Subject Matter Index
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Duty of the plaintiff to prove the case set up by him
Duty on party who wants the court to believe the existence of certain facts
Effect of failure of the plaintiff to prove a fact
Effect of failure of the plaintiff to prove his case
Effect of failure to call evidence in proof of a case
How anticipated profits should be proved
How can money paid into the bank be proved
How identity of a person can be proved
How payment of money into an account can be proved
How proof is effected in applications fought on affidavit evidence
How to prove delivery where it is alleged that a document was delivered to a person who denied receiving it
How to prove the corporate status of a company
Nature of proof required where a petitioner alleges disenfranchisement of voters at an election
Proof of shareholding in a company
Stages of proof
The principle that a multitude of suspicion is no proof
The principle that credible evidence must be led in support of an allegation
The principle that proof goes beyond repeating mere averments
The rule that a party must adduce evidence in proof of an assertion that has been traversed by the other party
The rule that a party who disputes an issue does not simply rest the case on formal denials either made in examination in chief or ‘put’ or ‘suggested’ to an opponent under cross-examination
The rule that a plaintiff must prove his case and not merely rely on the weakness of the defence
The rule that proof presupposes a dispute between parties on a particular point or issue
The rule that when averments are denied by an opponent, admissible and credible evidence must be led from which the fact or facts asserted can be properly and safely inferred
The rule that where a party makes an averment which is capable of proof, he must prove it by providing corroborative evidence
The rule that where a person makes an allegation the onus is on him to lead evidence to prove that allegation
The rule that where the evidence was unsatisfactory, the plaintiffs claim should fail, although it does not lessen the burden which rests on a defendant to prove his counterclaim
The rule that where the forgery/fraud alleged is apparent on the face of the record there is no need for further proof
The senses in which proof can be used in law
What a petitioner alleging falsification of election result must prove
What constitutes proof of an averment
What proof entails
What the rule that an assertion be proved strictly requires
What the trial court in a civil case ought to consider where it has to decide whether the evidence led by the plaintiff proves a particular fact
When a fact is said to have been proved
Whether a party can prove his case by previous acts in his favour
Whether a party can repeat on oath what he has pleaded
Whether a party needs to prove an averment that has not been denied
Whether a statement of defence constitutes proof in law
Whether averment in an affidavit that facts exist is proof of the existence of that fact
Whether facts peculiarly within the knowledge of the opponent must be proved by him
Whether mere sworn assertions amount to proof
Whether proof consists of a mere repetition of the matters claimed in pleadings
Whether proof is required where a negative averment is made
Whether the laws of a foreign country are questions of fact and must be proved by evidence
Whether what is admitted or, by presumption of law, deemed admitted needs further poof
Whether where a party fails to lead evidence on a fact and it is put to him under cross-examination for him to deny, it consttutes proof in law
Whether written documents from a court must be produced to establish a criminal trial and judgment
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