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State of Himachal Pradesh v. Sanjay Kumar alias Sunny
RatioThe testimony of a survivor in sexual offences cases is vital unless compelling reasons necessitate corroboration. Courts should find no difficulty to convict on the testimony of the survivor of a sexual assault alone if the testimony inspires confidence.
PincitesPara 31, Page 11
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Vijay alias Chinee v. State of Madhya Pradesh
RatioConviction can be based solely on the testimony of the child survivor if it is trustworthy and reliable, even in the absence of corroborating evidence or injuries. Minor discrepancies in her does not make it unreliable.
PincitesPara 9-15 Page 195-198, 204, 205
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State of Rajasthan v. N.K
RatioConvictions for rape can be founded solely on the testimony of the survivor, without the need for corroboration. However, if the court finds the testimony insufficiently credible on its own, it may seek additional evidence to bolster the survivor's account. A survivor's testimony under oath should be believed unless the testimony is such as would…
PincitesPara 11, 19 Page 39,42-44
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Vitthal Rajendra Jogade v. State of Maharashtra
RatioAbsence of any injuries on the person of the child survivor might not by itself discredit the statement of the child survivor and in such a situation the non-production of a medical report would not be of much consequence if the other evidence was believable. Corroboration is not the sine qua non for a conviction…
PincitesPara 12; Page 4
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Raju Roy vs. State of West Bengal
RatioTestimony of a child can only be relied on if it is intelligible. A testimony is intelligible based on (a) the ability to understand questions put to the witness and (b) give answers to those questions that can be understood. If evidence is in the favour of the victim, mere lapses in the victim's statement…
PincitesPara 29-31, 34-37, 39-41, 42-44, 50, 61, 72-75; Page 5-8, 11, 14
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Imran Shabbir Gauri Vs. State of Maharashtra
RatioThe court held that the concerned authorities of the State Government or Central Government will take some initiative in incorporating certain amendments under relevant laws so as to give status to Section 164 statement as that of examination-in-chief in all eventualities. The trauma that a victim has to undergo, after the incident does not stop…
PincitesPara 48; Page 13, 14
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Attorney General of India and Ors. v. Satish and Ors.
RatioWhile sexual intent under S. 8 POCSO is a question of fact, the Court is entitled to raise the presumption under S. 30 POCSO with regard to the culpable state of mind of the accused when the court is satisfied with the existence of a fact beyond reasonable doubt.
PincitesPara 36-37, 42; Page 15, 17
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Pappu v. State of Uttar Pradesh
RatioWhere foundational facts have been established, the presumption under section 29 POCSO becomes operational and the accused is bound to rebut the presumption.
PincitesPara 32; Page 39 & 40.
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Ranjit Rajbanshi v. The State of West Bengal and Ors.
RatioWhen the prosecution fails to establish a strong preponderance of probability sufficient to raise a presumption under Section 29 POCSO, the negative burden to prove their innocence will not shift to the accused if the defence effectively discredits the prosecution's case, the accused will be discharged of their onus under Section 29 POCSO.
PincitesPara 43, 50, 52, 53; Page 5, 6, 7