Introduction
Before a court can weigh whether a piece of evidence is convincing, it must answer a more basic question: should this evidence be heard at all? That gatekeeping decision — separate from, and prior to, any assessment of credibility — belongs to the judge alone, and one provision spells out exactly how that gatekeeping works, including the tricky cases where a fact's relevance depends entirely on some other fact being proved first.
Section 141 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 (BSA), in Chapter X ("Of the Examination of Witnesses"), is one of the more substantively rich provisions in this cluster — three subsections and four illustrations covering the judge's admissibility power and the doctrine of conditional relevancy. This article works through all of it, including how its illustrations connect directly to two provisions already covered in this series.
141. Judge to decide as to admissibility of evidence.
(1) When either party proposes to give evidence of any fact, the Judge may ask the party proposing to give the evidence in what manner the alleged fact, if proved, would be relevant; and the Judge shall admit the evidence if he thinks that the fact, if proved, would be relevant, and not otherwise.
(2) If the fact proposed to be proved is one of which evidence is admissible only upon proof of some other fact, such last mentioned fact must be proved before evidence is given of the fact first mentioned, unless the party undertakes to give proof of such fact, and the Court is satisfied with such undertaking.
(3) If the relevancy of one alleged fact depends upon another alleged fact being first proved, the Judge may, in his discretion, either permit evidence of the first fact to be given before the second fact is proved, or require evidence to be given of the second fact before evidence is given of the first fact.
Subsection (1): Relevancy Is a Question for the Judge, Not a Matter of Weight
Section 141(1) establishes the fundamental separation between two distinct evidentiary questions: is this fact relevant at all, and if it is admitted, how much weight should it carry? The first question is a legal gatekeeping decision reserved entirely for the judge — before the fact ever reaches the record, the judge may demand that the party explain exactly how the proposed fact, if proved, would actually be relevant to the case, and must refuse admission if not satisfied.
This matters because India's trial system has no separate jury to whom relevancy questions could otherwise be deferred — the same judge who decides admissibility also ultimately weighs the evidence once admitted. Section 141(1) keeps these functions conceptually distinct even though one person performs both: a fact is not automatically credible just because it was ruled relevant, and a fact's weak persuasive value does not retroactively make it irrelevant.
Subsections (2) and (3): The Doctrine of Conditional Relevancy
Some facts are only relevant on the condition that some other fact is first established — a dying declaration is only relevant as an exception to hearsay if the declarant is actually dead; a copy of a document is only admissible as secondary evidence if the original is genuinely lost. Section 141 addresses this "chain" problem with two related but distinct rules.
Subsection (2) handles the mandatory case: where a fact is admissible only upon proof of some other, predicate fact, that predicate fact generally must be proved first — unless the party proposing the evidence undertakes to prove it later, and the court accepts that undertaking. This built-in flexibility avoids forcing an unworkable, rigid proof order in every case.
Subsection (3) handles a subtler situation: where the relevancy of one fact depends on another, but the dependency runs in a way that does not dictate a single mandatory order — here, the judge has genuine discretion to allow either fact to be proved first, choosing whichever order makes practical sense for that trial.
The Four Illustrations: Conditional Relevancy in Action
The section's own illustrations map each rule onto a concrete scenario, and two of them connect directly to provisions already covered elsewhere in this series.
Illustration (a) — the dying declaration problem: where a party wants to prove a statement made by a person alleged to be dead — relevant as an exception under the statements-by-unavailable-persons provisions elsewhere in the BSA — the fact that the person is actually dead must be proved first, before the statement itself is put in evidence. This is a direct, practical application of subsection (2)'s mandatory-order rule.
Illustration (b) — the lost document problem: where a party wants to prove a document's contents through a copy because the original is said to be lost, the loss of the original must be proved first, before the copy can be produced. This illustration connects directly to Section 147 BSA (already covered in this series), which lets the adverse party object to oral or secondary evidence about a document's contents until the document is produced or entitlement to secondary evidence is established — Section 141(2)'s illustration (b) is the specific proof-order mechanics behind exactly that objection.
