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Admissibility of circumstantial evidence in criminal cases

Circumstantial evidence as the best form of evidence

Conditions that must be satisfied before circumstantial evidence can support the conviction for an offence

Condition to be satisfied before drawing an inference of guilt from circumstantial evidence

Forms of circumstantial evidence

Importance of circumstantial evidence

Nature of circumstantial evidence required to convict for conspiracy

Nature of circumstantial evidence that can ground a conviction

Need for circumstantial evidence to be conclusive of guilt and incompatible with the innocence of the accused person

The nature of circumstantial evidence as contrasted with direct evidence

The principle that a finding of crime based on circumstantial evidence must lead to only one conclusion

The rule that a court ought not to convict upon circumstantial evidence unless guilt is the only reasonable inference which can be drawn from it

What circumstantial evidence connotes

When a presumption from circumstantial evidence should be drawn against the accused person

When a presumption will be permitted to be drawn from circumstantial evidence

When circumstantial evidence would support a conviction

Whether being in possession of stolen properties and disposing them amounts to circumstantial evidence of stealing

Whether circumstantial evidence can be derogated

Whether circumstantial evidence is admissible in civil cases

Whether circumstantial evidence is admissible in the absence of direct evidence

Whether circumstantial evidence must lead to one and only one conclusion

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