 document be treated as an exhibit by the trial court. Then we must go to order 13, order 13 sir. See, once a document is produced in evidence, say for example, a plaintiff gets into box and files a promissory note or a title deed. Then it is admissible, it is also relevant. Proof is different, mere marking is not proof. Then it says the suit promissory note is exhibit A1 or the suit sale deed relating to suit schedule property is exhibit A1. Then an endorsement will be made on the document. That endorsement will be as per order 13 rule 4. Subject to the provisions of the next following sub rule, there shall be endorsed on every document which has been admitted in evidence in the suit in the following particulars namely the number and title of the suit, the name of the person producing the document, the date on which it was produced and a statement of its having been so admitted and the endorsement shall be signed and initialed by the judge. Once that particular rubber stamp is put and the columns in that unfilled columns are filled by the bench clerk and the judge initials the documents, the marking is complete in the eye of law. The marking is complete in the eye of law. There a document so admitted is an entry in a book, account or record and a copy thereof has been submitted for the original under the next following rule. The particulars of a foreshad shall be endorsed on the copy and the endorsement thereon shall be signed and initialed by the judge. Supposing the original is a voluminous document like a revenue record is brought. It relates to 100 survey numbers but only one survey number is in question in the suit. The entire revenue record need not be kept in the court. The relevant page after comparison of the original with the photocopy can be taken and the photocopy can be marked. The judge will make an endorsement that the photocopy is compared with the original, original will be returned to the witness, the photocopy will be marked. Unless there are interpolations in the original record, the original record will not be retained in the court, it will be returned because it is daily needed by the revenue authorities for day to day maintenance. Similarly, a banker's book, account book, it will contain entries of several customers. One page is relevant for this suit that will be taken and will be marked. The photocopy will be marked and the original will be returned saying that the copy market is compared with the original. Similarly, a witness's identity is in doubt. Then he produces the adharkar. Adharkar is regularly required for him at several places. Similarly, he produces a driving license to prove his identity. Then a copy will be taken, copy will be retained in the court and will be marked as an exhibit. The original will be returned to the witness. That is how in some cases copy will be marked with an endorsement. In all other cases, original will be marked with an endorsement. When the endorsement is made in the court hall and the endorsement is signed by the judge, the market