1.4 Preliminary evidential matters Flashcards

1
Q

What are the ‘facts in issue’?

A

The facts in issue are the facts that any party needs to prove in order to prove its case.

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2
Q

What are the three ways to prove a fact without calling live evidence?

A
  1. Agreeing a witness statement as true by consent of the parties - Section 9 Criminal Justice Act 1967;
  2. Agreeing any fact between the advocates (and reducing it to writing) - Section 10 Criminal Justice Act 1967;
  3. Asking the judge or jury to take ‘judicial notice’ - where facts are generally and widely known.
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3
Q

What can advocates ask the judge to take judicial notice of?

A
  1. Where facts are generally and widely known; and/or

2. Judicial notice ‘on enquiry’ - where the judge can easily look up an easily accessible piece of information’.

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4
Q

What can juries take judicial notice of?

A

Only what they are asked to take notice of. They cannot rely on personal knowledge. If a juror has personal knowledge of the case, she should inform the court.

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5
Q

What is ‘real’ evidence?

A

Objects and things brought to court for inspection.

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6
Q

What are the three types of documentary evidence? (Not including documents that are real evidence.)

A
  1. Agreed statements - s.9 CJA
  2. Admitted facts - s.10 CJA
  3. Witness statements. (These will usually lead to oral evidence too.)
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7
Q

What is the difference between direct evidence and circumstantial evidence?

A
  1. Direct - directly shows that the matter in issue is true, e.g., the witness has had direct experience of the matter in issue;
  2. Circumstantial - requires some form of inference, e.g., a train ticket in D’s pocket suggests that D travelled to a certain place at a certain time.
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8
Q

What is ‘a view’?

A

Where the jury visits the scene of the crime or leaves court to view some evidence that cannot be brought to court.

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9
Q

What is the first question on the admissibility of evidence?

A

Is the evidence relevant?

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10
Q

How is evidence shown to be relevant?

A

[??]

Evidence is relevant if it is ‘logically probative’.

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11
Q

What is the purpose of the exclusionary rules in PACE?

A

To protect the fairness of the trial.

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