Evidence Notes
Evidence Notes
Evidence Notes
1.1
Police Powers
Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002 (NSW)
Powers and Obligation include:
o Powers of Entry (Part 2)
o Powers to Require Identity to be Disclosed (Part 3)
o Search and Seizure Powers (Parts 4&5)
o Powers of Arrest (Part 8)
o Investigation and Questioning (Part 9)
o Powers relating to Persons in Custody (Part 10)
S4 LEPRA: legislation does not override existing CL powers and rights
1.2
Powers of Arrest
S99: Powers of Police to Arrest without Warrant
S101: Powers of Police to Arrest with Warrant
S100: Powers of Others to Arrest without Warrant
What is arrest?
Where a person is deprived of his liberty (R v ODonoghue)
No magic formula required mere words may be sufficient. No longer requires
actual seizing or touching of the suspect (Hatzinikolaou v Snape)
Apart from making it clear that the person is no longer free to go, Police must also tell
the person why he is being arrested (NSW v Delly [2007] NSWCA 303)
1.3 NSW: s99 LEPRA
Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Act 2002
99 Power of police officers to arrest without warrant
(1) A police officer may, without a warrant, arrest a person if:
(a) the police officer suspects on reasonable grounds that the person is committing or has
committed an offence, and
(b) the police officer is satisfied that the arrest is reasonably necessary for any one or more
of the following reasons:
(i) to stop the person committing or repeating the offence or committing another offence,
(ii) to stop the person fleeing from a police officer or from the location of the offence,
(iii) to enable inquiries to be made to establish the persons identity if it cannot be readily
established or if the police officer suspects on reasonable grounds that identity information
provided is false,
(iv) to ensure that the person appears before a court in relation to the offence,
(v) to obtain property in the possession of the person that is connected with the offence,
(vi) to preserve evidence of the offence or prevent the fabrication of evidence,
(vii) to prevent the harassment of, or interference with, any person who may give evidence
in relation to the offence,
(viii) to protect the safety or welfare of any person (including the person arrested),
(ix) because of the nature and seriousness of the offence.
(2) A police officer may also arrest a person without a warrant if directed to do so by
another police officer. The other police officer is not to give such a direction unless the
other officer may lawfully arrest the person without a warrant.
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(3) A police officer who arrests a person under this section must, as soon as is reasonably
practicable, take the person before an authorised officer to be dealt with according to law.
Note. The police officer may discontinue the arrest at any time and without taking the
arrested person before an authorised officersee section 105.
(4) A person who has been lawfully arrested under this section may be detained by any
police officer under Part 9 for the purpose of investigating whether the person committed
the offence for which the person has been arrested and for any other purpose authorised by
that Part.
(5) This section does not authorise a person to be arrested for an offence for which the
person has already been tried.
(6) For the purposes of this section, property is connected with an offence if it is connected
with the offence within the meaning of Part 5.
Test:
1. Whether an officer suspects on reasonable grounds that an offence is or has
been committed; and
a. Objective v subjective
2. Whether the officer is satisfied that the arrest is reasonably necessary.
s91(1): may arrest
o Wide discretion
o BUT discretion is limited by the fact that the officer must be satisfied that the
arrest is reasonably necessary for one of the enumerated purposes in 99(1)(b)
(i)-(ix)
S138 EA: evidence that is obtained improperly or illegally is not to be admitted unless
the desirability of admitting the evidence outweighs the undesirability of admitting
evidence that has been obtained in the way in which the evidence was obtained.
S99(1)(a): Suspects on reasonable grounds
Subjective (Lord Hope- O'Hara v Chief Constable of the Royal Ulster Constabulary)
o Police officer has formed a genuine suspicion in his own mind that the person
has been concerned in acts/omissions
Objective (Lord Hope- O'Hara v Chief Constable of the Royal Ulster Constabulary)
o It is the grounds which were in the police officers mind at the time which
must be found to be reasonable grounds for the suspicion which he has
formed. These grounds must be examined objectively and that they be judged
at the time when the power was exercised.
o The question is whether a reasonable man would be of that opinion, having
regard to the information which was in the mind of the arresting officer
R v Rondo: 2 limb test
1. Police must have formed genuine suspicion based on some factual basis, and;
2. Are there reasonable grounds for the suspicion formed?
There must be less than a belief but more than a possibility, something
which would create in the mind of a reasonable person an
apprehension or fear
Regard must be had to the source of the information and its content,
seen in the light of the whole of the surrounding circumstances.
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1.4
1.5
1.6
1.7
o Give the accused a summary of the provisions which references that the
investigation may be extended beyond 4 hours
S129: right to medical attention
S130: custody manager must ensure that the person is provided with reasonable
refreshments and reasonable access to toilet facilities
Vulnerable Persons
S128: If client needs interpreter, arrange for one- s128 LEPRA
Defined in reg 24 Law Enforcement (Powers and Responsibilities) Regulation 2005:
o Children
o Persons who have impaired intellectual functioning,
o Persons who have impaired physical functioning,
o Persons who are Aboriginal persons or Torres Strait Islanders,
Is NOT a person whom the custody manager reasonably believes is not a person
falling within any of those categories (reg 24 LEPRA)
Reg 36: If an application for a detention warrant is made, the application for it must
include reference to the fact that the person is believed to be a vulnerable person, the
nature of the persons vulnerability, the identity and relationship to the person of any
support person who is present during the investigative procedure concerned, and any
particular precautions that have been taken in respect of the vulnerable person
(2) Without limiting subsection (1) and subject to section 9, nothing in this Act affects the
powers conferred by the common law on police officers to deal with breaches of the
peace.
1.9
Pre-trial silence
See notes on ss89 and 89A (p59/60)
Section 122 LEPRA requires a custody manager to both orally and in writing:
o Caution the person that they do not have to say or do anything but that
anything they do say or do may be used in evidence; and
o The person must sign an acknowledgement that this information has been
given.
Bail
Bail Applications
S48: court or authorised justice may make or vary a bail decision, after hearing a bail
application
Types of bail applications:
1. S49: Release Application
a. Made by accused to be released on bail
2. S50: Detention Application
a. Made by prosecutor to seek an order than bail not be granted
3. S51: Variation Application
a. Made by any interested person to vary a previous order e.g. victim of
domestic violence seeks to have the bail revoked
Detention application opposing bail.
o Opposing bail: accused is applying for bail and the prosecutor opposes the
application for x reasons e.g. flight risk, history of not showing up for court
appearances
Prosecutors do not have to give notice that they will oppose bail.
o Detention application
Prosecutors must provide the accused with written notice that they are
making such an application. In response to the prosecutors application
a court can refuse bail, grant or dispense with bail pursuant to s49.
Variation application: an interested person can apply to vary the bail of the accused
with notice.
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o S51: interested person = an accused person, the prosecutor, the AttorneyGeneral, the complainant in a domestic violence offence or the person for
whose protection an AVO application has been made.
2.4 Bail Decisions
Bail Act 2013
8 Bail decisions that can be made
(1) The following decisions (each of which is a bail decision) can be made under this Act
in respect of a person accused of an offence:
(a) a decision to release the person without bail for the offence,
(b) a decision to dispense with bail for the offence,
(c) a decision to grant bail for the offence (with or without the imposition of bail
conditions),
(d) a decision to refuse bail for the offence.
S8(1)(a): only a police officer can make such a decision (s9)
S8(1)(b): only a court or authorise justice can make such a decision (s10)
S8(1)(c): only a police officer, court or authorised justice can make decision (s11)
S8(1)(d): only a police officer, court or authorised justice can make decision (s11)
2.5
Show cause offence: accused must show why the cause of his detention is not justified
(s16A(1))
If the accused is able to show cause, the prosecution must then apply the unacceptable
risk test (s16A(2))
If the accused does not show cause, bail is refused (s16A(1))
*Note: s16A does not apply if the accused person was under the age of 18 years at the
time of the offence (s16A(3))
Show cause offence is (s16B):
o Offence punishable by imprisonment for life,
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(f) whether the accused person has a history of compliance or non-compliance with bail
acknowledgments, bail conditions, apprehended violence orders, parole orders or good
behaviour bonds,
(g) whether the accused person has any criminal associations,
(h) the length of time the accused person is likely to spend in custody if bail is refused,
(i) the likelihood of a custodial sentence being imposed if the accused person is convicted
of the offence,
(j) if the accused person has been convicted of the offence and proceedings on an appeal
against conviction or sentence are pending before a court, whether the appeal has a
reasonably arguable prospect of success,
(k) any special vulnerability or needs the accused person has including because of youth,
being an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander, or having a cognitive or mental health
impairment,
(l) the need for the accused person to be free to prepare for his or her appearance in court
or to obtain legal advice,
(m) the need for the accused person to be free for any other lawful reason,
(n) the conduct of the accused person towards any victim of the offence, or any family
member of a victim, after the offence,
(o) in the case of a serious offence, the views of any victim of the offence or any family
member of a victim (if available to the bail authority), to the extent relevant to a concern
that the accused person could, if released from custody, endanger the safety of victims,
individuals or the community,
(p) the bail conditions that could reasonably be imposed to address any bail concerns in
accordance with section 20A.
