that secondary evidence is admitted, form of the
secondary evidence is not material, it could be in any
form as for example copy or duplicate copy of the copy
of the original document, oral evidence or any other
form and that three conditions, which constitute
foundational facts, must be fulfilled while pressing into
service the provision of Section 65(c) of the Indian
Evidence Act, namely, (a) the original document is in
existence and has been executed by its executants, (b)
it has been lost or destroyed or cannot be produced in
reasonable time for any other reason not arising from
own default or neglect of the party leading secondary
evidence, and (c) the copy is the true copy of the
original.
If these conditions or any one of them are or is
not proved, the secondary evidence cannot be
admitted.
(Emphasis added)
6. In the present case it appears that at an early stage an
application was filed styled as an ‘application under Section 65 of
the Evidence Act’ seeking ‘permission’ to prove the contents of a
lease deed by secondary evidence. A copy of this application is at
page 59, Exhibit “G”.
7. Section 65 of the Evidence Act reads thus:
“65. Cases in which secondary evidence relating to
documents may be given.— Secondary evidence may be
given of the existence, condition, or contents of a
document in the following cases:—
(a) When the original is shown or appears to be in the
possession or power—
of the person against whom the document is sought
to be proved, or of any person out of reach of, or not
subject to, the process of the Court, or
of any person legally bound to produce it,
and when, after the notice mentioned in section 66, such
person does not produce it;
(b) when the existence, condition or contents of the
original have been proved to be admitted in writing by the
person against whom it is proved or by his representative
in interest;
(c) when the original has been destroyed or lost, or
when the party offering evidence of its contents cannot, for
any other reason not arising from his own default or
neglect, produce it in reasonable time;
(d) when the original is of such a nature as not to be
easily movable;
(e) when the original is a public document within the
meaning of section 74;
(f) when the original is a document of which a certified
copy is permitted by this Act, or by any other law in force in
India to be given in evidence;
(g) when the original consists of numerous accounts or
other documents which cannot conveniently be examined
in Court, and the fact to be proved is the general result of
the whole collection.
In cases (a), (c) and (d), any secondary evidence of
the contents of the document is admissible.
In case (b), the written admission is admissible.
In case (e) or (f), a certified copy of the document,
but no other kind of secondary evidence, is admissible.
In case (g), evidence may be given as to the general
result of the documents by any person who has examined
them, and who is skilled in the examination of such
documents.”
As is clear, this Section does not speak of any ‘application’ at all. It
only speaks, as Vazifdar J said, of the nature of the evidence adduced
as secondary evidence.
8. In this context, Section 63 is also to be noticed:
“63. Secondary evidence.— Secondary evidence means
and includes—
(1) certified copies given under the provisions
hereinafter contained;
(2) copies made from the original by mechanical
processes which in themselves insure the accuracy of the
copy, and copies compared with such copies;
(3) copies made from or compared with the original;
(4) counterparts of documents as against the parties
who did not execute them;
(5) oral accounts of the contents of a document given
by some person who has himself seen it.”
9. The result of such applications, which as I have noted are
misconceived and not maintainable, is that exceedingly peculiar
orders are passed either allowing or disallowing the leave sought.
When leave is granted, apparently secondary evidence is then led
but that leave is, as we have seen, completely unnecessary and a
party may always place before the Trial Court secondary evidence as
contemplated by the Evidence Act without such leave. The result of
disallowing the application is even more serious because the
evidence in question is wholly excluded from consideration without
the slightest examination of the proposed secondary evidence.
There is no question of examining the secondary evidence first at
the stage of considering the application for leave. If the secondary
evidence is sufficient to prove the document, then the document
must be admitted into evidence. One of two things happen on any
such application: either the secondary evidence is not considered,
and the document is shut out, which is wrong, or the evidence is
considered twice over, once for the so-called ‘leave’ and then again
at the time of admitting the document.
10. This is no way to conduct the trial. Conceivably, it might
result in a document that might otherwise be admissible and proved
by secondary evidence being wholly left out only because of an order
of this kind on an application that in itself is misconceived and not
contemplated in law. This procedure wastes scarce judicial time and
achieves nothing. When a party goes to trial, he may have direct or
primary evidence of some documents, and secondary evidence of
others. It is for him to decide which of these he can best prove by
what evidence.
