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Case Name | Citation(s) | Court † | Jurisdiction | Date | Full Text | Citation Index | |
To deal with the criminal liability of the second and third accused, it is necessary first to quote from two recent authorities to remind ourselves of the law governing s 34. In Suresh v State of Uttar Pradesh |
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Supreme Court of India | India | circa 2001 |
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Under the provisions of s 34 the essence of the liability is to be found in the existence of a common intention animating the accused leading to the doing of a criminal act in furtherance of such intention As a result of the application of principles enunciated in s 34, when an accused is convicted under s 302 read with s 34, in law it means that the accused is liable for the act which caused death of the deceased in the same manner as if it was done by him alone The provision is intended to meet a case in which it may be difficult to distinguish between acts of individual members of a party who act in furtherance of the common intention of all or to prove exactly what part was taken by each of them As was observed in Ch Pulla Reddy v Andhra Pradesh |
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Supreme Court of India | India | circa 1993 |
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Loh Shak Mow v Public Prosecutor; Wong Hoi Ping, Alan v Public Prosecutor |
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Malaysia | circa 1987 | LexisNexis |
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Neither the Evidence Act nor any other Act lays down any law governing the question which statement of a witness should be believed or should not be believed The question depends upon so many circumstances that it is impossible to lay down hard and fast rules The law has left it to the court to decide whether the evidence should be believed or not and, if believed, what weight should be attached to it or what effect should be given to it These matters have been left at the sound discretion of the court When the Legislature itself has left them at the discretion of the court, it is not open to the highest court to fetter the discretion by laying down hard and fast rules, because it would be tantamount to legislating (Jwala v State | India - Uttar Pradesh | circa 1963 |
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Balachandran v PP |
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Malaysia | circa 2005 | LexisNexis |
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PP v Chin Moi Moi |
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Singapore - Singapore | circa 1995 | LexisNexis |
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Goi Ching Ang v PP |
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Malaysia | circa 1999 | LexisNexis |
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Powell v Streatham Manor Nursing Home |
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United Kingdom | circa 1935 | LexisNexis / Westlaw |
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Herchun Singh v Public Prosecutor |
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Malaysia | circa 1969 | LexisNexis |
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Sabarudin Bin Non v PP |
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Malaysia | circa 2005 | LexisNexis |
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Abraham Ho Ah Loke v William Manson-Hing |
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Malaysia | circa 1949 | LexisNexis |
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Tengku Mahmood v Public Prosecutor |
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Malaysia | circa 1974 | LexisNexis |
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Chandrasekaran v PP |
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Malaysia | circa 1971 | LexisNexis |
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The Act does not purport to lay down any rule as to the weight to be attached to the evidence when admitted, nor is any such rule possible for the proper appreciation of evidence is a matter of experience, common sense and knowledge of human affairs. For weighing evidence and drawing inferences from it, there can be no canon. Each case presents its own peculiarities, and common sense and shrewdness must be brought to bear upon the facts elicited in every case which a judge of facts in this country discharging the functions of a jury in England, has to weigh and decide (per Birch J in R v Madhub 21 WR Cr 13, 19; Mahendrapal v State | India - Uttar Pradesh | circa 1955 |
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Lagi v Pendakwa Raya |
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Malaysia | circa 2002 | LexisNexis |
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[1986] SLR 358 |
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Singapore - Singapore | circa 1986 | LexisNexis |
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AD Caldeira v FA Gray |
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Malaysia | circa 1936 | LexisNexis |
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Melvani v Public Prosecutor |
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Malaysia | circa 1992 | LexisNexis |
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Hari Ram v Uttar Pradesh |
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Republic of Ireland | circa 2004 |
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