(2) The following matters (to the extent relevant) are to be considered in deciding whether
an offence is a serious offence under this Division (or the seriousness of an offence), but do
not limit the matters that can be considered:
(a) whether the offence is of a sexual or violent nature or involves the possession or use of
an offensive weapon or instrument within the meaning of the Crimes Act 1900,
(b) the likely effect of the offence on any victim and on the community generally,
(c) the number of offences likely to be committed or for which the person has been
granted bail or released on parole.
2.8
If no unacceptable risk
S20: If no unacceptable risk, bail authority must:
o Grant bail (with or without the imposition of bail conditions), or
o Release the person without bail, or
o Dispense with bail
2.9 s21: Special rule for offences for which there is a right to release
Bail Act 2013 (NSW)
21 Special rule for offences for which there is a right to release
(1) The following decisions are the only bail decisions that can be made for an offence for
which there is a right to release:
(a) a decision to release the person without bail,
(b) a decision to dispense with bail,
(c) a decision to grant bail to the person (with or without the imposition of bail
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conditions).
(2) There is a right to release for the following offences:
(a) a fine-only offence,
(b) an offence under the Summary Offences Act 1988, other than an excluded offence,
(c) an offence that is being dealt with by conference under Part 5 of the Young Offenders
Act 1997.
(3) Each of the following offences under the Summary Offences Act 1988 is an excluded
offence:
(a) an offence under section 5 (obscene exposure) if the person has previously been
convicted of an offence under that section,
(b) an offence under section 11A (violent disorder) if the person has previously been
convicted of an offence under that section or of a personal violence offence,
(c) an offence under section 11B, 11C or 11E (offences relating to knives and offensive
implements) if the person has previously been convicted of an offence under any of those
sections or of a personal violence offence,
(d) an offence under section 11FA (custody or use of laser pointer in public place),
(e) an offence under section 11G (loitering by convicted child sexual offenders near
premises frequented by children).
(4) An offence is not an offence for which there is a right to release if the accused person
has previously failed to comply with a bail acknowledgment, or a bail condition, of a bail
decision for the offence.
(5) Subject to subsection (1), Division 2 (Unacceptable risk testall offences) applies to a
bail decision for an offence for which there is a right to release.
Bail cannot be refused for an offence for which there is a right to release under s21
(s19(4))
Usually where they will be released because theyre not serious enough for bail e.g.
right to release for fine only offences
2.10 Conditional Bail
Bail may be granted either with or without conditions imposed
S20A(1): for bail conditions to be imposed there must be identified bail concerns
S20A(2): bail conditions are to be imposed only if the bail authority is satisfied, after
assessing the Bail Concerns, and the Bail Authority is satisfied the Conditions are
necessary, proportionate and appropriate in addressing the identified bail concerns
(s20A)
Bail Act 2013 (NSW)
20A Imposition of bail conditions
(1) Bail conditions are to be imposed only if the bail authority is satisfied, after assessing
bail concerns under this Division, that there are identified bail concerns.
(2) A bail authority may impose a bail condition only if the bail authority is satisfied that:
(a) the bail condition is reasonably necessary to address a bail concern, and
(b) the bail condition is reasonable and proportionate to the offence for which bail is
granted, and
(c) the bail condition is appropriate to the bail concern in relation to which it is imposed,
and
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(d) the bail condition is no more onerous than necessary to address the bail concern in
relation to which it is imposed, and
(e) it is reasonably practicable for the accused person to comply with the bail condition,
and
(f) there are reasonable grounds to believe that the condition is likely to be complied with
by the accused person.
Bail Conditions include:
S25: conduct requirements e.g. surrender passport
S26: security be provided e.g. payment of security
o E.g. if you dont show up, family member provides assurity such as paying
$10k
S27: character acknowledgement by person of standing
o Someone vouches youre of good character
S28: accommodation requirements e.g. live with a nominated person
2.11 Actions that may be taken to enforce bail requirements
Bail Act 2013 (NSW)
77 Actions that may be taken to enforce bail requirements
(1) A police officer who believes, on reasonable grounds, that a person has failed to
comply with, or is about to fail to comply with, a bail acknowledgment or a bail condition,
may:
(a) decide to take no action in respect of the failure or threatened failure, or
(b) issue a warning to the person, or
(c) issue a notice to the person (an application notice) that requires the person to appear
before a court or authorised justice, or
(d) issue a court attendance notice to the person (if the police officer believes the failure is
an offence), or
(e) arrest the person, without warrant, and take the person as soon as practicable before a
court or authorised justice, or
(f) apply to an authorised justice for a warrant to arrest the person.
(2) However, if a police officer arrests a person, without warrant, because of a failure or
threatened failure to comply with a bail acknowledgment or a bail condition, the police
officer may decide to discontinue the arrest and release the person (with or without issuing
a warning or notice).
(3) The following matters are to be considered by a police officer in deciding whether to
take action, and what action to take (but do not limit the matters that can be considered):
(a) the relative seriousness or triviality of the failure or threatened failure,
(b) whether the person has a reasonable excuse for the failure or threatened failure,
(c) the personal attributes and circumstances of the person, to the extent known to the
police officer,
(d) whether an alternative course of action to arrest is appropriate in the circumstances.
2.12 Offence of failing to appear
Bail Act 2013 (NSW)
79 Offence of failing to appear
(1) A person who, without reasonable excuse, fails to appear before a court in accordance
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13
Standard of Proof
Level of proof required to meet/discharge the Burden of Proof (strength of proof)
Criminal
Evidence Act 1995
141 Criminal proceedings: standard of proof
(1) In a criminal proceeding, the court is not to find the case of the prosecution proved
unless it is satisfied that it has been proved beyond reasonable doubt.
(2) In a criminal proceeding, the court is to find the case of a defendant proved if it is
satisfied that the case has been proved on the balance of probabilities.
Prosecution must prove the Accuseds guilt beyond reasonable doubt
o Must prove every element of the offence beyond reasonable doubt
o Must also disprove the existence of each defence (which is raised by the
accused), beyond reasonable doubt.
Longstanding authority for the proposition that, except in certain limited
circumstances, no attempt should be made to explain or embellish the meaning of the
phrase beyond reasonable doubt (Green v The Queen (1971) 126 CLR 28)
Circumstantial evidence
o No requirement for each piece of circumstantial evidence to be proven beyond
reason doubt. Evidence must be considered as a whole and not by a piecemeal
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Where the court thinks something is common knowledge, they will not require any
evidence to be adduced about it, and can take judicial notice of that fact.
Can also apply to matters of common sense. eg. A court once took judicial notice of
the fact that drugs are heavier when they are wet than when they are dry.
Australian Communist Party v Commonwealth (1951) 83 CLR 1: HCA took judicial
notice of what political and economic principles Marx and Lenin stood for and certain
events in the history of communism.
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4.1
Admissibility
3 stage test
1. Relevant / Not Relevant?
2. If Relevant, are there any Exclusionary Rule that apply?
3. If no Exclusionary Rule applies, should the Trial Judge use Discretion to exclude the
evidence?
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Relevance
In particular, evidence is not taken to be irrelevant only because it relates only to:
the credibility of a witness, or
the admissibility of other evidence, or
a failure to adduce evidence.
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1. Hearsay: relevant to proving the fact in issue (complainant had not consented
to intercourse with P), even though it is used for hearsay purpose, provided
exception applies (s66 - maker available to give evidence + fresh in the
memory)
2. Credibility: relevant to supporting the credibility of the complainant's evidence
in sexual assault cases because the making of an early complaint is regarded as
being consistent with what a complainant would do if he or she had been
assaulted as alleged
Here she complained immediately, she complained three times, she
was consistent in her complaint and she was very upset.
McHugh J: In a trial for sexual assault, ss 55(2)(a) and 56(1)
permit evidence to be adduced that, within a reasonable period
of the alleged assault, the complainant had told one or more
persons that she had been sexually assaulted
McHugh J: Evidence of distress on the part of a complainant is
always relevant to a charge of sexual assault
Reliability and procedural fairness play a part in exclusionary rules and ss 135-137,
NOT s55 (McHugh J).
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o If, attired in the balaclava, the accused had looked very different from the
descriptions given by the eyewitnesses that would have been material capable
of raising a reasonable doubt. If, so attired, he had looked similar to the
descriptions, it would, taken with other evidence, have been material capable
of supporting a conclusion of identity.
o The appearance of the accused walking in overalls in front of the jury was
capable of making an impression on the jury which was favourable to the
accused (as his counsel submitted in final address) as much as it was capable
of causing an impression adverse to him (as prosecution counsel submitted).
Either way the evidence was relevant
5.2 Different ways in which evidence can be relevant
Direct evidence
Establishes one or more of the facts in issue without the need for any further inference
E.g. if witness testifies that he perceived one or more facts, which constitute elements
of the offence/cause of action such as consent in a rape trial
Circumstantial evidence
Witness testifies their perspective however the credibility of this is inconclusive
o Because witness only perceives the facts that render more or less probable
occurrence of the events as alleged
o E.g. in crim case the witness testifies that he saw the defendant leaving the
deceaseds house shortly after the deceased was found dead. Circumstance is
relevant because it suggests the D falls into the limited class of those who had
the opportunity to commit murder
Task of jury:
1. Decide whether or not the circumstance exists; and
2. Whether or not to draw the inference sought
On its own, each piece of circumstantial evidence may establish little; it is the
cumulative effect of the evidence, which may persuade the jury to draw the inference
o E.g. accompany evidence of opportunity with motive, weapon, blood on Ds
clothing etc
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6
6.1
6.2
What is Privilege?
