Introduction
When a defence lawyer calls a respected neighbour, employer, or community elder to tell the court that the accused is a person of good repute, it can feel like a different kind of testimony — softer, more personal, almost beyond challenge. It is not. A witness called purely to speak to someone's character is, procedurally, no different from any other witness in the box.
Section 145 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 (BSA), in Chapter X ("Of the Examination of Witnesses"), is a single, short sentence that closes off any argument to the contrary. This article explains what a "witness to character" actually is, the substantive rules that bring such witnesses into a trial in the first place, the real (and narrower than most people assume) scope of what they may testify to, and why Section 145 ensures they face the same testing as everyone else.
145. Witnesses to character.
Witnesses to character may be cross-examined and re-examined.
What a "Witness to Character" Actually Is
A witness to character is someone called specifically to give evidence about another person's reputation or disposition — most commonly the accused's, in a criminal trial. This kind of testimony exists because of a separate, substantive rule: Section 47 BSA (corresponding to Section 53 of the old Indian Evidence Act, 1872) makes the accused's good character relevant in criminal cases, allowing the defence to put such evidence before the court in the first place. A mirror-image rule, Section 49 BSA (corresponding to Section 54 IEA), keeps the accused's previous bad character generally irrelevant — except once the defence has opened the door with good-character evidence, at which point the prosecution may respond in reply.
Section 145 does not create the right to call a character witness — that comes from Sections 47 and 49. What it does is confirm that once such a witness is called, they are examined exactly like any other: subject to full cross-examination by the opposing side, and to re-examination by the party who called them.
The Real Scope of Character Evidence: Reputation and Disposition, Not Specific Acts
Before Section 145's rule can be understood properly, it helps to know what a character witness is actually allowed to say — because it is narrower than most people expect. Indian evidence law distinguishes between reputation (the general opinion the community holds of a person) and disposition (a person's actual, inherent qualities), and both are relevant under the BSA's character-evidence provisions. What a character witness generally cannot do is testify about specific acts or incidents to prove character — the law confines this kind of witness to general reputation and disposition, not a catalogue of anecdotes.
This distinction matters enormously once cross-examination begins, because it defines exactly what a character witness can be legitimately tested on: how well they actually know the person, how wide their acquaintance with the relevant community is, and whether their claimed knowledge of "general reputation" is genuine or merely a personal, one-sided impression dressed up as community opinion.
Why the No-Exemption Rule Matters in Practice
Without Section 145's clarity, a party might argue that character testimony — being general, reputational, and not tied to the specific facts in issue — should be treated as a lighter-touch exercise, perhaps limited to a brief statement rather than searching cross-examination. Section 145 forecloses that argument entirely. The opposing party retains the full right to probe the character witness's basis of knowledge, potential bias, relationship with the party they are vouching for, and the breadth (or narrowness) of the community whose "opinion" they claim to represent.
This matters because character evidence, even when admissible, is widely recognised as inherently weaker than direct factual testimony about the events in issue — its value depends entirely on how well-founded the witness's claimed knowledge actually is. Cross-examination is the mechanism that tests whether a character witness's testimony reflects genuine, wide community reputation or a narrow, potentially self-serving personal opinion.
Worked Examples
Example 1 — Testing a Defence Character Witness
In a trial where the defence calls a long-time neighbour to testify that the accused is "known in the community as an honest, peaceable person," the prosecution is fully entitled to cross-examine that witness — asking how often they actually interact with the accused, whether they are aware of any prior disputes or complaints involving the accused, and how wide a cross-section of the community their claimed knowledge of "reputation" actually represents.
Example 2 — A Reply Witness Under Section 49 BSA
Once the defence has led good-character evidence, the prosecution may call its own witness in reply to testify to the accused's bad character under Section 49 BSA. That reply witness is, in turn, subject to the same rule: the defence may cross-examine and, where appropriate, the prosecution may re-examine, exactly as with any other witness. Section 145's rule cuts both ways — it applies equally to witnesses supporting either side of the character question.
Section 145 BSA vs. Section 140 IEA: Verbatim Continuity
Section 145 corresponds to Section 140 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (IEA), carried forward without a single change in wording. The substantive character-evidence provisions it operates alongside have shifted position — Section 53 IEA is now Section 47 BSA, and Section 54 IEA is now Section 49 BSA — but the core rule that character witnesses face ordinary examination remains exactly as it has stood since 1872.
| Provision | Function | IEA, 1872 Equivalent |
|---|---|---|
| Section 47 BSA | Makes an accused's good character relevant in criminal cases | Section 53 |
| Section 49 BSA | Bars previous bad-character evidence, except in reply | Section 54 |
| Section 145 BSA | Confirms character witnesses face ordinary cross/re-examination | Section 140 |
Section 145 Distinguished From Section 149: Two Different Kinds of "Character" Question
It is easy to confuse Section 145 with Section 149 BSA (already covered in this series), since both touch on character in examination — but they address entirely different situations. Section 149 governs questions put to any witness, on cross-examination, attacking that witness's own credit and character. Section 145 governs the procedural status of a witness called specifically to testify about someone else's character — typically the accused's. A character witness can, in principle, face both kinds of scrutiny at once: cross-examination on the substance of their character evidence about the accused (governed generally, with Section 145 confirming no exemption exists), and separately, credit-testing questions about their own veracity or character under Section 149.
Who Section 145 Actually Affects
- Defence counsel calling character witnesses must prepare them for genuine cross-examination, not treat the testimony as a formality that will pass unchallenged.
- Prosecutors retain the full right to probe the basis, breadth, and genuineness of any claimed reputation evidence offered on the accused's behalf.
- Character witnesses themselves should understand they will be tested on the depth of their actual knowledge, not simply permitted to make a general favourable statement and step down.
- Trial judges should ensure character witnesses are confined, in examination-in-chief, to reputation and disposition rather than specific incidents, while allowing full cross-examination once that evidence is led.
- Litigators reading this chapter as a system should keep Section 145's narrow procedural function distinct from Section 149's broader credit-testing rule for any witness.
Key Takeaways
- Section 145 grants no special exemption: a witness called purely to speak to character is examined exactly like any other witness — full cross-examination and re-examination apply.
- Character witnesses exist because of Sections 47 and 49 BSA: good character is relevant for the defence; bad character becomes relevant only in reply once the door is opened.
- The permitted scope is reputation and disposition, not specific acts: a character witness cannot ordinarily testify to particular incidents to prove character.
- Cross-examination is where weak character evidence is exposed: genuine community reputation and a narrow personal opinion can look identical until tested.
- The rule is unchanged from 1872: Section 145 BSA carries forward Section 140 IEA verbatim, even as the substantive character-evidence provisions it operates alongside were renumbered.
Conclusion
Section 145 is a short provision doing a precise job: it removes any doubt that testimony about someone's character deserves gentler treatment than testimony about anything else in a trial. The witness who steps up to vouch for another person's good name faces exactly the same scrutiny as any other — and that scrutiny is often what reveals whether their evidence is grounded in genuine community reputation or something considerably thinner.
Understood alongside Sections 47 and 49 BSA, which supply the substantive right to lead character evidence in the first place, Section 145 completes the picture: character evidence is real evidence, tested by the same rules as everything else the court hears.