Law of Evidence and Proof Flashcards
What is Burden of Proof
- Whoever asserts something must prove it
- BURDEN OF PROOF is on the crown - prove guilt rather than defendant prove innocence
- In criminal cases must prove every ingredient beyond reasonable doubt
Woolmington Fundamental Principal - Presumption of Innocence/Burden of Proof
Establishes that (other than specific statutory exceptions) burden of proof lies with the prosecution in relation to all elements of the offence.
Evidential Burden
EVIDENTIAL BURDEN ON DEFENCE
A defence cannot be left to jury/judge unless made a live issue by the defence. It’s not a burden of proof and once a live issue the prosecution must destroy the defence as burden of proof remains with prosecution
Burden of Proof Exceptions
EXCEPTIONS TO WOOLMINGTON
- Insanity S23(1) CA61 (defendant must prove insanity)
- Specific statutory exceptions - some offences shift burden of proof of defence on defendant e.g S202A(4)(b) CA61 prima facie show intent to commit offence involving bodily injury (defendant to prove no intent to used OW to commit bodily injury)
- May not apply in public welfare offences, once actus reus proved prosecution doesn’t need to prove mes rea
Beyond Reasonable Doubt
BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT (WANHALLAH) - prosecution legal burden
Juries concluding: A RD is an honest and reasonable uncertainty left in your mind about the guilt of the defendant after giving careful/impartial consideration to the evidence.
Starting point is presumably innocent, must treat defendant this way until crown has proved guilt.
A very high standard - only met by crown if judge/jury are sure the accused is guilty after careful/impartial consideration.
Balance of Probabilities
Where defence is to prove an element on BOP it must simply show that it is more probably then not. If probabilities are equal the burden is not discharged
Onus Falls on Defence to Prove Particular Element to What Standard
On balance of probabilities - more probable than not
4 Fundamental Principals of Evidence To Consider if Admissible
- Relevance, reliability, unfairness, public interest
What Makes Good Evidence - Facts that Prove the Charge
WHAT MAKES GOOD EVIDENCE - FACTS THAT PROVE THE CHARGE
Facts must prove the elements of the charge and the evidence should be made up of facts that prove that. Consider what evidence is relevant and will help prove the guilt of the person charged.