Sunday, September 12, 2010

The Departure of Lord Bingham of Cornhill


Lord Bingham of Cornhill, who died on September 11 aged 76, was one of the outstanding English judges of the 20th century, and the first to hold the three top judicial posts of Master of the Rolls, Lord Chief Justice and senior law lord.


A charming and broadly cultivated man, Tom Bingham was revered as a judge of supreme intellect and lucidity, as well as for being exceptionally fair and for consistently upholding human rights and the rule of law against the worst excesses of legislative and government action.
Old-fashioned in demeanour – he was once described as exhibiting "vintage old-fashioned courtesy" – Bingham was less so in outlook. His room in the Royal Courts of Justice was festooned with modern art, which was reflected in his forward-looking approach to justice.


In 1989 he became the first judge to speak out strongly in favour of the Conservative government's proposed reforms of the legal profession – in particular the proposal to dismantle the Bar's monopoly of the right to appear as advocates in the High Court. He infuriated some of his colleagues by declaring that the greatest threat to the Bar was not the green paper but "the profession's reaction to it".
He accused the Bar in its opposition of delivering a message of "doom, decline and decay" and said that Lord Mackay of Clashfern's proposals weakened none of the pillars on which the justice system rests. "We delude ourselves," he said, "if we do not suppose there is not a large body of responsible, middle-of-the-road opinion that regards the legal profession as riddled with anachronistic conventions and privileges."
But he conceded that judges still needed to maintain a degree of remoteness, remarking that "It would be undesirable if we slipped over to El Vino's [the traditional haunt of Fleet Street lawyers and journalists] and were jugging it up with the boys."
When he succeeded Lord Donaldson as Master of the Rolls in 1992, Bingham was only too happy to find himself at the heart of the implementation of Mackay's reforms, the most revolutionary in civil justice in the last century, opening up the rights of audience to employed barristers and solicitors, and encouraging alternative dispute resolution, of which he declared himself a "fervent advocate".
He gained a reputation as someone who combined administrative ability with great sensitivity, and whose liberal instincts were tempered with sound practical judgment.
When Lord McKay made him Lord Chief Justice after Lord Taylor's sudden retirement due to ill health in 1996, Bingham became the first judge since Lord Alverstone in 1900 to make the leap from Master of the Rolls. His appointment was unexpected and caused a stir because of his inexperience in criminal law, but his obvious abilities quickly won over the doubters.
His style was very different from that of his predecessor. He did not, like Taylor, have a series of highly publicised run-ins with the Home Secretary. Nor did he pursue the same path as a media-friendly judge, with Question Timeappearances and regular media interviews. Instead he limited himself to one press conference a year; and whenever he did have a policy to pursue, he preferred to do so discreetly, behind the scenes – or, at most, from his seat in the Lords. As a result he was barely known to the public at large, and could pass unremarked in almost any street in the land.
Mackay had told him that he need not do the job for life, as was customary, and in 2000 Bingham accepted Lord Irvine's offer for him to become senior law lord – technically a step down the judicial ladder, even though the Lord Chief Justice sits in a lower court.
His appointment came in the aftermath of the Pinochet affair, in which the law lords had been obliged to set aside one of their own rulings because Lord Hoffmann had failed to declare his links to Amnesty International; and again it was deemed unconventional, since he was by no means the longest-serving law lord. However, Bingham strongly refuted suggestions that his appointment was a bid to "shake up" the highest court.
He likened his new role to being "the conductor of an orchestra with a group of very experienced and talented instrumentalists", and saw it as his job to steer the law lords towards being a supreme court that would occupy the same constitutional position as those in the United States and elsewhere.
In his view, the separation of Britain's highest court from parliament would remove any potential conflict that had arisen whenever law lords ruled on issues on which they had previously spoken at Westminster. But he was adamant that the British court should not follow the American model and could never challenge the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty by having the power to strike down acts of parliament. The new supreme court eventually came into being in 2009, a year after his retirement as senior law lord.
The son of a Protestant Ulsterman, Thomas Henry Bingham was born on October 13 1933 and grew up at Reigate, Surrey, where both his parents practised as doctors; a friend remembered them as "high-minded" professionals, dedicated to the public good.
Tom won a scholarship to Sedbergh, the Cumbrian public school renowned at the time for its Spartan regime of cold baths, short trousers and cross-country runs. He rose to become head boy and was regarded as the cleverest boy at the school in living memory.
After doing his National Service with the Royal Ulster Rifles (he later joined the TA), he went up to Balliol, Oxford, where he won a Gibbs Scholarship and took a First in Modern History. As an undergraduate he was "very thin and intense-looking", remembered his friend John Keegan, the military historian, "with the male ideal of good looks... It was always clear to us that he was going to do great things. He was a very funny speaker. Balliol was full of debating societies, and Tom belonged to all of them."
After graduating, he read for the Bar as Eldon Law Scholar and, after passing top in his Bar exams, he was called by Gray's Inn in 1959.
Taken on as a tenant at Leslie Scarman's chambers in Fountain Court, he established a thriving practice in general common law and commercial work. He spent four years as Standing Junior Counsel to the Ministry of Labour (later the Department of Employment) before taking Silk in 1972, aged just 38. He was one of the most elegant advocates at the Bar, at his best in the Court of Appeal, where the regular interchanges with the bench demand an extremely quick mind and clear mastery of points of law.
Bingham first came to wider public attention in 1977, when the Foreign Secretary David Owen appointed him to head the politically charged inquiry into allegations of breaches of UN trade sanctions against Rhodesia. His report the next year caused a sensation with its conclusions that oil companies had knowingly contravened the sanctions with the complicity of British civil servants.
A Recorder of the Crown Court since 1975, Bingham was appointed Judge of the High Court, Queen's Bench Division, in 1980, and a Judge of the Commercial Court, and promoted to the Court of Appeal in 1986.
In the year prior to his becoming Master of the Rolls, he led the high-profile inquiry into the collapse of Bank of Credit and Commerce International. His report contained a stinging indictment of the Bank of England's "deficient" supervision of the fraud-riddled BCCI, observing that the B of E had showed a "marked lack of curiosity" and that there had been "a tragedy of errors, misunderstandings and failures of communication".
Bingham was often described as a liberal with a small "l", and when asked about the description he admitted that he "wouldn't want to be called illiberal". He was suspicious, however, of the notion that the law lords could be easily categorised. "They're curiously unpredictable," he said. "I don't think any of us aims to be consistent. I actually regard consistency in a judge as a vice."
Nevertheless, he could very rarely have been described as conservative. Soon after becoming Master of the Rolls he was the first senior judge to call for the incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights into domestic law – which came about with the Human Rights Act in 1998. Within a year of the convention coming into force, the destruction of the World Trade Centre and subsequent wars in Afghanistan and Iraq ushered in a period of peculiarly authoritarian antiterrorist legislation. Some of these powers were curtailed by the law lords, and many of their more significant judgments were written by Bingham.
Prominent among these was the Belmarsh prison case in 2004, in which he and seven fellow law lords decided that to detain foreign terrorist suspects indefinitely without charge contravened the Convention on Human Rights. As senior law lord, Bingham delivered the characteristically measured 47-page lead judgment, and afterwards found himself hailed by The Guardian as "the radical who is leading a new English revolution". He did not want to be seen as a campaigning political figure, but conceded that he regarded liberty, one of the values protected by the convention, as of "immense importance".
Bingham was never afraid to take controversial positions. He called the cannabis laws "stupid" and supported their relaxation; he welcomed the growing trend towards judicial review and backed the international criminal court in the face of American criticism.
In 2008, shortly after standing down as senior law lord, he said that in his opinion Lord Goldsmith's advice to the then-Prime Minister Tony Blair on Britain's invasion of Iraq was "flawed" because "it was not plain that Iraq had failed to comply in a manner justifying resort to force and there were no strong factual grounds or hard evidence to show that it had"; moreover, he argued, it was up to the entire Security Council to decide whether Iraq had failed to comply with the resolution.
One of Bingham's few setbacks came when he stood for election as Chancellor of Oxford University in 2003, for which he launched his own website with a section headed "Tom's supporters". In the end his inability to dissimulate – he said publicly that university tuition fees were necessary – undermined his campaign, and he was defeated the by the former Conservative party chairman Chris Patten. "I'd be a terrible politician," Bingham said at the time. "I've never agreed with a single party long enough."
His wife once stood as a Social Democrat candidate in a council election, but he himself strongly resisted any identifiable political affiliations – though friends would have been surprised to discover that he was a Tory.
Away from the law, Bingham enjoyed mountaineering and walking. For many years he had a remote cottage near Hay-on-Wye in the Welsh Marches where he enjoyed reading, planting trees, mending fences and acting as president of the literary festival.
Even Bingham's judicial colleagues admitted that they could find him "frighteningly clever" at times, one of them observing that he could appear "very austere, very critical. But it is usually that he is just thinking of the implications... he is always several points ahead of everyone else."
His slightly reserved though never pompous manner was sometimes taken as shyness, yet at other times he could seem relaxed and outgoing, and he was often very funny. By nature kind and modest, he was none the less also an excellent speaker – clear and instructive in lectures, and highly entertaining after dinner and at the Hay Festival.
Bingham's publications included The Business of Judging (2000) and, most recently, The Rule of Law (2010), a characteristically accessible explanation of such notions as equality before the law, respect for human rights and procedures that safeguard fair trials. As one reviewer wrote, the book also functions as an insight into "a special kind of mind": "Tom Bingham is a Lord Denning of sorts, but one with discipline in place of egoism" and "a consistent rather than selective sense of right and wrong".
In 2005, Bingham was appointed a Knight of the Garter, the first judge to be accorded that honour.
Tom Bingham married, in 1963, Elizabeth Loxley, with whom he had two sons and a daughter.






