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1–3 of 3 cases
  1. High Court of Himachal Pradesh Criminal Appeal No. 438 of 2019 [2022 SCC OnLine HP 4139]

    Vijay Kumar v. State of Himachal Pradesh

    Ratio

    Convictions can be sustained on the sole testimony of the child survivor when found cogent and reliable, and corroboration is not necessary.. The testimony of the child survivor of a sex related offence must be given the same evidentiary value as that to an injured person in cases of physical violence.

    Pincites

    Para 13, 18; Page 4, 5

  2. High Court of Uttarakhand Criminal Jail Appeal No. 08 of 2018 [2022 SCC OnLine Utt 400]

    Ashok Singh Kandari v. State of Uttarakhand

    Ratio

    A conviction can be sustained on the sole testimony of the child survivor and there is no need for corroboration unless there exist compelling reasons for the same. Further, minor discrepancies in the child survivor's statement will not discredit an otherwise reliable prosecution case.

    Pincites

    Para 27; Page 4

  3. High Court of Kerala WA No. 1651 of 2020 [MANU/KE/3811/2021]

    Justin v. Union of India and Ors.

    Ratio

    Sections 29 and 30 of the POCSO Act are held to be Constitutional and they do not violate the Fundamental Rights, nor are they contrary to the basic criminal Principles. Presumption under Sections 29 and 30 POCSO would become operational only after the prosecution has established the foundational facts beyond reasonable doubt.

    Pincites

    Para 21-31, 35; Page 15-18