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Admissibility of computer-generated bank statement of account

Admissibility of computer generated evidence

Admissibility of newspapers

Admissibility of relevant evidence

Basis for admissibility of evidence

Circumstances where document admitted by the other party would still be required to be tendered in evidence

Circumstances where documentary evidence will be admissible in the absence of its maker

Condition for the admissibility of a survey plan under the Survey Law of Oyo State 2000

Conditions a document must satisfy before it can be tendered and admitted as exhibit

Conditions for the admissibility of a tape recording

Distinction between admissibility and weight to be attached to evidence

Distinction between evidence inadmissible per se and evidence admissible under certain conditions

Duty of a trial court where a document tendered in evidence is sought to be withdrawn upon being opposed or objected to.

Effect of evidence admitted with the consent of the other party or without objection

Effect of evidence given by an agent or official of a company

Effect of evidence which passes the test of admissibility

Effect of failure to object to the admissibility of evidence when it is tendered

Effect of provisionally admitting evidence

Effect of relevant evidence which is neither discredited nor demolished

How the court should treat the testimony of interested persons

Nature of evidence that can be relied on by a court to make its findings

Need for a party to explain the purport of a document that is tendered in evidence

Position of the law on giving of evidence of the terms of a contract which have been reduced into writing

Position of the law on the admissibility of a statement in a recital

Position of the law where a party fails to produce material evidence in support of his case

Position of the law where evidence has been received at the trial without objection or by consent of the parties

Principles governing the admissibility of evidence

Principles governing to the admissibility of a document relating to a land transaction as a receipt

The nature of evidence upon which the court can act

The position of the law on the admissibility of evidence by a person employed in the public service who is not present at the hearing

The position of the law on the only admissible evidence of court proceedings

The principle that a certified true copy of a document is admissible without proof

The principle that admissibility is based on relevance

The principle that courts should not shut out a party who seeks to tender some materials he considers vital to his case at the preliminary stage

The principle that the court can only act on and ascribe probative value to legally admissible credible evidence

The rule that admissibility is governed by the purpose for which the evidence is sought to be admitted

The rule that the only evidence of the contents of a judgment of a Court of law or any other judicial or official proceedings admissible in evidence is the judgment itself

The rule that where a court admits a piece of evidence, the whole of the evidence must be used

Whather a tape is admissible in evidence

Whether a bare statement from the Bar by a counsel has any force of legal evidence

Whether a copy of a certificate of incorporation certified by the High Court is admissible in evidence

Whether a court is required to set down a date for establishing the authenticity or otherwise of evidence

Whether admissibility of evidence and the weight to be attached are the same thing

Whether a document may be admissible for one purpose and be inadmissible for another purpose

Whether a draft white paper is admissible in evidence

Whether a Judge can either completely reject admitted evidence or disregard such evidence admitted at the stage of writing judgment

Whether a newspaper report is admissible as evidence of the facts recorded in it

Whether an objection can be taken on appeal to the admissibility of evidence which is not inadmissible per se

Whether an objection to the admissibility of evidence can be made on appeal

Whether antecedent evidence of insanity is admissible

Whether an uncertified copy of a judgment is admissible

Whether an unstamped instrument is admissible in evidence

Whether a party can raise the issue of the inadmissibility of admissible evidence which he failed to object to at the trial

Whether a party can rely on evidence elicited under cross-examination

Whether a party is precluded from complaining on appeal about the inadmissibility of evidence which was not strictly admissible

Whether a piece of evidence admissible under the Evidence Act can be rendered inadmissible in evidence under a state law

Whether a statement from the bar constitutes legal evidence

Whether a survey plan not countersigned by a Surveyor-General is inadmissible

Whether a trial Judge can admit evidence which he had previously rejected

Whether criminal proceedings are relevant and admissible in a civil proceeding

Whether evidence can be given of a judicial proceeding which has been reduced to the form of a document

Whether evidence elicited under cross-examination is admissible

Whether evidence obtained in cross-examination in respect of facts that have not been pleaded is admissible

Whether evidence obtained under cross examination but on facts not pleaded are admissible

Whether evidence on a genealogical table which has not been pleaded with particularity will be admitted

Whether evidence taken at an inquiry is admissible

Whether extrinsic evidence is admissible when identifying a piece of land

Whether failure to object to the admissibility of an inadmissible evidence will prevent its inadmissibility from being raised and determined on appeal

Whether failure to plead a particular facts renders evidence in respect of that fact not relevant and, consequently, not admissible

Whether illegality renders evidence inadmissible in an election petition

Whether immaterial evidence should be tendered in court

Whether or not an appellate court may exclude or expunge an inadmissible evidence per se which was admitted and used by a trial court.

Whether the admissibility of a document that is legally admissible can be objected to on appeal

Whether the admissibility or inadmissibility of evidence is exclusively governed by the Evidence Act

Whether the appeal court must reject evidence improperly received in the lower court, even when no objection was raised

Whether the court can expunge a wrongly admitted document at the judgment stage

Whether the court can pick and choose which portion of the evidence of a witness to believe

Whether the court can rely on evidence of counsel

Whether the court can reopen the issue of admissibility of a piece of evidence not objected to by the opposing party

Whether the court can use evidence admitted without objection

Whether the deposition of a witness taken at a Preliminary Enquiry and produced from the custody of the Registrar of the court before which the trial is held may properly be admitted in evidence without further proof

Whether the record of proceedings in a criminal trial is admissible in civil matters

Whether the reports of proceedings of the National Assembly is admissible to rebut the inclusiveness of the certificate of the Clerk of the National Assembly

Whether untested statements of witnesses in a Police case file care admissible

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