F1.1 - Facts in issue
(a) the facts which the prosecution bear the burden of proving or disproving (in order to establish the guilt of the accused)
(b) the facts which, in exceptional cases, the accused bears the burden of proving in order to succeed in the defence
- Determinable by reference to the legal ingredients of the offence charged and any defence raised.
F1.1 - What is not a fact in issue?
Any fact which is formally admitted under s.10 CJA 1967 ceases to be in issue: it must be taken to have been proved.
Proving a fact by means other than calling live evidence
(a) agreeing a witness statement as true by consent of the parties (CJA 1967, s 9)
(b) agreeing any fact between the parties (CJA 1967, s 10)
(c) a judge or jury take ‘judicial notice’ of the fact
Agreeing any fact between the parties - CJA 1967, s 10
- The fact is reduced to writing, and both parties agree and sign the agreement.
Agreeing a witness statement as true by consent of the parties - CJA 1967, s 9
F1.3 - Rules for s 10 formal admissions
F1.3 - Rules on going back on formal admissions
Leave to withdraw them is unlikely to be given under s.10(4) without cogent evidence from the accused and advisers that the admissions were made by reason of mistake or misunderstanding (Kolton)
F1.4 - Judicial notice
Types of evidence
(a) Oral evidence given by witness in court
(b) Written evidence: agreed statements (s 9 CJA 1967) or admitted facts (s 10 CJA 1967)
(c) Real evidence
(d) Direct evidence
(e) Circumstantial evidence
(f) A ‘view’
F8.45 - Real evidence
Objects/things brought to court for inspection, e.g. documents exhibited by a witness who can vouch for their origin.
Direct evidence v circumstantial evidence
Direct - evidence that a witness gives of having had direct experience of a matter
Circumstantial - evidence from which facts are inferred
F8.50 - A ‘view’
Sometimes juries can visit a scene of the crime or leave court to view an object that cannot be brought into court. Their observations become evidence in the case.
F1.11 - Cardinal rule of the law of evidence
Subject to the exclusionary rules, all evidence which is sufficiently relevant to the facts in issue is admissible, and all evidence which is irrelevant or insufficiently relevant to the facts in issue should be excluded.
F1.11 - When can evidence that is relevant nonetheless be excluded?
F1.12 - The meaning of ‘relevance’
‘Evidence is relevant if it is logically probative or disprobative of some matter which requires proof…relevant evidence is evidence which makes the matter which requires proof more or less probable’ (DPP v Kilbourne)
Question of relevance typically to be determined by common sense and experience (Randall)
F1.14 - Good character
F1.36 - General rule as to law and fact in a trial on indictment
F1.36 - Questions of law for the judge in jury trials
(a) where the court has determined that an accused is unfit to plead, whether the accused did the act or made the omission charged as the offence
(b) challenges to jurors
(c) discharge of a juror or the whole jury
(d) competence of persons to give sworn or unsworn evidence
(e) admissibility of evidence
(f) withdrawal of an issue from the jury
(g) submissions of no case to answer
(h) the issues on which the jury should be directed in the summing up e.g. the law governing the charge, the burden and standard of proof, the use which the jury is entitled to make of evidence, the operation of any presumptions, the nature of/any requirement for corroboration
(i) matters ancillary to the trial itself, e.g. questions of bail, costs and leave to appeal
F1.36 - Questions of fact for the jury in jury trials
(a) whether the accused stands mute of malice or by visitation of God;
(b) the credibility of the witnesses called and the weight of the evidence adduced;
(c) whether, applying the burden and standard of proof applicable, they are satisfied as to the existence or non-existence of the facts in issue
F1.36 - Questions of fact for the judge in jury trials
F1.42 - Rules on law and fact in summary trials
F2.7 - Most important discretionary power to exclude otherwise admissible prosecution evidence
F2.7 - Important considerations about s.78(1) PACE 1984
F2.9 - Excluding otherwise admissible evidence at common law
(a) any admissible evidence which is likely to have a prejudicial effect out of proportion to its probative value
(b) admissions, confessions and other evidence obtained from the accused after the commission of the offence by improper or unfair means and which might operate unfairly against the accused (Sang)