11. Take the two situations under Section 65(a) and (c). In the
first, notice is given to the other side to produce an original; the
other side does not produce the notice. Section 66 requires such a
notice, but also contains exceptions. One of these is in sub-clause
(2), “when, from the nature of the case, the adverse party must
know that he will be required to produce it”. There are others.
Therefore, it is not in every case that such a notice is compulsory. A
simple example is that of a letter by the party A to party B. The
original is with party B. He knows, or must know, from the nature of
the case, that he will be required to produce the original. He does
not. No notice is necessary, and party A can straightaway produce
his office copy of that letter. No ‘leave’ or ‘permission’ is required to
do this. Under Section 65(c), where the original is lost, the party
seeking to adduce secondary evidence must depose that the original
is lost and must also depose to the other conditions set out in that
sub-clause, viz., that he is not guilty of default or neglect. The
section itself says that in a case under 65(c), any evidence of the
contents is admissible. Again, there is simply no question of ‘leave’
being required.
12. In the present case, by the impugned order, the plaintiffs were
ostensibly ‘permitted’ to lead secondary evidence with respect to a
certified copy of a registered lease deed but were disallowed to lead
secondary evidence in respect of a gift deed.
13. The entire order is one that cannot be sustained. It adopts a
procedure unknown to our law and jurisprudence and directly
contrary to decisions of this court.
14. I am informed that the only reason this application was filed
was that notice under Section 66 of the Evidence Act to produce the
original documents had not been given. That, as we have seen, is no
reason to demand an application for ‘permission to lead secondary
evidence’. All that the Court needed to do was to grant some time
for issuing appropriate notice under Section 66, assuming such a
notice was required, which is not always so. I am now told that a
notice under Section 66 has already been given.
15. In that view of the matter, the plaintiffs will be at liberty to
lead such secondary evidence as they desire on both documents, and
the Trial Court will consider whether that secondary evidence is
sufficient to prove the documents in question.
16. All questions as to admissibility and relevance are expressly
kept open.
17. In the result, the petition succeeds. The impugned order
dated 30th August 2017 is quashed and set aside. Rule is made
absolute in these terms. No costs.
(G. S. PATEL, J)
application was filed styled as an ‘application under Section 65 of
the Evidence Act’ seeking ‘permission’ to prove the contents of a
lease deed by secondary evidence. A copy of this application is at
page 59, Exhibit “G”.
7. Section 65 of the Evidence Act reads thus:
“65. Cases in which secondary evidence relating to
documents may be given.— Secondary evidence may be
given of the existence, condition, or contents of a
document in the following cases:—
(a) When the original is shown or appears to be in the
possession or power—
of the person against whom the document is sought
to be proved, or of any person out of reach of, or not
subject to, the process of the Court, or
of any person legally bound to produce it,
and when, after the notice mentioned in section 66, such
person does not produce it;
(b) when the existence, condition or contents of the
original have been proved to be admitted in writing by the
person against whom it is proved or by his representative
in interest;
(c) when the original has been destroyed or lost, or
when the party offering evidence of its contents cannot, for
any other reason not arising from his own default or
neglect, produce it in reasonable time;
(d) when the original is of such a nature as not to be
easily movable;
(e) when the original is a public document within the
meaning of section 74;
(f) when the original is a document of which a certified
copy is permitted by this Act, or by any other law in force in
India to be given in evidence;
(g) when the original consists of numerous accounts or
other documents which cannot conveniently be examined
in Court, and the fact to be proved is the general result of
the whole collection.
In cases (a), (c) and (d), any secondary evidence of
the contents of the document is admissible.
In case (b), the written admission is admissible.
In case (e) or (f), a certified copy of the document,
but no other kind of secondary evidence, is admissible.
In case (g), evidence may be given as to the general
result of the documents by any person who has examined
them, and who is skilled in the examination of such
documents.”
As is clear, this Section does not speak of any ‘application’ at all. It
only speaks, as Vazifdar J said, of the nature of the evidence adduced
as secondary evidence.
8. In this context, Section 63 is also to be noticed:
“63. Secondary evidence.— Secondary evidence means
and includes—
(1) certified copies given under the provisions
hereinafter contained;
(2) copies made from the original by mechanical
processes which in themselves insure the accuracy of the
copy, and copies compared with such copies;
(3) copies made from or compared with the original;
(4) counterparts of documents as against the parties
who did not execute them;
(5) oral accounts of the contents of a document given
by some person who has himself seen it.”
9. The result of such applications, which as I have noted are
misconceived and not maintainable, is that exceedingly peculiar
orders are passed either allowing or disallowing the leave sought.
