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Section 82 - Indian Evidence Act, 1872
82. Presumption as to document admissible in England without proof of seal or signature
When any document is produced before any Court, purporting to be a document which, by the law in force for the time being in England or Ireland, would be admissible in proof of any particular in any Court of justice in England or Ireland, without proof of the seal or stamp or signature authenticating it, or of the judicial or official character claimed by the person by whom it purports to be signed, the Court shall presume that such seal, stamp or signature is genuine, and that the person signing it held, at the time when he signed it, the judicial or official character which he claims, and the document shall be admissible for the same purpose for which it would be admissible in England or Ireland.
Related Sections
- Section 59: Proof of facts by oral evidence
- Section 164: Using, as evidence, of document production of which was refused on notice
- Section 106: Burden of proving fact especially within knowledge
- Section 68: Proof of execution of document required by law to be attested
- Section 31: Admission not conclusive proof, but may estop
Related Acts
- Punjab Municipal Corporation Law (Extension to Chandigarh) Amendment Act, 2017
- Central Goods and Services Tax (Amendment) Act, 2018
- Inter-Services Organisations (Command, Control and Discipline) Act, 2023
- Rashtriya Raksha University Act, 2020
- National Institutes of Food Technology, Entrepreneurship and Management Act, 2021