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BSA 2023 Documentary Evidence (Sections 56-90) for Judiciary Exam 2027 — Primary, Secondary, Electronic Records and 25 MCQs

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Last Updated: May 2026

The Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA) 2023 replaced the Indian Evidence Act 1872 with effect from 1 July 2024. Sections 56–90 of BSA deal with documentary evidence — one of the most heavily-tested areas in PCS-J Mains, Delhi Judicial Service Mains, and Civil Judge interview rounds. This guide unpacks every key provision with the corresponding old IEA section reference and 25 practice MCQs.

BSA Documentary Evidence — Quick Map

  • Sections 56–73 — Proof of documents, primary vs secondary evidence
  • Sections 74–82 — Public documents, certified copies, presumptions
  • Sections 83–90 — Exclusion of oral by documentary evidence, parol evidence rule, electronic records

Section 56 — Definition of Document

“Document” means any matter expressed or described upon any substance by means of letters, figures or marks, or by more than one of those means, and includes electronic and digital records.

Note: BSA expressly includes electronic records within the definition — a major shift from IEA where electronic records were treated separately under Section 65A/65B.

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Section 57 — Primary and Secondary Evidence

Type Definition BSA Section IEA Equivalent
Primary Evidence The document itself produced for inspection 57 62
Secondary Evidence Includes certified copies, mechanically-made copies, counterparts, oral accounts 58 63

Section 58 — Secondary Evidence (Five Categories)

  1. Certified copies given under provisions hereinafter contained
  2. Copies made from the original by mechanical processes (photocopy, scan, print, photograph)
  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

Section 60 — When Secondary Evidence is Permissible

Secondary evidence of contents of a document may be given when:

  • (a) Original is in possession of opposing party who refuses to produce despite notice
  • (b) Original is in possession of any person not subject to court process and refuses to produce
  • (c) Existence/condition/contents have been admitted in writing by the party against whom it is proved
  • (d) Original has been destroyed or lost, or its production not possible
  • (e) Original is of public nature
  • (f) Original is a document where law permits secondary evidence
  • (g) Original consists of numerous documents not conveniently examined in court

Section 61 — Electronic Records as Primary Evidence

This is BSA’s most significant departure from IEA. Electronic records are now primary evidence on par with paper documents — not secondary. Provided the certificate under Section 63 is filed.

Old IEA Section 65B treated electronic records as secondary evidence requiring strict certification (Anvar P.V. v. P.K. Basheer, 2014). BSA simplifies but retains certification.

Section 63 — Certificate for Electronic Evidence

The certificate must:

  • Identify the electronic record and describe the manner of production
  • Give particulars of the device involved
  • Be signed by a person occupying a responsible official position in relation to operation of the device or management of activities

Arjun Panditrao Khotkar v. Kailash Kushanrao Gorantyal (2020) had reaffirmed mandatory Section 65B certificate. BSA Section 63 retains this in modified language.

Sections 74–77 — Public vs Private Documents

BSA § Provision
74 Public documents — documents forming acts/records of sovereign authority, official bodies, public officers; public records of private documents
75 All documents not falling under §74 are private
76 Certified copies of public documents — issued by officer in charge with seal/signature
77 Proof of public documents — by certified copies (no need for primary)

Sections 78–82 — Presumptions Regarding Documents

  • §78: Presumption as to genuineness of certified copies
  • §79: Presumption as to documents produced as records of evidence
  • §80: Presumption as to gazettes, newspapers, private acts, etc.
  • §81: Presumption as to electronic gazettes
  • §82: Presumption as to genuineness of electronic records 5 years old

Sections 83–88 — Parol Evidence Rule

The fundamental rule that oral evidence cannot contradict, vary, add to or subtract from the terms of a written contract when the contract has been reduced to writing.

  • §83: Evidence of terms of contracts in documentary form
  • §84: Exclusion of evidence of oral agreement (with 6 exceptions)
  • §85: Exclusion of evidence to explain ambiguous documents (with 4 exceptions)
  • §86: Application of provisions to wills and testamentary documents

Section 84 — Six Exceptions to Parol Evidence Rule

  1. Validity of document (mistake, fraud, intimidation)
  2. Separate oral agreement on subject not addressed in document
  3. Conditions precedent to contract attaching
  4. Distinct subsequent oral agreement to rescind/modify
  5. Usage/custom not inconsistent with the document
  6. To explain ambiguous documents (per §85)

Landmark Cases for PCS-J Mains

Case Year Principle
Anvar P.V. v. P.K. Basheer 2014 Section 65B certificate mandatory for electronic evidence
Arjun Panditrao Khotkar v. Kailash Kushanrao 2020 Reaffirmed mandatory certificate; clarified procedural law
Tomaso Bruno v. State of UP 2015 Section 65B not mandatory if device produced
Shafhi Mohammad v. State of HP 2018 Strict view; certificate required (overruled Tomaso Bruno’s softer position)
Bipin Shantilal Panchal v. State of Gujarat 2001 Procedure for marking documents as exhibits

BSA vs IEA — Key Section-Wise Comparison

Concept IEA Section BSA Section
Definition of document 3 2(d) read with §56
Primary evidence 62 57
Secondary evidence 63 58
Electronic records as evidence 65A, 65B 61 (primary), 63 (certificate)
Public documents 74 74
Parol evidence rule 91, 92 83, 84

25 Practice MCQs

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FAQ

Q1. Are BSA section numbers tested in PCS-J Mains?

Yes, in 2024-25 transition years, several state Mains have tested BSA section numbers directly. Memorise the high-frequency sections (57, 58, 60, 61, 63, 74, 83, 84).

Q2. Is Anvar P.V. v. P.K. Basheer still good law?

The principle (mandatory certificate) survives BSA. The case remains directly relevant.

Q3. Are electronic records now treated equally with paper documents?

Yes — Section 61 BSA gives electronic records primary-evidence status, eliminating the IEA-era distinction.

Q4. What is the parol evidence rule in one line?

When a contract is in writing, no oral evidence is allowed to contradict, vary, add or subtract from its terms — subject to six listed exceptions.

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