Judicial notice is a rule in the law of evidence that allows a fact to be introduced into evidence if the truth of that fact is so notorious or well known that it cannot be refuted.
Judicial Notice Court of law is based on facts that needs to be proved. But if all the facts are to be proved, it would take months and years to solve a simplest of case.
Judicial Notice: The procedure by which a judge recognizes the existence of the truth of a certain fact having bearing on the case without the production of evidence because such fact is established by common notoriety.
judicial notice n. the authority of a judge to accept as facts certain matters which are of common knowledge from sources which guarantee accuracy or are a matter of official record, without the need for evidence establishing the fact.
judicial notice Procedure by which the court may recognize a well-known fact as true despite the absence of evidence; e.g., the court will take judicial notice of the fact that Tacoma is in Pierce County.
Judicial Notice: Act by which a court will recognize the existence of a certain fact without the production of substantiating evidence. Judicial Review: ...
Judicial Notice A determination by an administrative law judge that a fact is true even if the parties have not presented evidence about it. Usually this occurs when the fact is common knowledge and undisputed. See also Official Notice .
Judicial Notice The court’s declaration of fact and/or law that controls the outcome of a controversy. The court may do this on its own, or it may do so upon the motion of any party at any time.
COGNIZANCE (Lat. cognoscere, to know), knowledge, notice, especially judicial notice, the right of trying or considering a case judicially, the exercise of jurisdiction by a court of law.
The court will take judicial notice of the days of the week - for example, when a writ of inquiry was stated in the pleadings to have been executed on the fifteenth of June, and, upon an examination, it was found to be Sunday, ...
Proof may be dispensed with when an adversary formally admits a fact either in the pleadings or in court, or when the court may take judicial notice of the fact, i.e.
: a thing whose actual occurrence or existence is to be determined by the evidence presented at trial see also finding of fact at finding judicial notice question of fact at question trier of fact compare law opinion ...
The courts of one state not being presumed to know, are not bound to take judicial notice of the laws of another State. In this respect, they are foreign to each other. General law. Relates to a whole genus or kind, to a whole class or order.
See also: Notice, Judicial, Law, Person, Court
 
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