Bhartiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023

Bhartiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023

๐Ÿ”น Introduction

  • Enacted in 2023 (as part of 3 new criminal laws: BNS 2023, BNSS 2023, BSA 2023).
  • Replaces Indian Evidence Act, 1872.
  • Objective:
    • Modernize evidence law,
    • Incorporate digital/electronic records,
    • Remove outdated provisions,
    • Strengthen fair trial & justice system.

๐Ÿ”น Structure of BSA, 2023

  • Total Sections: 170 (Earlier 167 in IEA).
  • Divided into:
    1. Part I โ€“ Relevancy of Facts (Ss. 1โ€“52)
    2. Part II โ€“ Proof (Ss. 53โ€“118)
    3. Part III โ€“ Production & Effect of Evidence (Ss. 119โ€“170)

๐Ÿ”น Key Features & Changes

1. Recognition of Digital Evidence

  • Section 61โ€“90 (Digital Records):
    • Emails, SMS, WhatsApp chats, server logs, CCTV footage, voice recordings, GPS data admissible.
    • Electronic signature & blockchain records recognized.
    • Presumption of authenticity if from secure systems.

Example:
If A threatens B via WhatsApp, chat + phone location + server record = admissible digital evidence.


2. Secondary Evidence Expanded

  • Earlier: only certified copies allowed.
  • Now: photographs, audio, video, digital copies, mirror images, hard-disk data are admissible.

3. Presumption of Validity

  • Electronic Gazette notifications, digital government records presumed genuine.
  • Burden of disproving lies on person who denies authenticity.

4. Witness Examination (Ss. 119โ€“136)

  • Witnesses can be examined via video conferencing.
  • Special protection for vulnerable witnesses (children, rape survivors).

Example:
Victim of cyber-harassment can testify via video link from a safe room instead of appearing in court.


5. Expert Opinion (Ss. 45โ€“52, 113)

  • Expanded scope โ†’ includes DNA, fingerprint, handwriting, electronic forensic experts.
  • Judges may call cyber experts for technical verification.

6. Burden of Proof (Ss. 101โ€“114)

  • Principle unchanged: โ€œHe who asserts must prove.โ€
  • Special provisions for:
    • Presumption against dowry death (similar to Sec. 113B, IEA).
    • Presumption against sexual harassment in workplace.

7. Confession & Admissions

  • Confession before police officer still inadmissible (unless before magistrate).
  • However, electronic recording of confession permissible.

8. Privileged Communication (Ss. 122โ€“129)

  • Lawyerโ€“client, doctorโ€“patient, journalistโ€“source protection retained.
  • Cannot be compelled to disclose.

๐Ÿ”น Comparison with Indian Evidence Act, 1872

IEA, 1872BSA, 2023
Limited scope for electronic recordsWide recognition of digital/electronic evidence
Outdated (colonial language, 19th-century examples)Simplified, modernized language
Witness must appear physicallyVideo conferencing allowed
Secondary evidence restrictedWider acceptance of digital secondary evidence
Presumption rules limitedStronger presumptions for govt. e-records, blockchain, signatures

๐Ÿ”น Practical Importance for Lawyers

  1. Cybercrime & digital fraud cases โ†’ stronger evidentiary value.
  2. Bail arguments โ†’ electronic call data, CCTV, GPS crucial.
  3. Civil disputes โ†’ digital contracts, blockchain property records valid.
  4. Corporate law โ†’ Emails & digital agreements now primary evidence.

๐Ÿ”น Case Study Example

  • Scenario:
    X is accused of fraud in an online transaction.
    • Evidence: WhatsApp chats, payment gateway logs, bank e-records, CCTV of ATM withdrawal.
  • Under IEA (1872): each had to be certified + cumbersome.
  • Under BSA (2023): all digital records directly admissible if server logs are intact.

โœ… X can be convicted/acquitted faster, reducing delay in trials.


๐Ÿ”น Summary

  • BSA, 2023 modernizes Indian evidence law.
  • Focus on digital proof, speedy trial, protection of witnesses.
  • Essential for criminal, civil, family, corporate & cyber lawyers.
  • Future-ready law aligning with global digital justice systems.
BSA2023
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