A right to resist compulsory demands for information i.e. right to refuse to
handover/disclose material (Federal Police v Propend Finance)
This Public Policy based concept acts against the notion that all relevant evidence
should be admitted.
o Public interest favours non-disclosure unless the public interest in disclosure is
greater.
This is the balancing act
CL privileges operate alongside the various EA provisions
Client Legal Privilege
There is something special about the relationship between a lawyer and her client.
Similar in effect to Legal Professional Privilege (CL version) but broader in its
application
Client Legal Privilege attaches to the Client it should not be seen as a Lawyers
entitlement.
Both pre-trial and trial claims of legal privilege dealt with under EA
Definitions (s117)
Client includes inter alia:
o Employer of lawyer.
o Employee or agent of a client.
o An employer being the Cth, State or Territory, or a body established under the
law of the Cth, State or Territory.
Confidential communication means:
o A communication made in such circumstances that when it was made the
person who made it or to whom it was made was under an express or implied
obligation not to disclose its contents.
Confidential document means:
o A document prepared in circumstances that when it was prepared the person
who prepared it or for whom it was prepared was under an express or implied
obligation not to disclose its contents.
Lawyer:
o Includes Australian and overseas registered foreign lawyers and an employee
or agent of a lawyer.
Advice (s118)
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
118 Legal advice
Evidence is not to be adduced if, on objection by a client, the court finds that adducing the
evidence would result in disclosure of:
(a) a confidential communication made between the client and a lawyer; or
(b) a confidential communication made between 2 or more lawyers acting for the client; or
(c) the contents of a confidential document (whether delivered or not) prepared by the
client, lawyer or another person;
for the dominant purpose of the lawyer, or one or more of the lawyers, providing legal
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(4) The reference in paragraph (3)(a) to a knowing and voluntary disclosure does not
include a reference to a disclosure by a person who was, at the time of the disclosure, an
employee or agent of the client or party or of a lawyer of the client or party unless the
employee or agent was authorised by the client, party or lawyer to make the disclosure.
(5) A client or party is not taken to have acted in a manner inconsistent with the client or
party objecting to the adducing of the evidence merely because:
(a) the substance of the evidence has been disclosed:
(i) in the course of making a confidential communication or preparing a confidential
document; or
(ii) as a result of duress or deception; or
(iii) under compulsion of law; or
(iv) if the client or party is a body established by, or a person holding an office under, an
Australian lawto the Minister, or the Minister of the Commonwealth, the State or
Territory, administering the law, or part of the law, under which the body is established or
the office is held; or
(b) of a disclosure by a client to another person if the disclosure concerns a matter in
relation to which the same lawyer is providing, or is to provide, professional legal services
to both the client and the other person; or
(c) of a disclosure to a person with whom the client or party had, at the time of the
disclosure, a common interest relating to the proceeding or an anticipated or pending
proceeding in an Australian court or a foreign court.
Privilege is not waived if documents are mistakenly produced in the discovery process
o Where a privileged document is inadvertently disclosed, the court should
ordinarily permit the correction of that mistake and order the return of the
document (Armstrong)
Misconduct
S125(1)(a): loss of privilege if a communication or document was made or prepared
by a client, lawyer or party in furtherance of a fraud, an offence or an act that renders
a person liable to a civil penalty.
S125(1)(b): loss of privilege if the communication or document was known, or should
reasonably have been known, by the client, lawyer or party, to have been made or
prepared in furtherance of a deliberate abuse of statutory power
Other
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
121 Loss of client legal privilege: generally
(1) This Division does not prevent the adducing of evidence relevant to a question
concerning the intentions, or competence in law, of a client or party who has died.
(2) This Division does not prevent the adducing of evidence if, were the evidence not
adduced, the court would be prevented, or it could reasonably be expected that the court
would be prevented, from enforcing an order of an Australian court.
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(3) This Division does not prevent the adducing of evidence of a communication or
document that affects a right of a person.
6.3
(2) For the purposes of this Division, a communication may be made in confidence even if
it is made in the presence of a third party if the third partys presence is necessary to
facilitate communication.
In NSW, PCRP covers a wide range of confidential communications NSW Act does
not attempt to define the ambit.
o Doctor / Health Professional
o Journalist
o Social Worker
o Accountant/client
o Its not a definitive list
The Cth Act only covers confidential communications with Journalists.
s126B(1): PCRP serves to protect:
o A protected confidence
o A document recording a protected confidence
o Protected Identity information
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When considering whether to grant the Privilege, the Court is required balance
potential harm in a particular case against public interest of having all relevant
material before the Court.
s126B(3): when the Court is dealing with the issue of PCRP, it must consider and be
satisfied that .
a) it is likely that harm would or might be caused (whether directly or indirectly)
to a protected confider if the evidence is adduced, AND
b) the nature and extent of the harm outweighs the desirability of the evidence
being given.
S126B(4): In undertaking this balancing exercise, the Court will have to consider
factors such as:
a) the probative value of the evidence in the proceeding,
a. If not of provable value, why would you consider overriding privilege?
b) the importance of the evidence in the proceeding,
c) the nature and gravity of the relevant offence, cause of action or defence and
the nature of the subject matter of the proceeding,
a. If case involving minor, it will influence judges decision making
d) the availability of any other evidence concerning the matters to which the
protected confidence or protected identity information relates,
a. Is there other evidence disclosing the same thing without waiving
privilege?
e) the likely effect of adducing evidence of the protected confidence or protected
identity information, including the likelihood of harm, and the nature and
extent of harm that would be caused to the protected confider,
f) the means (including any ancillary orders that may be made under section
126E) available to the court to limit the harm or extent of the harm that is
likely to be caused if evidence of the protected confidence or the protected
identity information is disclosed,
g) if the proceeding is a criminal proceedingwhether the party seeking to
adduce evidence of the protected confidence or protected identity information
is a defendant or the prosecutor,
h) whether the substance of the protected confidence or the protected identity
information has already been disclosed by the protected confider or any other
person,
i) the public interest in preserving the confidentiality of protected confidences,
j) the public interest in preserving the confidentiality of protected identity
information.
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o Requires a judge to undertake balancing exercise i.e. s126B guides the judge
as to how he must exercise his discretion as to whether or not to recognise the
privilege
Loss of PCRP
Can occur in 2 circumstances:
1. Confider gives consent for the protected material to be disclosed (s126C);or
2. Document is prepared in the furtherance of the commission of a fraud or an
offence or the commission of an act that renders a person liable to a civil
penalty (s126D)
Where a communication or document has lost privilege then evidence of another
communication or document reasonably necessary to enable understanding of the
communication will also be lost.
The court may inspect a document for the purpose of determining whether it is
privileged (s133)
6.4
6.5
HELD: PCRP did not apply to counsellors notes. Division 1B only applied to the
adducing evidence and could not protect sexual assault communications in relation to
discovery and the production of documents.
LAW NOW: ss295-298 Criminal Procedure Act 1986 (NSW)
o S296: protected confidence means a counselling communication that is made
by, to or about a victim or alleged victim of a sexual assault offence
o S300: principal protected confider may consent to the production of the
document or adducing of the evidence
Consent must be in writing; and
consent must expressly relate to the production of a document or
adducing of evidence that is privileged
s126H EA will exclude evidence of protected sexual assault communications in civil
proceedings only applies if evidence was excluded in a criminal trial for sexual
assault, where substantially the same acts are in issue.
Privilege Against Self-Incrimination
CL: person is not obliged to answer a question, or to produce documents, or to do
anything if, in doing so, it might expose them to a criminal conviction or a civil
penalty
CL privilege has been codified in s128 EA
Privilege against self-incrimination only applies to individual human beings. It does
not apply to companies
S128(1): A witness can object to giving particular evidence, or evidence on a
particular matter, on the ground that the evidence may tend to prove that the witness
has committed an offence or is liable to a civil penalty
S128(2): if the witness objects, court must determine whether or not there are
reasonable grounds for the objection
27
6.6
S128(3): subject to s128(4), if there are reasonable grounds for the objection, the
court will inform the witness that they do not need to give evidence
S128(4): court may decide the witness should give evidence because:
a) the evidence does not tend to prove that the witness has committed an offence
against or arising under, or is liable to a civil penalty under, a law of a foreign
country, and
b) the interests of justice require that the witness give the evidence.
S128(5): If the witness either willingly gives the evidence without being required to
do so under s128(4), or gives it after being required to do so under s128(4), the court
must cause the witness to be given a certificate (immunity)
o Cornwell v The Queen HC: even if certificate is issued by mistake, effect of
certificate (immunity) will remain
S128(10): privilege does not apply in relation to the giving of evidence by a
defendant, being evidence that the defendant:
a) did an act the doing of which is a fact in issue, or
b) had a state of mind the existence of which is a fact in issue.
Religious Confessions
S127(1) EA: A person who is or was a member of the clergy of any church or
religious denomination is entitled to refuse to divulge that a religious confession was
made, or the contents of a religious confession made, to the person when a member of
the clergy.
