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Circumstances that may prevent the resolving of a case against a defendant

Duty of a party to prove his case by calling the best evidence available

Effect of failure of a party to give evidence in his case as disclosed in his pleadings or to challenge the evidence of his adversary

Need for the proof of a criminal case to be consistent with active participation of the accused person in the commission of the crime and circumstantial evidence

The nature of evidence that can prove a case

The principle that a case is decided on the totality of evidence led by the parties

The principle that a plaintiff must succeed on the strength of his own case and not on the weakness of the defendant's case

What a plaintiff who relies on an admission in the defence for the proof of a substantial part of his case must prove

When a defendant would be entitled to judgment without tendering evidence

Whether a claimant or a counter-claimant is allowed to rely on the weakness of the opposite party in order to succeed

Whether a party can establish his case by evidence elicited under cross-examination

Whether a party can rely on the weakness of the case of the opposite party in order to succeed

Whether a party can take advantage of the evidence of his opponent which supports his case

Whether a party is bound to testify himself

Whether a party needs to call every available piece of evidence/witness to prove his case

Whether a plaintiff can take advantage of the defendant's evidence which supports his case

Whether consequences attach for failure of a party to testify in a civil case

Whether proof of cases must be by mathematical exactitude

Whether suspicion can substitute for legal evidence

Whether the court must consider the proof of the case by the plaintiff in a Chieftaincy matter before considering the case of the Defendant

Whether the plaintiff can rely on the weakness of the defendant's case to succeed

Whether the respondent can rely on the evidence adduced by the appellant

Whether the rule that a plaintiff must succeed on the strength of his own case and not on the weakness of the defendant's case applies where the defendant's case supports that of the plaintiff

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