Examination of witness is necessary in order to prove the case of the respective parties and to disprove the case of adversary party to the suit. The plaintiff brings his own witness to establish his claim, and unless there is pleading, question of proof does not arise.
The term ‘examination’ is the process to ask relevant questions regarding the fact in issue to a witness. The stages of ‘examination’ include-
The Evidence Act in India prescribes the examination of witnesses in civil and criminal cases. In civil matters, the plaintiff has the right to begin (Order XVIII, Rule 3 of CPC), the prosecutor or complainant begins matters in a criminal case. The examination of a witness by the party calling him is chief-examination, and by the other party is cross-examination Section 137.
As discussed above, it is the most effective tool in law to prompt the truth. It is required to give credibility to the testimony made by a witness. The evidence given by the witness is admissible when the opposite party tests the genuineness of the same by cross-examination.
It aims to discredit the accuracy, credibility, and value of the evidence stated by the witness during a chief examination. It also enables the cross-examining party to run through the material facts given by the witness to discover and reveal any inconsistencies, or to reveal any concealed information and facts which will strengthen the case.
Read Also Challenges and Solutions in Addressing Juvenile Delinquency in IndiaSec. 146 of the Evidence Act provides certain questions that can be asked during cross-examination. Questions can be asked for testing the veracity of the witness, questions shake his credit to know the truth etc. Sec. 148 of the Act provides the discretion of the Court where it can decide which questions are proper and which are improper.
The basic objective of the cross-examination is to ascertain the truth from the testimony given by the witness. It is intended to suggest that the witness is not speaking the truth on particular point, it is necessary to direct his attention to it by questions in cross-examination.
In the case of Jayendra Vishnu Thakur vs. State of Maharashtra, the Supreme Court of India observed that the right to cross-examine is not only a natural right but also a statutory right.
In State of Karnataka v. Yarappa Reddy, the Supreme Court of India added that the basic requirement for adducing such contradictory evidence is that the witness, whose impartiality is in question, must be presented with evidence and asked about it and he should have denied it.
A witness during cross-examination can be asked questions which tend to-
Such questions can be asked to the witness even if the answer to them might tend directly or indirectly to criminate the witness or expose him to penalty or forfeiture.
Amendment of 2002 to the Act inserted a proviso that says ‘In prosecution for rape or attempt to rape, it shall not be permissible to put questions in the cross-examination of the prosecutrix as to her general immoral character’.
Read Also How to prove false allegations under POCSO ACT?In S. Amruta v. C. Manivanna Bhupathy, held that there would be no disqualification for a child witness and before the outcome of such cross-examination is accepted. It added that the evidence needs to be corroborated through a preliminary enquiry. It was further clarified that the court would not be allowed to permit a child to take oath for being incompetent to understand the consequences.
In the case of Laxman v. State, AIR 1974 SC 303– If there are omissions in the previous statements that are not contradictions but throw some doubt on the veracity of what was omitted, the uncertainty may be capable of removal by questions in re-examination.
It is an act or process of examining one’s witness in the court or before an arbitrator once again after the witness has already been cross-examined by the counsel of the opposite party. As the expression suggests,‘re-examination’ means re-examining the witness by the counsel of the party who is relying on him. A witness may be re-examined only after cross-examination is done.
The purpose of re-examination is only to get clarification of some doubts created in cross-examination. The facts that have not been introduced till the stage of cross-examination cannot be introduced at the stage of re-examination.
It must be noted that the new facts can be brought in at this stage only after due permission of the court. If the new facts are introduced at this stage of the trial that the right to further cross-examine the witness on the new facts shall accrue.
Section 137- The provision says that the examination of a witness by the party calling the witness shall be called his examination-in-chief; the examination of a witness by the opposite party is called his cross-examination and the examination of a witness, after the stage of cross-examination by the party who calls him, shall be called his re-examination.
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Section 138– It prescribes the order of examination and says that the witness shall be first examined-in-chief, then (if the adverse party so desires) cross-examined, then (if the party calling him so desires) re-examined. It also gives a statutory right to the party calling a witness to re-examine him after the cross-examination.
In Rammi and Ors. v. State of Madhya Pradesh, the Apex Court has discussed very exhaustively the objective of re-examination.
The area and scope of cross-examination are very vast. In this article, although we couldn’t cover each aspect exhaustively by we have attempted to cover the elements of a good cross-examination. Constant training and practice is the only way to gain mastery over the art of cross-examination.
The stage of re-examination gives an opportunity to reconcile the discrepancies, between the statements in examination-in-chief and cross-examination. It also provides an opportunity to the parties to examine the statements inadvertently made at the stage of cross-examination or to remove confusions/ ambiguities in the deposition on the evidence by cross-examination.
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