Adverse Inference from a Defendant’s Absence in the Witness-Box under Indian Law

Adverse Inference from a Defendant’s Absence in the Witness-Box under Indian Law

Introduction

Whether a court may, and should, draw an adverse inference when a party—particularly a defendant—elects not to depose in support of the pleaded case is a recurrent question in Indian civil litigation. The issue combines the evidentiary presumption contained in Illustration (g) to section 114 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 with wider considerations of the burden of proof, the right to cross-examine, and the integrity of the fact-finding process. This article critically analyses that doctrine, traces its evolution through leading authorities such as Vidhyadhar v. Manikrao[1], Gopal Krishnaji Ketkar v. Mohamed Haji Latif[2], and Man Kaur v. Hartar Singh Sangha[3], and situates the principle within the broader statutory and procedural matrix governing Indian civil trials.

Statutory Framework

Section 114 Evidence Act empowers courts to “presume the existence of any fact which it thinks likely to have happened”, having regard to “the common course of natural events”. Illustration (g) exemplifies one such presumption: “That evidence which could be and is not produced would, if produced, be unfavourable to the person who withholds it.” Although framed in general terms, two corollaries arise in civil trials:

  • Where a party possessing personal knowledge of facts in issue does not step into the witness-box, the court may presume that his or her testimony would not have supported the case; and
  • The presumption is permissive, not mandatory, and yields where the burden of proof does not lie upon that party or where other circumstances neutralise the omission.

Historical and Doctrinal Evolution

Privy Council Foundations

The locus classicus is the Privy Council’s observation in Sardar Gurbakhsh Singh v. Gurdial Singh (1927)[4] that a party’s failure to give evidence “would be the strongest possible circumstance” discrediting his case. Subsequent Indian decisions, including Murugesam Pillai v. Manickavasaka Pandara[5], adopted the same formulation.

Supreme Court Consolidation

The principle was crystallised half a century later in Gopal Krishnaji Ketkar, where Hidayatullah, J. held that a litigant “cannot rely on the abstract doctrine of burden of proof” while suppressing vital evidence within his control. Comparable reasoning appears in Vidhyadhar, where the defendant who disputed the plaintiff’s sale deed but avoided the witness-box faced an inference that his pleadings were “not correct”. The Court harmonised section 114(g) with Order 18 Rule 4 CPC by emphasising that modern affidavit-in-lieu-of-examination cannot substitute personal cross-examination where primary facts lie within the party’s knowledge.

Post-1999 Refinements

Two contemporary decisions merit attention:

  1. Man Kaur re-affirmed that an attorney-holder’s testimony is insufficient on matters requiring the principal’s personal knowledge, thereby expanding the circumstances in which adverse inference may arise.
  2. Banarsi Dass v. Maharaja Sukhjit Singh[6]—although primarily on second appeals—reiterated that appellate intervention is warranted where lower courts accept unfounded allegations from an absent party.

Conditions Precedent to Drawing the Inference

Jurisprudence suggests four cumulative conditions:

  • Materiality of Facts: The facts on which the party abstains from deposing must be germane and personally known (Ketkar).
  • Exclusive Knowledge: Where section 106 Evidence Act places the facts “especially within the knowledge” of the party, the rationale for adverse inference strengthens (Ser Singh v. Kripal Singh[7]).
  • Opportunity Offered: The opposing party must have lacked any realistic means of cross-examining the absent litigant, thereby suffering procedural prejudice (Om Parkash v. Manoj Kumar[8]).
  • No Contrary Presumption: If the statutory burden rests on the claimant—not the defendant—or if the defendant’s evidence would be merely corroborative, courts have declined to infer (Umesh Bondre v. Wilfred Fernandes[9]; Pattipati Rama Murthy[10]).

Interaction with Procedural Law

Order 16 Rule 1 CPC allows a party to summon the opposite side as a witness, but High Courts emphasise that this is exceptional. In Vashram Daya Harijan v. Bijal Deva Harijan[11] the Gujarat High Court held that compelling the defendant to the stand is normally impermissible; the price for abstention is the risk of adverse inference, not coercive testimony. Similarly, the Madras High Court in Kanagambaram Ammal v. Kakammal[12] drew a negative presumption against a defendant signatory who remained silent, underscoring litigant autonomy coupled with evidentiary consequences.