S127(4): religious confession means a confession made by a person to a member of
the clergy in the members professional capacity according to the ritual of the church
or religious denomination concerned
o cant be having a beer at the pub. This is not professional capacity
6.7
28
Witnesses
7.1
7.2
7.3
(1) A person is not competent to give evidence about a fact if, for any reason (including a
mental, intellectual or physical disability):
(a) the person does not have the capacity to understand a question about the fact, or
(b) the person does not have the capacity to give an answer that can be understood to a
question about the fact,
and that incapacity cannot be overcome.
17 Competence and compellability: defendants in criminal proceedings
(2) A defendant is not competent to give evidence as a witness for the prosecution.
7.4
7.5 Evidence
Sworn Evidence
S21: witness who is competent to give evidence is required to give sworn evidence
Before giving evidence, the witness must take an oath or make an Affirmation that
they will tell the truth:
o I swear by Almighty God that the evidence I shall give will be the truth, the
whole truth and nothing but the truth
o I solemnly and sincerely declare and affirm that the evidence I shall give will
be the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
21 Sworn evidence to be on oath or affirmation
(1) A witness in a proceeding must either take an oath, or make an affirmation, before
giving evidence.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who gives unsworn evidence under section
13.
(3) A person who is called merely to produce a document or thing to the court need not
take an oath or make an affirmation before doing so.
(4) The witness is to take the oath, or make the affirmation, in accordance with the
appropriate form in Schedule 1 or in a similar form.
30
(5) Such an affirmation has the same effect for all purposes as an oath.
Unsworn Evidence
A person who is incompetent to give sworn evidence may give unsworn evidence
if the Court is satisfied the Witness:
o understands the difference between the truth and a lie;
o understands the importance of telling the truth;
o gives an appropriate response when asked if he will tell the truth.
*Note: must tell jury that when assessing the value of this evidence, it is unsworn
evidence (not carrying the same weight as sworn evidence) and thus there is a risk
attached to it e.g. young child etc
NSW: accused cannot make an unsworn statement on his own behalf
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
13 Competence: lack of capacity
(3) A person who is competent to give evidence about a fact is not competent to give
sworn evidence about the fact if the person does not have the capacity to understand that,
in giving evidence, he or she is under an obligation to give truthful evidence.
(5) A person who, because of subsection (3), is not competent to give sworn evidence is
competent to give unsworn evidence if the court has told the person:
(a) that it is important to tell the truth, and
(b) that he or she may be asked questions that he or she does not know, or cannot
remember, the answer to, and that he or she should tell the court if this occurs, and
(c) that he or she may be asked questions that suggest certain statements are true or untrue
and that he or she should agree with the statements that he or she believes are true and
should feel no pressure to agree with statements that he or she believes are untrue
7.6
Calling Witnesses
One of the main ways to adduce evidence in court is through the calling and
questioning the witness
Generally parties to the litigation who decide what witnesses are to be called and in
what orders
R v Apostilides (1984) 154 CLR 563
o Crown prosecutor alone bears the responsibility of deciding whether a person
will be called as a witness for the Crown.
o A decision of the prosecutor not to call a particular person as a witness will
only constitute a ground for setting aside a conviction if, when viewed against
the conduct of the trial taken as a whole, it is seen to give rise to a miscarriage
of justice.
R v Kneebone (1999) 47 NSWLR 450
o The Crown must meet the obligations that were identified in Apostilides
because the Prosecutor is obliged to present the case fairly. This is an import
part of the Duties of the Prosecutor.
A prosecutor must present all material without fear or favour
o Prosecutor continues to have an obligation to the Crown to ensure that a
prosecution proceeds fairly. Failing to call an important witness may lead to a
miscarriage of justice.
31
32
Jones v Dunkel HC relates to civil cases the P does not call a witness that they would
reasonably be expected to have called as a result the trial judge may draw an
adverse inference from that failure.
o Civil: safe to trial judge to infer/draw adverse inference who fails to call a
particular witness who you think would otherwise be called
o DOES NOT APPLY TO CRIMINAL MATTERS
The application of Jones v Dunkel in criminal matters has been repeatedly overruled
(Dyers)
Dyers: the right to silence is protected by s20, preventing a trial judge from making
any adverse comment. (noting that s20 does not apply to civil matters)
Mahmood v WA HC: where a witness, who might have been expected to be called
and to give evidence on a matter, is not called by the prosecution, the question is not
whether the jury may properly reach conclusions about issues of fact but whether, in
the circumstances, they should entertain a reasonable doubt about the guilt of
the accused. See also R v Louizos [2009] NSWCCA [54-57].
o CRIMINAL: If a witnesses who expected to be called and wasnt, the jury
shouldnt be worried about reaching certain matters of fact, they should be
worried that prosecution hasnt called material witness
o Cross-Examination
Opposing Party will test the evidence of Witness hoping to undermine
it or bolster his / her own case. (Leading questions s42)
o Re-Examination
Our turn again to talk to witness and ask questions which came out of
that evidence
If need be, the first party may re-examine the witness in order to
explain any points of confusion or unfavourable evidence. (Nonleading questions s37)
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
39 Limits on re-examination
On re-examination:
(a) a witness may be questioned about matters arising out of evidence given by the witness
in cross-examination, and
(b) other questions may not be put to the witness unless the court gives leave.
Ask questions of witness that have link that arise out of question
o Cant start a new line of questioning without leave
Leading Questions
A question asked of a Witness that:
o directly or indirectly suggests a particular answer to the question, or
Proposition format
Type of question with a y/n answer
o Assumes the existence of a fact the existence of which is in dispute in the
proceeding and as to the existence of which the witness has not given evidence
before the question is asked.
E.g. when you belted your wife and murdered her, what were you
thinking (it assumes the wife was belted and murdered even though its
not proved yet)
Non-leading
o When was the last time you saw the woman?
o How tall was the man that you saw?
o What happened when you entered the bank?
Leading
o The last time you saw the woman was about noon?
o The man was approx 180cm tall, wasnt he?
o Is it true that when you entered the bank, a shot was fired by the Accused?
The Rule in Browne v Dunn
Requires a cross-examining party that intends to contradict a witness by adducing
other evidence, to put as much of their own case that concerns that witness to them,
and if it is intended to suggest that a witness is not speaking the truth on a particular
matter, that their attention is drawn to what will be suggested about it so that they
might have an opportunity to explain.
It is not a rule of evidence - it is a rule of procedural fairness.
If the rule is not observed, there are several different ways that the Court can deal with
the issue:
34
35
36
Credibility of evidence
Evidence may have >1 reason for being relevant i.e. for credibility and some other
reason (hearsay) Papakosmas
What is Credibility?
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
Part 1 Definitions
credibility of a witness means the credibility of any part or all of the evidence of the
witness, and includes the witnesss ability to observe or remember facts and events about
which the witness has given, is giving or is to give evidence.
Credible evidence is relevant evidence because in affecting the probability that the W
is telling the truth, it in turn affects the probability of the existence of the facts about
which they are testifying
General premise is that courts are interested in hearing evidence that is reliable,
honest and therefore credible. The rules pertaining to credibility are about the quality
of the evidence.
Courts are not interested in hearing about blemishes upon the reputation, history or
morality of a witness unless those blemishes could affect the quality of the evidence
the witness can give.
o Fraudulent history of not telling the truth. This is the type of information we
need to look at
This type of evidence extends beyond the veracity of the evidence given by the W to
whether the W has the capability to be reliable.
o Not just the evidence, its the way they give it
o Thus whats the quality of the evidence, not just the evidence they are giving
Reasons why you would wish to use credibility evidence.
1. Attack the credibility of an opponents witness
2. Bolster the credibility of your own witness.
3. Attack the credibility of your own witness, for instance, if they are an unfavourable
witness.
a. Declared unflavoured witness under s38
b. e.g. cross-examine on prior inconsistent statement
s102 The Credibility Rule
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
102 The credibility rule
Credibility evidence about a witness is not admissible.
Blanket exclusion
s101A (amendment)
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
101A Credibility evidence
Credibility evidence, in relation to a witness or other person, is evidence relevant to the
credibility of the witness or person that:
(a) is relevant only because it affects the assessment of the credibility of the witness or
person, or
(b) is relevant:
37
(i) because it affects the assessment of the credibility of the witness or person, and
(ii) for some other purpose for which it is not admissible, or cannot be used, because of a
provision of Parts 3.2 to 3.6.
Notes.
1
Sections 60 and 77 will not affect the application of paragraph (b), because they cannot apply to evidence
that is yet to be admitted.
2
Section 101A was inserted as a response to the decision of the High Court of Australia in Adam v The
Queen (2001) 207 CLR 96.
1st column
o Material has dual purpose
o Evidence is admissible for its non-credibility purpose (hearsay)
o If this is so, the credibility rule (s102) wont apply at all
o Premise: if it can be used for 1 purpose, it should be allowed to be used for
another purpose
nd
2 column
o Evidence that is relevant only to credibility
o If this is the case, need to go through s102 exclusion OR s108A exclusion
S102: more common exclusion
38
S108A
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
108A Admissibility of evidence of credibility of person who has made a previous
representation
(1) If:
(a) evidence of a previous representation has been admitted in a proceeding, and
(b) the person who made the representation has not been called, and will not be called, to
give evidence in the proceeding,
credibility evidence about the person who made the representation is not admissible unless
the evidence could substantially affect the assessment of the persons credibility.
(2) Without limiting the matters to which the court may have regard for the purposes of
subsection (1), it is to have regard to:
(a) whether the evidence tends to prove that the person who made the representation
knowingly or recklessly made a false representation when the person was under an
obligation to tell the truth, and
(b) the period that elapsed between the doing of the acts or the occurrence of the events to
which the representation related and the making of the representation.