Illustration (c) — the discretionary property case: where an accused denies possession of allegedly stolen property, and the relevancy of that denial depends on the property first being identified, the court may choose either order — requiring identification first, or allowing the denial to be proved first — illustrating subsection (3)'s flexible approach.
Illustration (d) — the causal chain case: where a fact is said to be the cause or effect of a fact in issue, but several intermediate facts must first be shown to establish that causal link, the court may permit proof of the ultimate fact before the intermediate facts, or require the intermediate facts first — again, a matter of judicial discretion under subsection (3).
Worked Example: Combining the Rules
A witness in a homicide trial wants to testify to a statement the deceased made shortly before dying, identifying their attacker. Before that statement can be admitted, the party proposing it must first prove — under subsection (2), following illustration (a) — that the declarant is in fact dead. Separately, the defence wishes to prove a chain of forensic facts (B, C, D) said to establish that a particular injury (A) caused the death. Under subsection (3), following illustration (d), the judge may permit proof of the injury (A) before the underlying chain (B, C, D) is established, or require the chain to be proved first — a discretionary sequencing choice rather than a fixed rule.
Section 141 BSA vs. Section 136 IEA: No Substantive Change
Section 141 corresponds to Section 136 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (IEA), and both the three operative subsections and all four illustrations are carried forward without any change in substance. The extensive body of case law on the judge's gatekeeping role and conditional relevancy built up under the 1872 Act therefore continues to apply in full under the BSA.
| Illustration | Governing Subsection | Connects To |
|---|---|---|
| (a) Dying declaration | Subsection (2) — mandatory order | Statements by unavailable persons provisions elsewhere in the BSA |
| (b) Lost document/copy | Subsection (2) — mandatory order | Section 147 BSA (already published) |
| (c) Property identification | Subsection (3) — discretionary order | General possession/denial fact patterns |
| (d) Causal chain | Subsection (3) — discretionary order | Complex multi-fact causation scenarios |
Who Section 141 Actually Affects
- Trial judges exercise the core gatekeeping function this section describes every time a party proposes to introduce a new fact into evidence.
- Litigators planning trial strategy must map out which pieces of evidence depend on predicate facts, and whether that dependency is mandatory (subsection 2) or discretionary (subsection 3), before deciding the order of proof.
- Counsel relying on statements of deceased persons must be ready to prove death as a threshold fact before the statement itself becomes admissible, per illustration (a).
- Counsel relying on secondary evidence of documents must establish the original's loss or unavailability first, per illustration (b), reinforcing the objection mechanism in Section 147 BSA.
- Appellate courts reviewing an evidentiary ruling should check whether the trial judge correctly distinguished the mandatory ordering of subsection (2) from the discretionary ordering of subsection (3).
Key Takeaways
- Relevancy and weight are distinct questions: subsection (1) makes the judge the gatekeeper on relevancy, separate from any later assessment of credibility or persuasive value.
- Conditional relevancy has two different rules: subsection (2) is a mandatory proof-first order (subject to an accepted undertaking), while subsection (3) is genuinely discretionary.
- The illustrations are not decorative: illustration (a)'s dying-declaration scenario and illustration (b)'s lost-document scenario map directly onto real, frequently litigated evidentiary situations.
- Section 141 connects directly to Section 147 BSA: illustration (b)'s proof-order rule is the mechanical backbone behind Section 147's objection-to-secondary-evidence procedure, already covered in this series.
- The rule is unchanged from 1872: Section 141 BSA carries forward Section 136 IEA's subsections and all four illustrations verbatim.
Conclusion
Section 141 is where the law of evidence meets the practical choreography of a trial — not just what counts as relevant, but in what order a genuinely relevant, but conditionally dependent, chain of facts must be proved. Its distinction between mandatory and discretionary sequencing reflects a considered judgment about which evidentiary chains are rigid by nature and which can tolerate a judge's practical flexibility.
Read alongside Section 147 BSA's documentary objection procedure, which illustration (b) directly underpins, Section 141 shows once again how this chapter's provisions interlock — a seemingly abstract, general rule about admissibility turns out to be the specific mechanism behind a very concrete, frequently invoked procedural right.