Certificate Not Necessary Before Producing Electronic Evidence in Court: SC Clarifies Law

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On Tuesday, the Apex Court ruled that it is not mandatory to obtain a certificate every time before electronic evidence can be adduced in a Court of law. It held that no certificate will be required to produce electronic evidence such as disks, pen drives, etc. if the original device can be produced in Court.

Clarifying the law on Section 65 of the Evidence Act, a 3-Judge bench headed by Justice Rohinton F Nariman said a certificate is not a must in each & every case before electronic evidence can be produced in a Court of law.

The bench maintained that if a person can step in the witness box with the original device, such as a laptop or a phone, there is no pre-requisite of a certificate under Section 65B(4) of the Act. It said the authenticity of the electronic evidence can be proved in the witness box with production of the originator of the electronic evidence.

About such evidence being stored in a network or in a server that can’t be produced in a Court, the bench said a certificate will be required in those cases.

The Court also said that appropriate rules need to be framed under the Information Technology Act for recording & preservation of the meta-data given the fact that more & more electronic evidence is likely to be involved in criminal trials.

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Justice Nariman read out the operative part of the judgment on behalf of himself & Justice Ravindra Bhat. Justice V Ramasubramanian has also authored a concurring judgment on this point. The 3-Judge bench was answering a reference made by a division bench in July 2019 on the point of law.

The larger bench’s decision was called in view of the conflict between Shafhi Mohammad Vs State of Himachal Pradesh (2017) & Anvar PV Vs PK Basheer (2012) on the question: “Is requirement of certificate under Section 65B(4) of Indian Evidence Act mandatory for production of electronic evidence?”

The 2017 judgment had held that requirement of certificate under Section 65B (4) is not always mandatory even though the previous judgment had said that electronic evidence shall not be admitted in evidence unless the requirements under Section 65B are satisfied. 

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