Unable to read doctors' handwriting, court seeks printed medico legal reports

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Press Trust of India
Last Updated : Nov 03 2018 | 7:40 PM IST

Fed up of summoning doctors to decipher medico legal reports, the Lucknow bench of Allahabad high court has ordered that computer printed reports be provided along with the original handwritten reports.

Making the observation on Friday, a division bench of justice Ajai Lamba and justice D K Singh said the unreadable hand written reports, produced before the courts in every other case, act as a hindrance in effective adjudication.

However, the printed report will have to be signed by the author as true copy of the original or by some other authorised signatory, after its comparison with the original, the court said.

It would also form part of police report at the time of conclusion of the investigation, the court added.

Despite imposing costs to be recovered from the salary of a number of doctors, they have not been recording medico legal reports/injury reports and post-mortem reports in readable and clear handwriting, the bench said.

Hence in every other case the court has to summon the doctor for reading out the medico legal reports for the benefit of effective adjudication, it added.

"Summoning a doctor simply for reading the report authored by him for bad handwriting does not make administrative sense," the court said while disposing of a writ petition challenging a First Information Report.

"We hereby take judicial notice of the fact that a doctor in a government medical facility is required to examine a large number of patients in a day."
Reiterating that the relevance of medico legal reports in cases of injury, homicide or suicide is enormous, the bench said, "The medical reports, however, are written in such shabby handwriting that they are not readable and decipherable by advocates or Judges."

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First Published: Nov 03 2018 | 7:40 PM IST

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