Supreme Court: Motive Becomes Irrelevant When Dying Declaration Provides Direct Evidence
Supreme Court restores murder conviction, rules absence of motive is irrelevant when a credible dying declaration provides direct evidence of guilt.
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Supreme Court restores murder conviction, rules absence of motive is irrelevant when a credible dying declaration provides direct evidence of guilt.
Supreme Court rules that omissions in chief examination are not fatal if clarified in cross-examination, reinforcing substantive justice over procedural technicalities.
Supreme Court rules that a Will is invalid if the sole attesting witness admits ignorance of its contents or affidavit. Landmark ruling clarifies Sections 63 of Succession Act and…
The Supreme Court has held that a dying declaration remains valid even if death is not imminent, clarifying Section 32(1) of the Evidence Act. The Court overturned the Allahabad H…
Mumbai ITAT rules that WhatsApp chats cannot be treated as valid evidence without a Section 65B certificate under the Indian Evidence Act. The Tribunal deletes a ₹3.16 crore addit…