When leave is granted, apparently secondary evidence is then led
but that leave is, as we have seen, completely unnecessary and a
party may always place before the Trial Court secondary evidence as
contemplated by the Evidence Act without such leave. The result of
disallowing the application is even more serious because the
evidence in question is wholly excluded from consideration without
the slightest examination of the proposed secondary evidence.
There is no question of examining the secondary evidence first at
the stage of considering the application for leave. If the secondary
evidence is sufficient to prove the document, then the document
must be admitted into evidence. One of two things happen on any
such application: either the secondary evidence is not considered,
and the document is shut out, which is wrong, or the evidence is
considered twice over, once for the so-called ‘leave’ and then again
at the time of admitting the document.
10. This is no way to conduct the trial. Conceivably, it might
result in a document that might otherwise be admissible and proved
by secondary evidence being wholly left out only because of an order
of this kind on an application that in itself is misconceived and not
contemplated in law. This procedure wastes scarce judicial time and
achieves nothing. When a party goes to trial, he may have direct or
primary evidence of some documents, and secondary evidence of
others. It is for him to decide which of these he can best prove by
what evidence.
11. Take the two situations under Section 65(a) and (c). In the
first, notice is given to the other side to produce an original; the
other side does not produce the notice. Section 66 requires such a
notice, but also contains exceptions. One of these is in sub-clause
(2), “when, from the nature of the case, the adverse party must
know that he will be required to produce it”. There are others.
Therefore, it is not in every case that such a notice is compulsory. A
simple example is that of a letter by the party A to party B. The
original is with party B. He knows, or must know, from the nature of
the case, that he will be required to produce the original. He does
not. No notice is necessary, and party A can straightaway produce
his office copy of that letter. No ‘leave’ or ‘permission’ is required to
do this. Under Section 65(c), where the original is lost, the party
seeking to adduce secondary evidence must depose that the original
is lost and must also depose to the other conditions set out in that
sub-clause, viz., that he is not guilty of default or neglect. The
section itself says that in a case under 65(c), any evidence of the
contents is admissible. Again, there is simply no question of ‘leave’
being required.
12. In the present case, by the impugned order, the plaintiffs were
ostensibly ‘permitted’ to lead secondary evidence with respect to a
certified copy of a registered lease deed but were disallowed to lead
secondary evidence in respect of a gift deed.
13. The entire order is one that cannot be sustained. It adopts a
procedure unknown to our law and jurisprudence and directly
contrary to decisions of this court.
REPORTABLE
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
WRIT PETITION NO. 11151 OF 2017
Karthik Gangadhar Bhat, Vs Nirmala Namdeo Wagh,
CORAM: G.S. PATEL, J
DATED: 3rd November 2017
1. Rule. Respondents waive service. By consent, Rule made
returnable forthwith and taken up for hearing and final disposal.
2. It is with great regret that I note that the Trial Courts
continue persistently to ignore settled law and binding precedents
on the question of leading secondary evidence. For reasons that are
entirely unclear, there seems to be an insistence on filing an
application for ‘permission’ to lead secondary evidence. This is
simply wrong.
3. It is settled law that no such application is at all maintainable
or even desirable. In Indian Overseas Bank v Triokal Textile Industries
& Ors.,
1
Vazifdar J (as he then was), in the context of a chamber
summons for such a leave filed on the Original Side, held that such a
chamber summons is not just unnecessary, it is misconceived. He
said it was neither necessary nor desirable; it is always open to the
party to lead secondary evidence before the Trial Court recording
evidence or hearing the matter without having to file such an
application. In paragraph 2, he said:
“2. A party desiring to lead secondary evidence must
do so before the Judge recording the evidence. It is the
Judge recording evidence who must decide, if any
objection as raised, whether or not to admit the
secondary evidence in evidence. If evidence is led
before a Commissioner the objection to secondary
evidence naturally can only be recorded and not
decided by the Commissioner. It is then the Judge
hearing the suit who decides the objection.”
1 AIR 2007 Bom 24 : 2006 (6) Bom CR 85.
(Emphasis added)
4. I myself have followed this decision (as I was bound to do) in
Anandji Virji Shah & Ors v Ritesh Sidhwani & Ors;
2 Ajaykumar
Krishnaprasad Seth v Maya Ramesh Belvetkar & Anr;3 MMTC Ltd v
Samarth Auto Care Pvt Ltd;
4
and Lajwanti v Jayshree P Madhwani &
Ors.