8.1
(1) The credibility rule does not apply to evidence that is relevant to a witnesss credibility
and that is adduced otherwise than from the witness if:
(a) in cross-examination of the witness:
(i) the substance of the evidence was put to the witness, and
(ii) the witness denied, or did not admit or agree to, the substance of the evidence, and
(b) the court gives leave to adduce the evidence.
(2) Leave under subsection (1) (b) is not required if the evidence tends to prove that the
witness:
(a) is biased or has a motive for being untruthful, or
(b) has been convicted of an offence, including an offence against the law of a foreign
country, or
(c) has made a prior inconsistent statement, or
(d) is, or was, unable to be aware of matters to which his or her evidence relates, or
(e) has knowingly or recklessly made a false representation while under an obligation,
imposed by or under an Australian law or a law of a foreign country, to tell the truth.
S108: Re-establishing Credibility
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
108 Exception: re-establishing credibility
(1) The credibility rule does not apply to evidence adduced in re-examination of a witness.
(2) (Repealed)
Note. The Commonwealth Act includes a subsection referring to section 105 of that Act.
(3) The credibility rule does not apply to evidence of a prior consistent statement of a
witness if:
(a) evidence of a prior inconsistent statement of the witness has been admitted, or
(b) it is or will be suggested (either expressly or by implication) that evidence given by the
witness has been fabricated or re-constructed (whether deliberately or otherwise) or is the
result of a suggestion,
and the court gives leave to adduce the evidence of the prior consistent statement.
S108C: Specalised knowledge
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
108C Exception: evidence of persons with specialised knowledge
(1) The credibility rule does not apply to evidence given by a person concerning the
credibility of another witness if:
(a) the person has specialised knowledge based on the persons training, study or
experience, and
(b) the evidence is evidence of an opinion of the person that:
(i) is wholly or substantially based on that knowledge, and
(ii) could substantially affect the assessment of the credibility of the witness, and
(c) the court gives leave to adduce the evidence.
(2) To avoid doubt, and without limiting subsection (1):
(a) a reference in that subsection to specialised knowledge includes a reference to
specialised knowledge of child development and child behaviour (including specialised
knowledge of the impact of sexual abuse on children and their behaviour during and
following the abuse), and
41
(b) a reference in that subsection to an opinion of a person includes, if the person has
specialised knowledge of that kind, a reference to an opinion relating to either or both of
the following:
(i) the development and behaviour of children generally,
(ii) the development and behaviour of children who have been victims of sexual offences,
or offences similar to sexual offences
S110: Character of the accused
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
110 Evidence about character of accused persons
(1) The hearsay rule, the opinion rule, the tendency rule and the credibility rule do not
apply to evidence adduced by a defendant to prove (directly or by implication) that the
defendant is, either generally or in a particular respect, a person of good character.
(2) If evidence adduced to prove (directly or by implication) that a defendant is generally a
person of good character has been admitted, the hearsay rule, the opinion rule, the tendency
rule and the credibility rule do not apply to evidence adduced to prove (directly or by
implication) that the defendant is not generally a person of good character.
(3) If evidence adduced to prove (directly or by implication) that a defendant is a person of
good character in a particular respect has been admitted, the hearsay rule, the opinion rule,
the tendency rule and the credibility rule do not apply to evidence adduced to prove
(directly or by implication) that the defendant is not a person of good character in that
respect.
Rape Shield Law
Criminal Procedure Act 1986 (NSW)
293 Admissibility of evidence relating to sexual experience
(1) This section applies to proceedings in respect of a prescribed sexual offence.
(2) Evidence relating to the sexual reputation of the complainant is inadmissible.
(3) Evidence that discloses or implies:
(a) that the complainant has or may have had sexual experience or a lack of sexual
experience, or
(b) has or may have taken part or not taken part in any sexual activity,
is inadmissible.
(4) Subsection (3) does not apply:
(a) if the evidence:
(i) is of the complainants sexual experience or lack of sexual experience, or of sexual
activity or lack of sexual activity taken part in by the complainant, at or about the time of
the commission of the alleged prescribed sexual offence, and
(ii) is of events that are alleged to form part of a connected set of circumstances in which
the alleged prescribed sexual offence was committed,
(b) if the evidence relates to a relationship that was existing or recent at the time of the
commission of the alleged prescribed sexual offence, being a relationship between the
accused person and the complainant,
42
(c) if:
(i) the accused person is alleged to have had sexual intercourse (as defined in section 61H
(1) of the Crimes Act 1900) with the complainant, and the accused person does not concede
the sexual intercourse so alleged, and
(ii) the evidence is relevant to whether the presence of semen, pregnancy, disease or injury
is attributable to the sexual intercourse alleged to have been had by the accused person,
(d) if the evidence is relevant to:
(i) whether at the time of the commission of the alleged prescribed sexual offence there
was present in the complainant a disease that, at any relevant time, was absent in the
accused person, or
(ii) whether at any relevant time there was absent in the complainant a disease that, at the
time of the commission of the alleged prescribed sexual offence, was present in the
accused person,
(e) if the evidence is relevant to whether the allegation that the prescribed sexual offence
was committed by the accused person was first made following a realisation or discovery
of the presence of pregnancy or disease in the complainant (being a realisation or discovery
that took place after the commission of the alleged prescribed sexual offence),
(f) if the evidence has been given by the complainant in cross-examination by or on behalf
of the accused person, being evidence given in answer to a question that may, pursuant to
subsection (6), be asked,
and if the probative value of the evidence outweighs any distress, humiliation or
embarrassment that the complainant might suffer as a result of its admission.
Shield sexual assault complainants from unwarranted further humiliation
Operate in addition to the rules about improper questions
Sexual reputation of the complainant cannot be called into question and cannot be
admissible
43
9
9.1
Documents
Definitions
Proof of contents of documents (s48)
Documents in foreign countries (s49)
o Exam: know ss48-49
Proof of voluminous or complex documents (s50)
o What to do when we have 52 boxes of bank statements etc
o Essentially by way of summary
Original document rule abolished (s51)
o Abolished all CL rule where original doc was required
*Note: need to differentiate between does the doc exist (e.g. will) and what is in the
doc
o Step 1: get the content of the doc into evidence
44
(4) A party may adduce evidence of the contents of a document in question that is not
available to the party, or the existence and contents of which are not in issue in the
proceeding, by:
(a) tendering a document that is a copy of, or an extract from or summary of, the
document in question, or
(b) adducing from a witness evidence of the contents of the document in question.
Part 2 Other expressions- Dictionary
5 Unavailability of documents and things
For the purposes of this Act, a document or thing is taken not to be available to a party if
and only if:
(a) it cannot be found after reasonable inquiry and search by the party, or
(b) it was destroyed by the party, or by a person on behalf of the party, otherwise than in
bad faith, or was destroyed by another person, or
(c) it would be impractical to produce the document or thing during the course of the
proceeding, or
(d) production of the document or thing during the course of the proceeding could render a
person liable to conviction for an offence, or
(e) it is not in the possession or under the control of the party and:
(i) it cannot be obtained by any judicial procedure of the court, or
(ii) it is in the possession or under the control of another party to the proceeding concerned
who knows or might reasonably be expected to know that evidence of the contents of the
document, or evidence of the thing, is likely to be relevant in the proceeding, or
(iii) it was in the possession or under the control of such a party at a time when that party
knew or might reasonably be expected to have known that such evidence was likely to be
relevant in the proceeding.
R v Cassar & Sleiman [1999] NSWSC 651
FACTS: police lost paper and fax. Only evidence was running sheet
HELD:
Running sheet was admissible (it incorporated the salient details) pursuant to s48(4)
(a).
The police officer should have leave, pursuant to s32, to use the running sheet to try to
revive his memory.
The police officer could give oral evidence of what he saw in the registration form
pursuant to s48(4)(b), using the running sheet to refresh his recollection.
The registration form was a business record of the kind referred to in s 69 and that
proof of the contents of the form would be evidence of the fact.
45
10 Real Evidence
S54:
o Where a demonstration, experiment or inspection occurs, the court may draw
any reasonable inference from what it sees, hears or otherwise notices
o Neither the judge or any member of the jury is permitted to conduct a view
outside of the rules in s53 (Bilal Skafs case)
o Demonstrations and experiences are powerful. Court needs to be assured that
if this proceeds, its not going to cause unfair prejudice on any party, usually
the defendant
Views
R v Milat (1996) view allowed
o Judge had to decide whether to do the view of the forest given the ability of
the D to attend and the probative value of the evidence
o In criminal matters, if the location is going to be inspected, the D must be
given opportunity to attend (M chose not to attend)
o The view was allowed as long as:
EThere was a media ban
Explanations were given to the jury concerning the alteration of the
forest and how the geography of the area had changed since the
murders, and
The jury did not see the memorial to the victims at the forest entrance.
