Role of Judiciary and Police in Connection With an Admissions and Confession and Abuses by Them

Understanding the Significance of Admissions and Confessions in the Indian Law of Proof

Authors

  • Salim Javed Akhtar

Keywords:

role of judiciary, role of police, admissions, confession, abuses, Indian law of proof, affirmation, evidence, conviction, criminal cases

Abstract

All admissions are confirmation however all affirmations are not admissions. Affirmation and admission are a fundamentals subject of the Indian law of proof and are a special case for the prattle. Affirmation and admission are significant in the Indian law of proof since they are the assertion against the interest of the people who makes them and they are without a doubt evident. In State (NCT of Delhi) v. Navjot Sandhu (2005) 11 SCC 600, the Supreme Court held that admission is considered exceptionally solid on the grounds that no ordinary individual would make an affirmation against himself except if elevated by his still, small voice to tell truth. Confirmation is significant proof yet creator can demonstrate that it isn't accurate. It's anything but an indisputable in nature however it is a definitive of the reality except if it is removed and demonstrated something else. Admission is an immediate confirmation of blame and it tends to be the premise of conviction. In the Shankaria v. Province of Rajasthan AIR 1978 SC 1248, the Apex Court held that an admission, if deliberate and honestly made, is a useful confirmation of blame. Segments 17 to 23 of the Indian law of proof, manage affirmation and areas 24 to 30 of the Indian law of proof, manages tolerability of admission by charged in criminal cases.

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Published

2019-02-01

How to Cite

[1]
“Role of Judiciary and Police in Connection With an Admissions and Confession and Abuses by Them: Understanding the Significance of Admissions and Confessions in the Indian Law of Proof”, JASRAE, vol. 16, no. 2, pp. 1597–1603, Feb. 2019, Accessed: Dec. 25, 2025. [Online]. Available: https://ignited.in/index.php/jasrae/article/view/10375

How to Cite

[1]
“Role of Judiciary and Police in Connection With an Admissions and Confession and Abuses by Them: Understanding the Significance of Admissions and Confessions in the Indian Law of Proof”, JASRAE, vol. 16, no. 2, pp. 1597–1603, Feb. 2019, Accessed: Dec. 25, 2025. [Online]. Available: https://ignited.in/index.php/jasrae/article/view/10375