5
5. In Sumati & Ors v Yashodhara & Ors,
6
SB Shukre J had before
him a challenge to an order on a similar application. Though he
dismissed the challenge, some of these authorities were cited before
him, and he said in that context:
11. In the cases relied upon by the learned counsel for
the petitioners and referred to in the earlier paragraphs, it
has been held that for adducing secondary evidence it is
necessary for the party to prove existence and execution of
the original document and that conditions laid down in
Section 65 must be fulfilled before secondary evidence can
be admitted. This can be seen from the law settled by the
Hon’ble Apex Court in the cases of J. Yashoda and H.
Siddiqui (supra). Following this law only that learned Single
Judges of this Court in the judgments rendered in Luis
Sales de Andrade e Souza (jr.) & Anr. (supra) and Yeshwant
Rambhau Chondhe (supra) have held that foundational
2 Chamber Summons No. 1153 of 2015 in Suit No. 395 of 2007, decided
on 27th June 2016.
3 Chamber Summons No. 17 of 2016 in Testamentary Suit No. 18 of 2003
in Testamentary Petition No. 628 of 2001, decided on 13th October
2016.
4 Suit No. 427 of 1995, order dated 1st October 2014.
5 Testamentary Suit No. 6 of 2004, order dated 14th December 2016.
6 2016 (6) All MR 507.
evidence must be led and the Court should record a
satisfaction on the basis of such evidence that the originals
are lost or destroyed before admitting the secondary
evidence. In the cases of Indian Overseas Bank (supra)
and Anandji Virji Shah (supra), learned single judges of
this Court have held that any objection to secondary
evidence must be decided by the Judge recording the
evidence. In the cases of Bank of Baroda (supra) and
Ganpat Ghongade (supra) learned Single Judges of this
Court have followed the settled principle of law regarding
necessity of proving the existence and execution of the
original document before secondary evidence is admitted.
In the case of M. Chandra (supra), the Hon’ble Apex
Court has cleared doubt about the form of secondary
evidence holding that it may be adduced in any form in
which it is available, whether a copy, or copy of copy or
any other form subject to the condition that the copy is
proved to be a true copy of the original. Hon’ble
Supreme Court also observed that the exceptions to the
rule requiring primary evidence are designed to provide
relief in a case where a party is genuinely unable to
produce the original though there is no fault on its part.
12. The law discussed above would show that in
order that secondary evidence is admitted, form of the
secondary evidence is not material, it could be in any
form as for example copy or duplicate copy of the copy
of the original document, oral evidence or any other
form and that three conditions, which constitute
foundational facts, must be fulfilled while pressing into
service the provision of Section 65(c) of the Indian
Evidence Act, namely, (a) the original document is in
existence and has been executed by its executants, (b)
it has been lost or destroyed or cannot be produced in
reasonable time for any other reason not arising from
own default or neglect of the party leading secondary
evidence, and (c) the copy is the true copy of the
original.
If these conditions or any one of them are or is
not proved, the secondary evidence cannot be
admitted.
(Emphasis added)
6. In the present case it appears that at an early stage an
application was filed styled as an ‘application under Section 65 of
the Evidence Act’ seeking ‘permission’ to prove the contents of a
lease deed by secondary evidence. A copy of this application is at
page 59, Exhibit “G”.
7. Section 65 of the Evidence Act reads thus:
“65. Cases in which secondary evidence relating to
documents may be given.— Secondary evidence may be
given of the existence, condition, or contents of a
document in the following cases:—
(a) When the original is shown or appears to be in the
possession or power—
of the person against whom the document is sought
to be proved, or of any person out of reach of, or not
subject to, the process of the Court, or
of any person legally bound to produce it,
and when, after the notice mentioned in section 66, such
person does not produce it;
(b) when the existence, condition or contents of the
original have been proved to be admitted in writing by the
person against whom it is proved or by his representative
in interest;
(c) when the original has been destroyed or lost, or
when the party offering evidence of its contents cannot, for
any other reason not arising from his own default or
neglect, produce it in reasonable time;
(d) when the original is of such a nature as not to be
easily movable;
(e) when the original is a public document within the
meaning of section 74;
(f) when the original is a document of which a certified
copy is permitted by this Act, or by any other law in force in
India to be given in evidence;
(g) when the original consists of numerous accounts or
other documents which cannot conveniently be examined
in Court, and the fact to be proved is the general result of
the whole collection.
