Admissible Evidence The evidence that a trial judge may allow in at a trial for the judge or jury to consider in reaching a decision.
Admissible Evidence n. in a court, any testimonial, documentary, or tangible evidence that may be introduced to a judge or jury is called admissible evidence. The use is to establish or to bolster a point put forth by a party to the proceeding.
'The State was obliged to present during the guilt phase competent, admissible evidence establishing the essential elements of the crimes with which Nixon was charged.
Admissible: Any form of testimony or evidence that is allowed into court. Adultery: When one spouse has sexual intercourse with a third party. This is considered grounds for divorce in some states.
Admissible Evidence Evidence is often presented in a tense, emotional atmosphere in a courtroom long after the event in question took place.
Admissible evidence - Evidence that can be legally and properly introduced in a civil or criminal trial. Admonish - To advise or caution. For example the court may caution or admonish counsel for wrong practices.
Admissible in evidence Evidence that a court or tribunal is entitled to hear. All ER ...
admissible evidence - Evidence which can legally and properly be used in court. admission - A statement tending to establish the guilt or liability of the person making the statement.
admissible evidence: Evidence that can legally and properly be used in court. admission: Saying that certain facts are true. But not saying you are guilty. (Compare with confession.) admonish: To warn, advise, or scold.
admissible Pertinent and proper to be considered by the court; used with reference to evidence; evidence that is barred by the rules of evidence is said to be inadmissible. admonition A warning, usually oral, carrying an implied penalty.
admissible evidence - The documents, testimony or tangible items that a trial judge allows a jury or herself to consider during trial based on the authenticity and reliability of the evidence.
Admissible Evidence: Relevant evidence that can be legally and properly introduced in a civil or criminal trial. Admission: ...
admissible evidence n. evidence which the trial judge finds is useful in helping the trier of fact (a jury if there is a jury, otherwise the judge), and which cannot be objected to on the basis that it is irrelevant, immaterial, ...
Inadmissible - An alien seeking admission at a port of entry who does not meet the criteria in the INA for admission.
inadmissible/incompetent evidenceInformation which is so unreliable it cannot be admitted under the established rules of evidence. in cameraIn a judge's chambers; in private.
inadmissible Not allowed, i.e. not able to be used as evidence in a court action. incorporated associations ...
admissible evidence The evidence that a trial judge or jury may consider, because the rules of evidence deem it reliable. See evidence, inadmissible evidence. admission ...
They are admissible, as such, only in cases of homicide, where the death of the deceased is the subject of the charge, and the circumstances of the death are the subject of the dying declarations. 2 B. & C. 605; 15 John. 286: 4 C. & P. 233.
Admissible Evidence Evidence that is relevant and is of such a kind that the court will receive it. Character Evidence Evidence that shows the kind of person that someone is.
The evidence may be admissible to show that another person's statement was made, but not of the truth of what was contained therein.
To be admissible in court, circumstantial evidence must be derived from direct evidence. It must be directly derived from direct evidence.
" used during an armed robbery would be admissible in evidence under the res gestae rule. So, too, would spontaneous statements made by the defendant during or right after the crime.
In some instances evidence in disparagement of character is admissible, not in order to prove or disprove the commission of a particular fact, but with a view to damages.
With some exceptions, a party may obtain discovery of any relevant information as long as it is not privileged, including information that itself would not be admissible at trial but that is likely to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.
Evidence of a later communication will not be barred by this rule, as it is admissible to show a later modification of the contract (although it might be inadmissible for some other reason, such as the Statute of Frauds).
No proceedings of a court of inquiry, no confession, statement or answer, is admissible in a court martial.
Hearsay evidence is normally only admissible in court proceedings to show that a statement was made, not to prove the truth of the contents of the statement.
hearsay: a type of testimony given by a witness who relates not what he/she knows personally, but what others have told the witness, or what the witness has heard said by others; may be admissible or inadmissible in court depending upon rules of ...
testimony, documents or things which one side attempts to present as evidence during trial, which the court finds (usually after objection by the opposition) are not admissible because they are irrelevant or immaterial to the issues in the lawsuit.
Privileged Communication A communication that is not admissible in evidence if made under circumstances in which the law recognizes a right of privacy, as between an attorney and a client.
Rules of Evidence: Standards governing whether evidence in a civil or criminal case is admissible. Ruling: Broadly, a determination made by a judge. A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z ...
Statements by a witness who did not see or hear the incident in question but heard about it from someone else. Hearsay is usually not admissible as evidence in court. Indictment ...
AUTHENTICATION: In the law of evidence, the act or mode or giving authority or legal authenticity to a statute, record or certified copy, so as to render it legally admissible as evidence. AVERMENT: A statement of facts in a legal pleading.
registry date Aliens who have continuously resided in the United States since January 1, 1972, are of good moral character, and are not inadmissible, are eligible to adjust to legal permanent resident status under ...
INCOMPETENT EVIDENCE -- Inadmissible evident. INCOME WITHHOLDING ORDER -- An order entered by the circuit court providing for the withholding of a person’s income to enforce a child support order.
affidavit: a statement of facts based on personal knowledge, written or adopted by a person (called the affiant) who signs it before a notary and swears to the truth of the statement. Affidavits are not necessarily admissible in court, ...
" A peculiar rule, used mostly in criminal cases, which allows hearsay if the statement is made during the excitement of the litigated event. For example, the words "stick 'em up!" used during an armed robbery would be admissible in evidence under ...
One does not have to agree to blow into a breath machine, and in most cases, one should not agree to do so. Some police jurisdictions also use roadside breath tests, but these are not admissible as evidence in court.
Failure to issue the Miranda warning results in the evidence so obtained to not be admissible in the court. The warning became a national police requirement when ordered by the US Supreme Court in the 1966 case Miranda v.
See also: Evidence, State, Law, Court, Person
 
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