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Admission by conduct
Can counsel make an admission on behalf of his client?
Conditions that admission against interest must satisfy in order to be valid in favour of an adverse party.
Condition that an admission on oral testimony should satisfy before it can be relied on by the court
Condtions for a valid admission
Effect of admissions
Effect of a free admission in Sharia Law
Effect of an admission
Effect of an admission by a defendant in a land matter
Effect of an admission of a debt
How the courts should consider the worth of an admission
How to determine whether an admission has been made
Legal significance of an admission by a party
Legal significance of an admission made by an accused person
Meaning and admissibility of an admission
Meaning and effect of an admission
Meaning and legal status of Informal Admission
Meaning and Nature of Formal Admissions
Meaning of Admission
Position of the law on admissions
The admissibility of admissions
The principle that admission should be based on personal knowledge
The principle that admissions must be clear
The rule that admissions constitute estoppels
The rule that an admission must relate to the live issues in the matter
What constitutes an admission
When admissions in civil cases are conclusive
When an admission will be binding
When the contents of a statement will amount to an admission
Whether a counsel can bind a client by admission
Whether admissions constitutes conclusive proof of the matters admitted
Whether a judgment can be entered on admission
Whether an admission can be by pleadings
Whether an admission can be made in a document tendered in a judicial proceeding
Whether an admission of indebtedness can be used as the basis of judgment for a specific sum
Whether an admission relied upon as an estoppel must be pleaded
Whether an informal admission is binding
Whether a retracted admission can give rise to a judgment
Whether a witness can admit to facts not within his knowledge
Whether failure of the defendant to discharge the burden of proof affects the efficacy of the formal admission in the pleading
Whether failure to reply to a letter constitutes an admission
Whether further proof is required of admissions under oath
Whether INEC can rely on its own admission to prove a case
Whether the admission of a transaction is an admission of the amount allegedly owed
Whether the failure to challenge an averment amounts to an admission
Whether the failure to reply a solicitor's letter amounts to an admission
Whether there is a difference between outright admission and default of pleadings
Whether where parties agree about a particular matter in their pleadings and/or evidence such matter need not be proved
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