Elements of Evidence Flashcards

1
Q

Purpose of Evidence Law Legislation The Act aims to “help secure the just determination of proceedings” through six objectives:

A

S6 Evidence Act 2006 The purpose of this Act is to help secure the just determination of proceedings by—

(a) providing for facts to be established by the application of logical rules; and
(b) providing rules of evidence that recognise the importance of the rights affirmed by the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990; and
(c) protecting rights of confidentiality and other important public interests; and
(d) promoting fairness to parties and witnesses; and
(e) avoiding unjustifiable expense and delay; and
(f) enhancing access to the law of evidence.

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2
Q

General Rule of Evidence

A

A general rule of evidence is that all facts in issue and facts relevant to the issue must be proved by evidence.

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3
Q

Exceptions to the General Rule of Evidence The two main exceptions to the general rule are when no evidence needs to be given of facts because:

A
  • judicial notice is taken
  • the facts are formally admitted.
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4
Q

Judicial Notice Notice of Uncontroverted Facts Legislation

A

S128 Evidence Act 2006

(1) A Judge or jury may take notice of facts so known and accepted either generally or in the locality in which the proceeding is being held that they cannot reasonably be questioned.
(2) A Judge may take notice of facts capable of accurate and ready determination by reference to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned and, if the proceedings involve a jury, may direct the jury in relation to this matter.

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5
Q

Judicial Notice Admission of Reliable Published Documents Legislation

A

S129 Evidence Act 2006

(1) A Judge may, in matters of public history, literature, science or art, admit as evidence any published documents that the Judge considers to be reliable sources of information on the subjects to which they respectively relate.
(2) Subpart 1 of Part 2 (which relates to hearsay evidence) and subpart 2 of Part 2 (which relates to opinion evidence and expert evidence) do not apply to evidence referred to under subsection (1).

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6
Q

Presumption of Law And example

A

Presumptions of law are inferences that have been expressly drawn by law from particular facts, they may be either conclusive or rebuttable. Example A child under ten years of age is unable to be convicted (Crimes Act 1961, section 21(1)).

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7
Q

Presumption of Fact And example

A

Presumptions of fact are those that the mind naturally and logically draws from the given facts.

Example One presumes that a person has guilty knowledge if they have possession of recently stolen goods.

Of note Presumptions of fact are simply logical inferences, and so are always rebuttable

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8
Q

Determining Admissibility of Evidence In deciding whether evidence is admissible, the courts have reference to certain principles of evidence law:

A
  • Relevance
  • Reliability
  • Unfairness
  • Public interest
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9
Q

Relevance Legislation Fundamental principle that relevant evidence admissible

A

S7 Evidence Act 2006

(1) All relevant evidence is admissible in a proceeding except evidence that is—
(a) inadmissible under this Act or any other Act; or (b) excluded under this Act or any other Act.
(2) Evidence that is not relevant is not admissible in a proceeding.
(3) Evidence is relevant in a proceeding if it has a tendency to prove or disprove anything that is of consequence to the determination of the proceeding.

Of note Whereas irrelevant facts will always be inadmissible, relevant facts are not always admissible.

For facts to be received in evidence, they must be both relevant and admissible.

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10
Q

Unfairness can cover a variety of situations and is a matter of discretion for the trial judge. It usually arises in two ways:

A
  • Evidence may be excluded if it would result in some unfair prejudice in the proceeding.
  • Evidence not prejudicial in itself in terms of the actual verdict may still be excluded where it has been obtained in circumstances that would make its admission against the defendant unfair. e.g. unfair confession
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