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The Court has the discretion as to how much evidence should be given of the statement when evidence is given of a statement which forms a part of:
I. a longer statement
II. a conversation
III. an isolated document
IV. a document contained in a book
V. a series of letters or papers
I, III and IV
II and III
I, II and V
all of them
- When evidence is given about a statement that is part of a larger body (like a longer statement, a conversation, a document, etc.), the Court has discretion on how much context should be provided.
-
- I. A longer statement: Yes, Courts decide how much of the full statement should be shown to fully understand the part given in evidence.
- II. A conversation: Correct, the Court may ask for more of the conversation for context.
- III. An isolated document: Yes, the Court can ask for more of related material.
- IV. A document contained in a book: Also correct; context may be needed.
- V. A series of letters or papers: Right, courts may need more of the series for clarity.
- Option 1 (I, III and IV): Leaves out II and V.
- Option 2 (II and III): Too limited, omits the rest.
- Option 3 (I, II and V): Misses III and IV.
- Option 4 (all of them): This includes all relevant scenarios where the Court has discretion.
By: santosh ProfileResourcesReport error
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