46
o the view was not unfairly prejudicial as D was given opportunity to attend
R v Bilal Skaf, R v Mohammed Skaf [2004] NSWCCA 37 view NOT allowed
o In the unauthorised view, some of the jury had regard to information that was
not evidence in the trial. Such information was obtained in circumstances
amounting to a want of procedural fairness in that the accused were unable to
test the material, comment upon it or call evidence to rebut or qualify it. The
court needs to weigh the possible prejudicial impact of this extrinsic
information upon the minds and deliberations of the jurors directly involved.
o Attempts to reconstruct material events or to conduct experiments are fraught
with danger, even if conducted under the control of the court. Conditions may
be different in perceptible and imperceptible ways, especially where there may
be movement and potentially variable lighting conditions or perspectives of
view. These dangers increase exponentially when a view, coupled with an
experiment, takes place in private and its impact comes to be assessed years
after the event.
o Here the irregularity did not affect the verdict. The two jurors treated what was
seen and done at the park as information that they took into account in arriving
at or confirming their conclusion that guilt had been established beyond
reasonable doubt.
Evans v R [2007] HCA 59: scope of s 53 is limited to demonstrations, experiments or
inspections which occur outside the courtroom
47
11 Hearsay
Relates to information that was not seen / heard by the W that is giving the evidence
they have been told about what happened by another person
E.g. Adam tells Belinda that he had bought a new laptop for his girlfriend, Clare, as a
surprise for her birthday.
o Only person who really knows the truth of the statement is Adam (the maker
of the representation). Evidence from both Belinda and Claire is Hearsay
because they did not see Adam buy the laptop.
Under EA, the Hearsay Rule forms part of the suite of Exclusionary Rules found in
Chapter 3 of the Act
48
(1) For the purposes of this Act, a person is taken not to be available to give evidence
about a fact if:
(a) the person is dead, or
(b) the person is, for any reason other than the application of section 16 (Competence and
compellability: judges and jurors), not competent to give the evidence, or
(c) the person is mentally or physically unable to give the evidence and it is not reasonably
practicable to overcome that inability, or
(d) it would be unlawful for the person to give the evidence, or
(e) a provision of this Act prohibits the evidence being given, or
(f) all reasonable steps have been taken, by the party seeking to prove the person is not
available, to find the person or secure his or her attendance, but without success, or
(g) all reasonable steps have been taken, by the party seeking to prove the person is not
available, to compel the person to give the evidence, but without success.
(2) In all other cases the person is taken to be available to give evidence about the fact.
ss(c): signed secret contract and which says you cant talk about it
ss(f): person is intended to be called by witness and the party seeking to call them
cant do it because e.g. cant find them
ss(g): person compelled, in contempt of court and still wont
s63- civil, maker not available
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
63 Exception: civil proceedings if maker not available
(1) This section applies in a civil proceeding if a person who made a previous
representation is not available to give evidence about an asserted fact.
(2) The hearsay rule does not apply to:
(a) evidence of the representation that is given by a person who saw, heard or otherwise
perceived the representation being made, or
(b) a document so far as it contains the representation, or another representation to which
it is reasonably necessary to refer in order to understand the representation.
Notes.
1
Section 67 imposes notice requirements relating to this subsection.
2
Clause 4 of Part 2 of the Dictionary is about the availability of persons.
Requires that the W saw, heard or perceived the representation being made by the
Maker.
If a party intends to call such evidence to be used for its Hearsay purpose (ie. to prove
the asserted fact in the previous representation), that party must conform provide
Notice to the other party pursuant to s67
51
(3) If the person who made the representation has been or is to be called to give evidence,
the hearsay rule does not apply to evidence of the representation that is given by:
(a) that person, or
(b) a person who saw, heard or otherwise perceived the representation being made.
s64(2): enables a party to adduce the Hearsay evidence through a W if it would cause
undue delay or expense, or would be not be reasonably practicable to call the Maker
of the previous representation.
o This is very broadly defined and applied and takes into account cost of
securing Maker, length of trial, health and location of maker.
s64(3) provides that if the Maker is called to give evidence, either:
o The Maker of the previous representation; or
o A person who saw, heard or otherwise perceived the previous representation
can also give evidence of the asserted fact.
Maker is available but e.g. its too costly, ill health etc, for these reasons were not
calling the maker of the representation, were going to rely the same sort of thing as
s63
S65- criminal, maker not available
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
65 Exception: criminal proceedings if maker not available
(1) This section applies in a criminal proceeding if a person who made a previous
representation is not available to give evidence about an asserted fact.
(2) The hearsay rule does not apply to evidence of a previous representation that is given
by a person who saw, heard or otherwise perceived the representation being made, if the
representation:
(a) was made under a duty to make that representation or to make representations of that
kind, or
(b) was made when or shortly after the asserted fact occurred and in circumstances that
make it unlikely that the representation is a fabrication, or
(c) was made in circumstances that make it highly probable that the representation is
reliable, or
(d) was:
(i) against the interests of the person who made it at the time it was made, and
(ii) made in circumstances that make it likely that the representation is reliable.
Note. Section 67 imposes notice requirements relating to this subsection.
(3) The hearsay rule does not apply to evidence of a previous representation made in the
course of giving evidence in an Australian or overseas proceeding if, in that proceeding,
the defendant in the proceeding to which this section is being applied:
(a) cross-examined the person who made the representation about it, or
52
(b) had a reasonable opportunity to cross-examine the person who made the representation
about it.
Note. Section 67 imposes notice requirements relating to this subsection.
(4) If there is more than one defendant in the criminal proceeding, evidence of a previous
representation that:
(a) is given in an Australian or overseas proceeding, and
(b) is admitted into evidence in the criminal proceeding because of subsection (3),
cannot be used against a defendant who did not cross-examine, and did not have a
reasonable opportunity to cross-examine, the person about the representation.
(5) For the purposes of subsections (3) and (4), a defendant is taken to have had a
reasonable opportunity to cross-examine a person if the defendant was not present at a time
when the cross-examination of a person might have been conducted but:
(a) could reasonably have been present at that time, and
(b) if present could have cross-examined the person.
(6) Evidence of the making of a representation to which subsection (3) applies may be
adduced by producing a transcript, or a recording, of the representation that is
authenticated by:
(a) the person to whom, or the court or other body to which, the representation was made,
or
(b) if applicable, the registrar or other proper officer of the court or other body to which
the representation was made, or
(c) the person or body responsible for producing the transcript or recording.
(7) Without limiting subsection (2) (d), a representation is taken for the purposes of that
subsection to be against the interests of the person who made it if it tends:
(a) to damage the persons reputation, or
(b) to show that the person has committed an offence for which the person has not been
convicted, or
(c) to show that the person is liable in an action for damages.
(8) The hearsay rule does not apply to:
(a) evidence of a previous representation adduced by a defendant if the evidence is given
by a person who saw, heard or otherwise perceived the representation being made, or
(b) a document tendered as evidence by a defendant so far as it contains a previous
representation, or another representation to which it is reasonably necessary to refer in
order to understand the representation.
Note. Section 67 imposes notice requirements relating to this subsection.
(9) If evidence of a previous representation about a matter has been adduced by a
defendant and has been admitted, the hearsay rule does not apply to evidence of another
representation about the matter that:
(a) is adduced by another party, and
(b) is given by a person who saw, heard or otherwise perceived the other representation
being made.
Note. Clause 4 of Part 2 of the Dictionary is about the availability of persons
S65(2):For the Prosecution, it is not enough that the unavailable maker of the
representation had personal knowledge of the asserted fact, and that evidence of the
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(3) If a representation was made for the purpose of indicating the evidence that the person
who made it would be able to give in an Australian or overseas proceeding, subsection (2)
does not apply to evidence adduced by the prosecutor of the representation unless the
representation concerns the identity of a person, place or thing.
(4) A document containing a representation to which subsection (2) applies must not be
tendered before the conclusion of the examination in chief of the person who made the
representation, unless the court gives leave.
Note. Clause 4 of Part 2 of the Dictionary is about the availability of persons.
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(3) However, this section does not apply in a criminal proceeding to evidence of an
admission.
Note. The admission might still be admissible under section 81 as an exception to the hearsay rule if it is
first-hand hearsay: see section 82.
s60 provides a way of admitting evidence for its Non-Hearsay purpose (credibility)
and then allowing it to be used for its Hearsay purpose.
Evidence must already have been admitted for its Non-Hearsay purpose before s60
can become operative. (remember s101A)
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Main use for s60 comes about where evidence of prior inconsistent statements (s104
and s106) and prior consistent statements (s108) have been admitted for their
Credibility purpose.
o s60 also has application with respect to factual evidence given as part of an
Experts opinion.
eg. Evidence that shows the basis of the Experts opinion (NonHearsay purpose) can also be used to prove the facts that formed the
basis of the opinion (Hearsay purpose).
s60(2): s60 applies to first hand and more remote forms of hearsay (post Lee)
s60(3): in a criminal matter, evidence of an Admission which is more remote than
First-hand Hearsay should not fall within the ambit of s60.
o s81 EA may provide an exception to the Hearsay Rule if the evidence of the
Admission is first-hand evidence.
Lee v The Queen (1998) 195 CLR 594
o Calins police statement
I was walking in the street
I saw Lee walking fast and looking sweaty
I said to him: Wheres my eighty dollars, you owe it to me.
Lee said: No, leave me alone, leave me alone.
I said: Im not f*ckin going to leave you alone til you give me my
eighty bucks. Where is it?
He said: I havent got it, leave me alone, cause Im running because I
fired two shots.
I said: What do you mean you fired two shots?
He said: I did a job and the other guy was with me bailed out.
o Police station: the scene of Cs Police Statement
Calin says Lee said, I did a job and fired two shots.