Comparative Survey of High Court Application

  • Rajasthan High Court: In Nathu Ram Bansal[13] the Court, while addressing limitation in criminal leave-to-appeal, echoed the civil law position that non-examination of a material party invites presumption.
  • Bombay High Court: Decisions from Kisanlal Rathi[14] to Kunda v. Haribhau[15] adopt a robust, though rebuttable, presumption. Yet Umesh Bondre cautions that the inference cannot fill a foundational evidentiary vacuum.
  • Himachal Pradesh High Court: In Ranjana Nagpal[16] a proxy witness (husband) was deemed inadequate; the defendant’s silence yielded an inference of falsity.

Critical Assessment of the Supreme Court Line

The trilogy of Ketkar, Vidhyadhar, and Man Kaur presents a nuanced doctrine:

  1. Ketkar stresses duty to produce evidence rather than mere presence in the box. Suppression of documents or accounts may trigger illustration (g) even if the party testifies orally.
  2. Vidhyadhar shifts attention to oral evidence: non-appearance when personal testimony is dispositive undermines the pleadings.
  3. Man Kaur extends the doctrine to proxy testimony, insisting on personal deposition where readiness and willingness (a subjective state) are at stake under section 16(c) Specific Relief Act.

Read conjointly, the cases establish that illustration (g) applies not only to documents withheld, but equally to witnesses consciously avoided when their statements would carry probative weight. However, the inference remains a rule of prudence; it cannot substitute proof of essential ingredients such as consideration (Banarsi Dass) or the plaintiff’s own readiness (Man Kaur).

Policy Considerations

Drawing adverse inference serves at least three systemic goals:

  1. Truth-Tracking: It discourages strategic silence and encourages production of best evidence.
  2. Procedural Fairness: It compensates the opposing party for the lost opportunity of cross-examination, aligning with the natural-justice tenet articulated in Om Parkash.
  3. Judicial Economy: It reduces frivolous litigation by disincentivising bare pleadings unsupported by verifiable evidence.

Nevertheless, over-extension risks reversing the burden of proof. Courts therefore calibrate the inference to case-specific equities, a balancing approach evident in Umesh Bondre, where the plaintiff’s own evidentiary deficiencies prevented reliance on the defendant’s silence.

Conclusion

Indian law recognises, but circumscribes, the court’s power to draw an adverse inference from a defendant’s failure to enter the witness-box. Section 114(g) Evidence Act furnishes the statutory source; the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence refines its contours. The inference is discretionary, rebuttable, and contingent upon the materiality of the withheld testimony and the allocation of the burden of proof. Where a litigant’s personal knowledge is pivotal, silence may prove fatal; yet where the claimant’s own evidentiary edifice is infirm, the presumption cannot salvage the claim. The doctrine thus operates as an equitable compass, guiding courts toward substantive justice while preserving procedural integrity.

Footnotes

  1. Vidhyadhar v. Manikrao & Anr., (1999) 3 SCC 573.
  2. Gopal Krishnaji Ketkar v. Mohamed Haji Latif, (1968) SCC OnLine SC 1413.
  3. Man Kaur (Dead) by LRs v. Hartar Singh Sangha, (2010) 10 SCC 512.
  4. Sardar Gurbakhsh Singh v. Gurdial Singh, AIR 1927 PC 230.
  5. Murugesam Pillai v. Manickavasaka Pandara, (1917) 40 Mad 402 (PC).
  6. Banarsi Dass v. Brig. Maharaja Sukhjit Singh, (1998) 2 SCC 81.
  7. Ser Singh & Ors. v. Kripal Singh, 2006 SCC OnLine MP 302.
  8. Om Parkash v. Manoj Kumar, 2024 SCC OnLine HP —.
  9. Umesh Bondre v. Wilfred Fernandes, 2006 SCC OnLine Bom 930.
  10. Pattipati Rama Murthy v. Chaluvadi Venkata Chalapathi Rao, 2017 SCC OnLine Tel 252.
  11. Vashram Daya Harijan v. Bijal Deva Harijan, (1969) SCC OnLine Guj 19.
  12. Kanagambaram Ammal v. Kakammal, 2004 SCC OnLine Mad 861.
  13. Nathu Ram Bansal v. State of Rajasthan, 2013 SCC OnLine Raj 3867.
  14. Kisanlal Maniklal Rathi v. Dinkar Yashwant Patil, 2003 SCC OnLine Bom 901.
  15. Kunda v. Haribhau, 2014 SCC OnLine Bom 2906.
  16. Ranjana Nagpal v. Devi Ram & Ors., 2001 SCC OnLine HP 373.