Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’s Indian Evidence Act of 1872: On the Verge of Abolition in Singapore?

Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’s Indian Evidence Act of 1872 was a revolutionary piece of work with respect to its conceptualisation of relevance and admissibility – essentially, it simplified the common law framework and statutorily defined what was relevant and admissible and obviated the need to ask...

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Main Author: CHEN, Siyuan
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2014
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/1277
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spelling sg-smu-ink.sol_research-32302014-02-26T10:19:42Z Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’s Indian Evidence Act of 1872: On the Verge of Abolition in Singapore? CHEN, Siyuan Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’s Indian Evidence Act of 1872 was a revolutionary piece of work with respect to its conceptualisation of relevance and admissibility – essentially, it simplified the common law framework and statutorily defined what was relevant and admissible and obviated the need to ask what was not relevant or what was not admissible. It was so influential that a number of common law jurisdictions adopted the legislation not long after its enactment; more than a hundred years later, many of them remain content to retain a majority of its relevancy provisions in their original form. In Singapore’s case, however, its courts have struggled to find the right balance between being faithful to its Evidence Act and following modern common law developments that were or are incompatible with the statute. Singapore’s legislature has had this struggle as well: this was demonstrated perhaps most clearly in the 2012 amendments, which effectively turned the relevance and admissibility framework on its head by giving judges the power to outflank the Evidence Act. In this paper I will show why the Evidence Act is better off repealed, or better yet completely redesigned. It has become more incoherent than before, exacerbated by a number of factors: Singapore has long abolished trial-by-jury; the statute continues to expressly prohibit the incorporation of common law jurisprudence that is inconsistent with it (but this has not stopped the courts from ignoring this prohibition); and the statute continues to apply indiscriminately to civil and criminal proceedings. The harsh lessons to be learned from the Singapore experience will hopefully be useful to other common law jurisdictions that still retain Stephen’s Evidence Act but have aspirations to reform it. 2014-05-01T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/1277 Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Asian Studies Evidence Indigenous, Indian, and Aboriginal Law
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Asian Studies
Evidence
Indigenous, Indian, and Aboriginal Law
spellingShingle Asian Studies
Evidence
Indigenous, Indian, and Aboriginal Law
CHEN, Siyuan
Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’s Indian Evidence Act of 1872: On the Verge of Abolition in Singapore?
description Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’s Indian Evidence Act of 1872 was a revolutionary piece of work with respect to its conceptualisation of relevance and admissibility – essentially, it simplified the common law framework and statutorily defined what was relevant and admissible and obviated the need to ask what was not relevant or what was not admissible. It was so influential that a number of common law jurisdictions adopted the legislation not long after its enactment; more than a hundred years later, many of them remain content to retain a majority of its relevancy provisions in their original form. In Singapore’s case, however, its courts have struggled to find the right balance between being faithful to its Evidence Act and following modern common law developments that were or are incompatible with the statute. Singapore’s legislature has had this struggle as well: this was demonstrated perhaps most clearly in the 2012 amendments, which effectively turned the relevance and admissibility framework on its head by giving judges the power to outflank the Evidence Act. In this paper I will show why the Evidence Act is better off repealed, or better yet completely redesigned. It has become more incoherent than before, exacerbated by a number of factors: Singapore has long abolished trial-by-jury; the statute continues to expressly prohibit the incorporation of common law jurisprudence that is inconsistent with it (but this has not stopped the courts from ignoring this prohibition); and the statute continues to apply indiscriminately to civil and criminal proceedings. The harsh lessons to be learned from the Singapore experience will hopefully be useful to other common law jurisdictions that still retain Stephen’s Evidence Act but have aspirations to reform it.
format text
author CHEN, Siyuan
author_facet CHEN, Siyuan
author_sort CHEN, Siyuan
title Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’s Indian Evidence Act of 1872: On the Verge of Abolition in Singapore?
title_short Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’s Indian Evidence Act of 1872: On the Verge of Abolition in Singapore?
title_full Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’s Indian Evidence Act of 1872: On the Verge of Abolition in Singapore?
title_fullStr Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’s Indian Evidence Act of 1872: On the Verge of Abolition in Singapore?
title_full_unstemmed Sir James Fitzjames Stephen’s Indian Evidence Act of 1872: On the Verge of Abolition in Singapore?
title_sort sir james fitzjames stephen’s indian evidence act of 1872: on the verge of abolition in singapore?
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2014
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/1277
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