Malaysian Renovation / Construction Law |
In Malaysian Law, If the Other Party Has
No Evidence = Do I Automatically Win❓ Part 2

Many people ask: if the opposing party allegedly has evidence but chooses not to produce it in court, is there any legal principle addressing this situation in Malaysia?

It must be stated carefully:

📌 This does not mean that failure to produce evidence automatically benefits one party or harms the other.
📌 Ultimately, the court evaluates the evidence as a whole.

However, Malaysian law does recognise an important principle relevant to such situations.

Section 114(g) of the Evidence Act: Adverse inference

Under Section 114(g) of the Evidence Act 1950, the court may, in appropriate circumstances, draw an adverse inference, meaning:

If a party has control over evidence which could reasonably be produced, but chooses not to produce it, the court may infer that:

📌 If such evidence had been produced, it would likely be unfavourable to that party’s case.

In simple terms:

📌 Withholding available evidence may lead the court, in certain circumstances, to reasonably suspect that the evidence is unfavourable.

However, this is not an automatic rule

Section 114(g) is not a “win automatically if evidence is not produced” provision.

The court will generally consider:

📌 Whether the evidence is truly within that party’s control
📌 Whether it is relevant and material to the dispute
📌 Whether it would ordinarily be expected to be produced
📌 Whether there is a reasonable explanation for non-production (e.g. non-existence, loss, or inability to obtain it)

Thus, it is a discretionary inference rather than a mechanical rule.

Application in construction and debt disputes

In construction disputes, where a party alleges:

📌 Third-party rectification works were carried out
📌 A large sum of money was incurred
📌 Complete documentation exists

But fails to produce key witnesses (such as the third-party contractor), site records, photographs, or detailed accounting documents, Section 114(g) may become relevant in the court’s evaluation:

Failure to produce available evidence may justify an adverse inference.

Final summary:

Under Malaysian law, if a party withholds available evidence, the court may draw an adverse inference under Section 114(g), but whether such inference is drawn, and its extent, ultimately depends on the judge’s assessment of the entire evidentiary matrix.

 
 

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