Calin is the person who saw, heard or otherwise perceived the
representation being made
Calins police statement is first-hand hearsay.
o Trial: the Court Room
Calin does not adopt his PR (no longer First-hand Hearsay)
Calin is an unfavourable witness: s38
Calin is XX on his PIS (s43): s106 Credibility exception applies
Know the process of s38. S43. S106
Exam: KNOW THIS PROCESS
o s60 could not be applied because it was not Calins intention to assert that
Lee had in fact fired the shots and committed the robbery. Because Calin could
not know whether Lee had done those things the only intention that can flow
from the Calin representation was that Lee had said these words.
It should be noted that the comments made by Lee to Calin, as
recorded in the previous representation (police statement) did not fall
within the Admission exception (s81) because it was not First Hand
Hearsay.
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12 Admissions
12.1 General Rule
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
81 Hearsay and opinion rules: exception for admissions and related representations
(1) The hearsay rule and the opinion rule do not apply to evidence of an admission.
(2) The hearsay rule and the opinion rule do not apply to evidence of a previous
representation:
(a) that was made in relation to an admission at the time the admission was made, or
shortly before or after that time, and
(b) to which it is reasonably necessary to refer in order to understand the admission.
S81
o Another exception to the hearsay
o Hearsay rule does not apply to admissions
12.2 Proving an Admission
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
Part 1 Definitions
admission means a previous representation that is:
(a) made by a person who is or becomes a party to a proceeding (including a defendant in
a criminal proceeding), and
(b) adverse to the persons interest in the outcome of the proceeding.
Types of Admissions
Categories of admissions:
1. Inculpatory
a. In: getting yourself into trouble
2. Exculpatory
a. Ex: getting yourself out of trouble
Inculpatory:
o Express or imply something that establishes guilt. eg.
I was pissed off with the guy, so I shot him. (express)
He was just asking for it. (implied)
I didnt complete the job because the account is in arrears. (express)
o Include:
Confessions
Acknowledge a relevant fact that tends to establish guilt / liability
Acknowledgement of something that goes towards establishing a
material fact in issue which Prosecution relies
An admission in a partys pleadings
Adopting someone elses representation as your own
Exculpatory
o Conduct that denies something.
o When you deny guilt, or deny knowledge about something, or deny a fact in
issue, that is an exculpatory representation. In itself, this is not adverse and
therefore not, on its face, an admission. Something more is required to turn it
into an admission. This might include:
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12.3 Exclusions
S82: evidence of Admissions that is not first-hand
o Admission evidence found in s81, s82 qualifies that. If the material is not first
hand, s81 cannot apply
S83: use of admissions against third parties
o Cannot be used by another party unless the other party applies
S84: admissions influenced by violence and other conduct
S85: unreliable Admissions of accused persons
o Not talking about violence behaviour which prompted admission
o Talking about other factors which made admission unreliable
o If there is any likelihood that there may be issue in way admission was made,
it may casts doubt over reliability and it may be adverse
S86: Records of oral questioning of accused persons
S89 and 89A: Evidence of Silence
S82: Evidence of Admissions that is not first-hand
Under s82, for the Admissions exception (s81) to operate, evidence of the Admission
must be first-hand ie.
a) Made by a person who saw, heard or otherwise perceived the Admission being
made; or
b) It is a document in which the Admission is made.
*Note: s60 does not apply in a criminal proceeding to evidence of an admission.
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General rule: unless Admission to police is tape recorded, it will not be admissible
(s281 Criminal Procedure Act)
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13 Opinion Evidence
13.1 What is Opinion Evidence?
Inference that can be drawn from observed and communicable facts or data (Lithgow
City Council v Jackson) which has been reasoned from some type of factual basis
Opinion conjecture
Evidence of a witness opinion that is tendered to prove a fact that was expressed in
the opinion.
Generally, the greater the inference that has to be drawn, the more likely it is for that
evidence to be an opinion rather than a fact
o Pen example: from holding a pen, it can be inferred that the person can write.
This is an opinion. Other options include being a pen holder or that the person
is about to write
13.2 General Rule: s76 Opinion Rule
General rule: evidence of an opinion is not admissible
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
76 The opinion rule
(1) Evidence of an opinion is not admissible to prove the existence of a fact about the
existence of which the opinion was expressed.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to evidence of an opinion contained in a certificate or
other document given or made under regulations made under an Act other than this Act to
the extent to which the regulations provide that the certificate or other document has
evidentiary effect.
Note. Specific exceptions to the opinion rule are as follows:
summaries of voluminous or complex documents (section 50 (3))
evidence relevant otherwise than as opinion evidence (section 77)
lay opinion (section 78)
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander traditional laws and customs (section 78A)
expert opinion (section 79)
admissions (section 81)
exceptions to the rule excluding evidence of judgments and convictions (section 92 (3))
character of and expert opinion about accused persons (sections 110 and 111).
Other provisions of this Act, or of other laws, may operate as further exceptions.
Examples:
1
P sues D, her doctor, for the negligent performance of a surgical operation. Unless an exception to the
opinion rule applies, Ps neighbour, W, who had the same operation, cannot give evidence of his opinion that
D had not performed the operation as well as his own.
2
P considers that electrical work that D, an electrician, has done for her is unsatisfactory. Unless an
exception to the opinion rule applies, P cannot give evidence of her opinion that D does not have the
necessary skills to do electrical work.
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65
66
HELD:
o W acquitted
o Expert "conducted a series of not particularly sophisticated experiments".
o Also raised issues relating the difficulties for jurors in understanding and
distinguishing between conflicting as well as the validity and reliability of
Expert Evidence.
R v Morgan [2011] NSWCCA 257
FACTS: robbery at hotel, M wore balaclava, captured of CCTV. M robbed PJs 30min
later. Considerable circumstantial evidence linked M to the robberies (DNA, key to
red Audi). Eye witness evidence as to height was conflicting. Expert said there was a
high level of anatomical similarity between the Offender and the Suspect / Accused.
No anthropometric measurement or statistical analysis was undertaken by expert.
Other Experts gave evidence that experts evidence was lacking in precise
methodology or scientific protocol.
HELD:
o Evidence given by expert should not have been admitted.
o There was no scientific evaluation of its validity, reliability and error rates.
Essentially, the expert expressed an opinion but there was no factual
explanation to support the opinion.
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68
69
s97 prevents the use of evidence that shows that an individual has a tendency to act or
think in a certain way unless:
o Reasonable notice of the intention to lead such evidence is given (s97(1)(a));
and
Written notice
o The court considers that the evidence has, either in its own right or in
conjunction with other evidence, significant probative value (s97(1)(b)).
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FACTS:
Appeal against convictions for sexual offences, ES argued that
TJerred in admitting evidence of uncharged acts on the basis
the evidence had been led as tendency evidence without
satisfying ss97 and 101 EA.
HELD:
Evidence had considerable probative force, particularly because
it was evidence that could be considered as corroborating the
complainant; but it would have that force only as motive or
tendency evidence
As tendency evidence, there was a need to comply with s 97;
failure to do so rendered the evidence unfairly prejudicial
The admission over objection of this evidence was a
miscarriage of justice
o If s97 requirements not satisfied, the Court must warn Jury not to use the
evidence in a tendency way.
Evidence for Other Purposes
Unlike other evidence for another purpose provisions such as s60 (Hearsay), s95
states that evidence admitted for another purpose cannot be used for a tendency and
coincidence purpose unless is also satisfies the Tendency and Coincidence Rules
o S95: cannot get evidence in for another purpose, unless you satisfy s97 first
Evidence can be admitted for various reasons on a non-propensity basis within s 95:
eg to rebut good character (R v OGD (No 2))
o In rebutting good character, prosecution might raise evidence in relation to the
accuseds previous behaviour. Might be tendency but might not if were not
using it for tendency. Were using it for to show that theyre not of good
character
o R v OGD (No 2)): O on trial for sexually assaulting nephew. Another nephew
testified that when he was 10, O said to him that it was all right to do these
things. Tendered as evidence of Os admission (previous representation that
was adverse to his interests inculpating him in the criminal conduct). O rasied
good character, prosecution cross-examined
None of the evidence had been tendered for a tendency purpose
Evidence of the Nephew had been tendered for an admission purpose
and the evidence of the 2 boys had been tendered to rebut the evidence
of good character
Trial judge had clearly directed the jury that this evidence could not be
used to prove that O had a tendency to commit sexual assaults nor that,
because of that tendency, he was guilty of the sexual assault of the
complainant.
Does this mean the evidence 1. Isnt tendency evidence; and 2. cant be
used for another purpose?
Generally where evidence is admitted under s 95 it will be necessary to give a
warning against tendency reasoning where there is a real possibility that the jury
might use it in that way (Toalepai v R; R v Jiang)
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s98 excludes evidence which is adduced to show that the improbability of the
similarity of 2 or more events occurring is more than coincidental. Unless following
requirements are met:
o s98(1)(a): notice requirement; and
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o s98(1)(b): the court being satisfied as to the significant probative value of the
evidence.
Purposes caught by s98 would include:
o Reliance on contended similarity of previous event / circumstances to the
event /circumstance in question.
o Proving that a person did a particular act (or had certain state of mind).
o Reasoning that it is improbable that the events occurred coincidently.