In cases (a), (c) and (d), any secondary evidence of
the contents of the document is admissible.
In case (b), the written admission is admissible.
In case (e) or (f), a certified copy of the document,
but no other kind of secondary evidence, is admissible.
In case (g), evidence may be given as to the general
result of the documents by any person who has examined
them, and who is skilled in the examination of such
documents.”
As is clear, this Section does not speak of any ‘application’ at all. It
only speaks, as Vazifdar J said, of the nature of the evidence adduced
as secondary evidence.
8. In this context, Section 63 is also to be noticed:
“63. Secondary evidence.— Secondary evidence means
and includes—
(1) certified copies given under the provisions
hereinafter contained;
(2) copies made from the original by mechanical
processes which in themselves insure the accuracy of the
copy, and copies compared with such copies;
(3) copies made from or compared with the original;
(4) counterparts of documents as against the parties
who did not execute them;
(5) oral accounts of the contents of a document given
by some person who has himself seen it.”
9. The result of such applications, which as I have noted are
misconceived and not maintainable, is that exceedingly peculiar
orders are passed either allowing or disallowing the leave sought.
When leave is granted, apparently secondary evidence is then led
but that leave is, as we have seen, completely unnecessary and a
party may always place before the Trial Court secondary evidence as
contemplated by the Evidence Act without such leave. The result of
disallowing the application is even more serious because the
evidence in question is wholly excluded from consideration without
the slightest examination of the proposed secondary evidence.
There is no question of examining the secondary evidence first at
the stage of considering the application for leave. If the secondary
evidence is sufficient to prove the document, then the document
must be admitted into evidence. One of two things happen on any
such application: either the secondary evidence is not considered,
and the document is shut out, which is wrong, or the evidence is
considered twice over, once for the so-called ‘leave’ and then again
at the time of admitting the document.
10. This is no way to conduct the trial. Conceivably, it might
result in a document that might otherwise be admissible and proved
by secondary evidence being wholly left out only because of an order
of this kind on an application that in itself is misconceived and not
contemplated in law. This procedure wastes scarce judicial time and
achieves nothing. When a party goes to trial, he may have direct or
primary evidence of some documents, and secondary evidence of
others. It is for him to decide which of these he can best prove by
what evidence.
11. Take the two situations under Section 65(a) and (c). In the
first, notice is given to the other side to produce an original; the
other side does not produce the notice. Section 66 requires such a
notice, but also contains exceptions. One of these is in sub-clause
(2), “when, from the nature of the case, the adverse party must
know that he will be required to produce it”. There are others.
Therefore, it is not in every case that such a notice is compulsory. A
simple example is that of a letter by the party A to party B. The
original is with party B. He knows, or must know, from the nature of
the case, that he will be required to produce the original. He does
not. No notice is necessary, and party A can straightaway produce
his office copy of that letter. No ‘leave’ or ‘permission’ is required to
do this. Under Section 65(c), where the original is lost, the party
seeking to adduce secondary evidence must depose that the original
is lost and must also depose to the other conditions set out in that
sub-clause, viz., that he is not guilty of default or neglect. The
section itself says that in a case under 65(c), any evidence of the
contents is admissible. Again, there is simply no question of ‘leave’
being required.
12. In the present case, by the impugned order, the plaintiffs were
ostensibly ‘permitted’ to lead secondary evidence with respect to a
certified copy of a registered lease deed but were disallowed to lead
secondary evidence in respect of a gift deed.
13. The entire order is one that cannot be sustained. It adopts a
procedure unknown to our law and jurisprudence and directly
contrary to decisions of this court.
14. I am informed that the only reason this application was filed
was that notice under Section 66 of the Evidence Act to produce the
original documents had not been given. That, as we have seen, is no
reason to demand an application for ‘permission to lead secondary
evidence’. All that the Court needed to do was to grant some time
for issuing appropriate notice under Section 66, assuming such a
notice was required, which is not always so. I am now told that a
notice under Section 66 has already been given.
15. In that view of the matter, the plaintiffs will be at liberty to
lead such secondary evidence as they desire on both documents, and
the Trial Court will consider whether that secondary evidence is
sufficient to prove the documents in question.
16. All questions as to admissibility and relevance are expressly
kept open.
17. In the result, the petition succeeds. The impugned order
dated 30th August 2017 is quashed and set aside. Rule is made
absolute in these terms. No costs.
(G. S. PATEL, J)
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