Central Excise Act, 1944
36B. ADMISSIBILITY OF MICRO FILMS, FACSIMILE COPIES
OF DOCUMENTS AND COMPUTER PRINT OUTS AS DOCUMENTS AND AS EVIDENCE.
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the
time being in force,
(a) a micro film of a
document or the reproduction of the image or images embodied in such micro film
(whether enlarged or not); or
(b) a facsimile copy
of a document; or
(c) a statement contained in a document and
included in a printed material produced by a computer (hereinafter referred to
as a "computer print out"), if the conditions mentioned in
sub-section (2) and the other provisions contained in this section are
satisfied in relation to the statement and the computer in question,
Shall be deemed to be also a document for the purposes of this
Act and the rules made thereunder and shall be
admissible in any proceedings thereunder , without
further proof or production of the original, as evidence of any contents of the
original or of any fact stated therein of which direct evidence would be
admissible.
(2) The conditions referred to in sub-section (1) in respect of
a computer print out shall be the following, namely : -
(a) the computer print out containing the
statement was produced by the computer during the period over which the
computer was used regularly to store or process information for the purposes of
any activities regularly carried on over that period by the person having
lawful control over the use of the computer;
(b) during the said
period, there was regularly supplied to the computer in the ordinary course of
the said activities, information of the kind contained in the statement or of
the kind from which the information so contained is derived;
(c) throughout the material part of the said
period, the computer vas operating properly or, if not, then any respect in
which it was not operating properly or was out of operation during that part of
that period was not such as to affect the production of the document or the
accuracy of the contents; and
(d) the information
contained in the statement reproduced or is derived from information supplied
to the computer in the ordinary course of the said activities.
(3) Where over any period, the function of storing or processing
information for the purposes of any activities regularly carried on over that
period as mentioned in clause (a) of sub-section (2) was regularly performed by
computers, whether –
(a) by a combination
of computers operating over that period; or
(b) by different
computers operating in succession over that period; or
(c) by different combinations
of computers operating in succession over that period; or
(d) in any other manner involving the
successive operation over that period, in whatever order, of one or more
computers and one or more combinations of computers, the computers used for
that purpose during that period shall be treated for the of this section as
constituting a single computer; and references in this to a computer shall be
construed accordingly.
(4) In any proceedings under this Act and the rules made thereunder where it is desired to give a statement in
evidence by virtue of this section, a certificate doing any of the following
things, that is to say, -
(a) identifying the
document containing the statement and describing the manner in which it was
produced;
(b) giving such particulars of any device
involved in the production of that document as may be appropriate for the
purpose of showing that the document was produced by a computer;
(c) dealing with any of the matters to which
the conditions mentioned in sub-section (2) relate, and purporting to be signed
by a person occupying a responsible official position in relation to the
operation of the relevant device or the management of the relevant activities
(whichever is appropriate) shall be evidence of any matter stated in the
certificate; and for the purposes of this sub-section it shall be sufficient
for a matter to be stated to the best of the knowledge and belief of the person
stating it.
(5) For the purposes of this section, -
(a) information shall
be taken to be supplied to a computer if it is supplied thereto in any
appropriate form and whether it is so supplied directly or (with or without
human intervention) by means of any appropriate equipment;
(b) whether in the course of activities
carried on by any official, information is supplied with a view to its being
stored or processed for the purposes of those activities by a computer operated
otherwise than in the course of those activities, that information, if duly
supplied to that computer, shall be taken to be supplied to it in the course of
those activities;
(c) a document shall
be taken to have been produced by a computer whether it was produced by it
directly or (with or without human intervention) by means of any appropriate
equipment.
Explanation: For the purposes of
this section, -
(a) "computer" means any device that receives, stores
and processes data, applying stipulated processes to the information and
supplying results of these processes; and
(b) any reference to information being
derived from other information shall be a reference to its being derived there
from by calculation, comparison or any other process. 118 ]