Process of coincidence reasoning from which that inference would be drawn is
(Simpson J in R v Gale; R v Duckworth):
o two or more events occurred; and
o there were similarities in those events; or there were similarities in the
circumstances in which those events occurred; or there were similarities in
both the events and the circumstances in which they occurred; and
o having regard to those similarities, it is improbable that the two events
occurred coincidentally
o therefore the person in question did a particular act or had a particular state of
mind.
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Onus rests with D (evidentiary burden). Then burden falls back on crown to negate
real chance
BP v R [2010] NSWCCA 303: D charged with 11 counts of sexual assault upon
different family members. Judge said he will hear all complainants together
o Features of Ds conduct described by each complainant were sufficiently
similar and sufficiently unusual for the evidence of each of them to have
significant probative value in showing the specified tendencies
o s97 is concerned with evidence that a person has a tendency to act in a
particular way or have a particular state of mind; and the probative value of
the evidence will depend both on its probative value in establishing the
tendency and on the probative value of the tendency (if established) in relation
to an issue in the case
o To be admissible as tendency evidence, the evidence must have significant
probative value. It must be capable of rationally affecting the probability of
the existence of a fact in issue to a significant extent, meaning (at least) an
extent greater than required for mere relevance
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15 Character Evidence
15.1 Overview of Character Evidence
Relates to a persons personal qualities, reputation, social standing of the D
o S109: ONLY in relation to the character of defendant i.e. ONLY in criminal
matter
General principle: D should not be judged on his character (fairness principle)
EA: rules about character evidence apply only in criminal proceedings, and only
to the character of the D(s109)
o D can adduce evidence of his good character to help support their case.
o Risk attached to doing this i.e. need to be in a passion to say that yes you can
raise good character but there may be downsides
Character evidence is relevant because it could rationally affect (directly or indirectly)
the assessment of the probability'' that the D committed the offence or offences
charged (Gaudron J -TKWJ v R)
o E.g. relevant to show:
that it is unlikely for a person of good character would commit the
offence; or
that where the D has given evidence, that they should be assessed as
being a creditable witness. (Eastman v The Queen)
Problem: studies show that a persons good character is a not a reliable way of
predicting whether a person has committed a crime.
o Perhaps tendency evidence ought to be preferred over character evidence.
Unfortunately, EA has not followed this approach.
Danger of Trier of Fact wrongly estimating probative value of character evidence.
Trier of Fact may also think that the good character of the Defendant should be used
to balance against the offence committed
15.2 s110 Evidence About Character of Defendant
Evidence Act 1995
110 Evidence about character of accused persons
(1) The hearsay rule, the opinion rule, the tendency rule and the credibility rule do not
apply to evidence adduced by a defendant to prove (directly or by implication) that the
defendant is, either generally or in a particular respect, a person of good character.
(2) If evidence adduced to prove (directly or by implication) that a defendant is generally a
person of good character has been admitted, the hearsay rule, the opinion rule, the tendency
rule and the credibility rule do not apply to evidence adduced to prove (directly or by
implication) that the defendant is not generally a person of good character.
(3) If evidence adduced to prove (directly or by implication) that a defendant is a person of
good character in a particular respect has been admitted, the hearsay rule, the opinion rule,
the tendency rule and the credibility rule do not apply to evidence adduced to prove
(directly or by implication) that the defendant is not a person of good character in that
respect.
s110(1): where the D adduces evidence which proves (directly or indirectly) that he is
a person of good character, the Hearsay Rule, Opinion Rule, Tendency Rule and
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Credibility Rule do not apply. (ie the evidence will not be excluded by operation
of these rules).
o Therefore no s78 and 79
o The evidence of good character can be general or relate to a specific aspect of
the Ds reputation. For example;
I am a peaceful person who hates all forms of violence.
I have never physically attacked someone, without provocation.
I have never assaulted my wife with anything but my hands she has
never had to go to the hospital.
Indication that yes I have done something but not talking about
it. But its saying that Ive never hurt her so much that shes had
to go to hospital. Its very specific
If the D makes these statements, this is licence for prosecution to
cross-examine about what theyve said
s110 allows the D to call evidence that would be otherwise considered to be
inadmissible eg.
o D may call a witness to give evidence about the reputation (opinion) without
evidence being excluded under s76 or having to conform to the requirements
under s78 or s79.
s110(2) and s110(3): where the D has lead evidence of good character (general or
specific), the prosecution and / or a co-D may call evidence that the D is not of good
character (generally or specifically)
S112: before the Dcan be cross examined about character evidence lead under s110,
leave of the Court must first be sought (Leave is sought in accordance with s192).
o Make application under s192
Use / exclusion of character evidence is subject to Discretionary Rules in Part 3.11
EA.
o BUT STILL SUBJECT TO DISCRETIONARY RULES
Judge may comment that although someone may be of previous good character, there
is always a first time for committing an offence evidence of previous good character
should not prevail against evidence of guilt.
o Nature of proceedings;
Murder, important issues need to be address.
o Possibility of adjouning or making alternative orders
Can we get around the grant of leave? Courts dont do it lightly. Can
we get around it by seeking an adjournment (statement of agreed facts)
o Can we get the evidence from somewhere else? Does it go to a fact in issue
Stanoevski v The Queen (2001) 202 CLR 115
Leave to cross-examine on character should not be granted if there is a chance:
o of a miscarriage of justice;
o it would be unfair; or
o it would distract the jury from the real facts in issue.
Cross-examination on character needs to have sufficient probative value in relation to
the facts in issue, in order for leave to be granted.
Look at prejudice, probative value, relevance
15.5 Advance Rulings on Grant of Leave
Question of leading evidence of good character (generally or specifically) can have a
large impact on conduct of Ds case if D elects to lead such evidence may open
himself to forensic disadvantage (usually cross examination of previous criminal
history etc).
o D is putting hand up and saying that if I were to put my character before the
court, would leave be granted or not (I want to get an indication of whether I
run the risk of being cross-examined)
o If D knows leave will be granted to P to cross-examine, D may be reluctant to
put their character in issue
There is a degree of forensic advantage if D knows the likelihood of whether or not
Court will grant leave to the Crown to cross-examine on character. May seek an
advance ruling under s192A. Court may considerate if appropriate.
o TKWJ v The Queen: no requirement for the trial judge to give an advance
ruling as to whether or not leave to cross-examination on character would be
granted.
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16 Discretionary/Mandatory Rules
16.1 Section 135 Discretionary Rule
Court may exclude the evidence because its probative value is substantially out
weighed by the danger that the evidence might:
o be unfairly prejudicial to a party;
o be misleading or confusing; or
o cause or result in an undue waste of time
Operates as a general discretion to exclude evidence in both Criminal and Civil
matters
Heavy onus on the party seeking to have the evidence excluded to show that probative
valued is substantially outweighed, the balancing act under s135 is weighted in favour
of admission of the evidence. (cf s137)
Unfair prejudice (s135(a))
Prejudice needs to be unfair
Where there is a danger that the fact-finder may use the evidence to make a decision
on an improper, perhaps emotional, basis - on a basis logically unconnected with the
issues in the case.
McHugh J, Papakosmas: talks about unfair prejudice in terms like improper,
emotional, logically unconnected with the issues in the case, arousing a sense of
horror, or provoking an instinct to punish. eg. Exclusion of gruesome crime scene
photographs (particularly when D has denied involvement)
Any crime scene, particulars murders, there will be hundreds of shots in all angles. If
this is shown to a jury, they are horrified and thus want to convict the D.
Exam: if stuck between s135 and s137, think of crime scene example
Misleading, confusing (s135(b))
Evidence may be misleading or confusing to a jury and it is impractical or impossible for a TJ
to give directions that would prevent that confusion. If directions cannot clarify to the jury
how to avoid being misled or confused it is more appropriate to exercise the discretion to
exclude the evidence altogether. Eg. widely used in relation to expert evidence particularly
statistical DNA evidence.
Undue waste of time (s135(c))
Often evidence may have some probative value but if that evidence has been
substantially presented to the jury by other witnesses, or in other ways, it may unduly
waste the courts time to hear further evidence on that subject.
Also widely applied in relation to voluminous financial reports and statistical data.
e.g. Accounting records or background data.
16.2 Section 136 Discretionary Rule
Court may limit the way in which evidence is used if there is a danger that a
particular use might be either unfairly prejudicial or misleading / confusing.
(Criminal and Civil)
Allows the court to give direction you are to use evidence in this manner and not that
manner. i.e. dictates how evidence is to be used
79
Where evidence is unfairly prejudicial, misleading or confusing the Court may limit
the use that may be made of that evidence.
In practical terms, s136 operates through giving of judicial directions, where a TJ
directs a jury about how they may or may not use the evidence.
o eg. if a piece of evidence is admissible in more than one way (relevant for
both hearsay and credibility uses) but one of those ways may be misleading,
the TJ may direct the jury that they can use the evidence in one of those ways
and explain why they cannot use it in the other way.
Other common examples include:
o Relationship evidence that may be used to show the nature of a relationship
but not be used as tendency evidence (R v Lock).
o Where s60 has been applied in order to allow otherwise inadmissible evidence
to be adduced, but it is considered that it would be unfair or misleading to use
the evidence for its Hearsay purpose eg. Evidence is not admissible under a
Hearsay Exception and there are reasons to doubt the reliability of the
representation.
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