Introduction
Trials are intended to be a pursuit of truth, governed by procedural fairness, not a game of hide-and-seek. One of the most fundamental principles of evidence law is that a party cannot intentionally suppress a critical piece of evidence when the court or the opposing party demands it, only to dramatically pull it out of their pocket later when it serves their own narrative.
Under the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 (BSA), this principle is codified in Section 167. It deals with a specific scenario: what happens when a party is formally asked to produce a document, flatly refuses, and then later tries to use that very same document to their own advantage? Section 167 slams the door on such tactics, laying down a strict rule of estoppel against the withholding party. This article explores the mechanics of Section 167, the rationale behind preventing "litigation by ambush," and the narrow exceptions where a court might forgive the initial refusal.
167. Using, as evidence, of document production of which was refused on notice.
When a party refuses to produce a document which he has had notice to produce, he cannot afterwards use the document as evidence without the consent of the other party or the order of the Court.
Illustration
A sues B on an agreement and gives B notice to produce it. At the trial A calls for the document and B refuses to produce it. A gives secondary evidence of its contents. B seeks to produce the document itself to contradict the secondary evidence given by A, or in order to show that the agreement is not stamped. He cannot do so.
The Core Philosophy: No Approbation and Reprobation
The law despises a party who tries to "blow hot and cold" at the same time—a legal doctrine formally known as approbate and reprobate. Section 167 is a direct manifestation of this doctrine in the realm of documentary evidence.
When you are served with a legal notice to produce a document, you are being compelled by procedural law to assist the court in uncovering the facts. If you claim the document does not exist, or you simply refuse to hand it over because you believe it will hurt your case, the law imposes an adverse consequence: you lose the right to rely on it yourself.
This rule exists to prevent "litigation by ambush." Without Section 167, a cunning litigant could suppress an original document, force the opposing party to rely on weaker secondary evidence, and then suddenly produce the pristine original just to humiliate the opponent and derail their argument. The BSA ensures that evidence is a two-way street.
How the Mechanics of Section 167 Work
For the penalty under Section 167 to trigger, a very specific sequence of procedural events must occur during the trial. It does not apply arbitrarily just because a document was forgotten; it applies to deliberate, notified refusals.
Section 167's Sibling: The Cooperative Scenario Under Section 166
Section 167 is deliberately paired with the provision immediately before it. Section 166 of the BSA governs the opposite, cooperative half of the same exchange: a party is served notice to produce a document, actually produces it, and the other side goes ahead and inspects it. In that scenario the roles reverse — once the calling party has inspected what was produced, they become bound to tender it as evidence themselves if the producing party insists, precisely so they cannot inspect a document, decide it doesn't help them, and then pretend they never asked to see it.
| Scenario | Governing Section | Who Ends Up Bound |
|---|---|---|
| Document produced and inspected | Section 166, BSA | The party who called for it — if the producing party insists, the caller must put it in evidence. |
| Document withheld despite notice | Section 167, BSA | The party who withheld it — permanently barred from using it in that proceeding. |
Read together, the two sections close off gamesmanship from both directions of a notice-to-produce exchange: a party cannot inspect a document and then disown it (Section 166), and a party cannot hide a document and then spring it later once it suits them (Section 167). Neither side gets to control the narrative by picking and choosing after the fact.
The Exceptions: When Can the Withheld Document Be Used?
The law is strict, but it is not entirely absolute. Section 167 explicitly outlines two narrow doorways through which a previously withheld document can re-enter the courtroom as evidence.
| Exception Pathway | Practical Application |
|---|---|
| Consent of the Other Party | If Party A (who originally asked for the document) agrees to let Party B introduce it later, the court will accept it. In reality, this rarely happens unless introducing the original actually helps Party A's case more than the secondary evidence did. |
| Order of the Court | The judge holds discretionary power to allow the document if Party B can prove a genuine, unavoidable reason for the initial refusal (e.g., the document was genuinely lost and independently discovered midway through the trial). |
Section 167 BSA vs. Section 164 IEA: What Changed?
Legal practitioners familiar with the old regime will immediately recognize Section 167 of the BSA as a verbatim continuation of Section 164 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872. The legislative intent, the phrasing of the rule, and the specific illustration involving Party A and Party B remain completely identical.
The lawmakers chose not to alter this provision because the underlying logic of procedural fairness is timeless. Whether in 1872 or 2023, allowing a party to wield a document as a sword after initially hiding it behind a shield fundamentally undermines the integrity of a trial.
Key Takeaways
- Estoppel by Refusal: If you receive a valid notice to produce a document and refuse, you generally forfeit your own right to use that document later in the trial.
- Prevention of Ambush: The section is designed to stop litigants from hiding evidence to force the opponent into a weaker position, only to reveal the original when convenient.
- Secondary Evidence Protection: The rule protects the opposing party's reliance on secondary evidence. Once secondary evidence is on the record due to your refusal, you cannot spring the original to contradict it.
- Discretionary Forgiveness: The court can forgive the initial refusal and allow the document, but only upon a strong showing of good faith (e.g., misplacement and subsequent recovery of the file).
- Section 166 and 167 work as a pair: cooperative production (Section 166) binds the party who inspected the document; refusal (Section 167) permanently binds the party who withheld it. Together they prevent either side from controlling the record after the fact.
Conclusion
Section 167 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023, stands as a stern warning to litigants and their legal counsel: evidence is not a game of poker. The justice system requires transparency, and procedural mechanisms like the "Notice to Produce" must be respected.
By enforcing a strict rule of estoppel against those who attempt to suppress documents, Section 167 ensures that trials remain a fair, open inquiry into the facts. It forces parties to lay their cards on the table when asked, cementing the principle that you cannot reject the court's authority one moment, only to seek its protection the next.