Introduction Flashcards

1
Q

What is evidence?

A

Material/information with a significance - to prove/disprove a fact in issue

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2
Q

Relevance?

A

Lord Simon in DPP v Kilbourne: evidence which is logically probative/disprobative of a fact in issue
Lord Steyn in Randall: for the most part, it is common sense and experience - matter of degree

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3
Q

Circumstantial evidence?

A

Facts relevant to a fact in issue - not conclusive on its own
R v Exhall: like strands in a rope

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4
Q

Case suggesting motive

A

Clewes

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5
Q

Case suggesting opportunity

A

Woolf

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6
Q

Case suggesting preparation

A

Clarke and Hewins

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7
Q

Similar fact evidence

A

Guney: problem of using the past to predict the future - forbidden reasoning
Generally excluded in civil cases: Agassiz

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8
Q

Admissibility

A

All admissible evidence is relevant, but not all relevant evidence is admissible - exclusion rules on certain types of evidence

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9
Q

Weight/cogency

A

The strength of a particular piece of evidence/its probative value - i.e. how effective is it in supporting the point for which it is adduced

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