Saturday, July 3, 2010

The Carpenter


At times, we called it, 'the hammer'. Over the decades most of us reading law, graduated, retired from legal profession and we still calling it, the hammer. Howsoever it being sheepishly sounds when all of us 'named' it as the hammer on the hand of a judge, we may all be surprised. Commonly, at least, amongst my friends, it triggers no curiosity on why would a profound judge holding a 'hammer' when he is not fixing any wooden furnitures. It may be well understood if we trace back to the history of it, it is used in medieval era of England for the purpose to settle agreements of land. In fact, it is called 'Gavel'.

The sound of gavel signifies a decision made and no changes shall be made. The concept of it not only been practiced by England but The Great China in its memorable empires. Though it did not exist in 'hammer' nonetheless it meant the same. The judges, no matter in which country, in what form they practice or in what way the used the hammer. They are indeed,in my perception, the carpenter. Any defective wooden furnitures is to be fixed by them. They have various tools and at the very moment, they might even need to be creative enough so get the defective wooden stuffs fixed and it can be nicely seen. This is how a carpenter should be? If it ever not been properly repaired? Complains and dissatisfaction hence arisen. As Lord Hewart CJ expressed in R v Sussex Justices exparte McCarthy [1924] 1 KB 256 :

"...It is not merely of some importance, but is of fundamental importance that justice should not only be done, but should manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done..."

Having said that, the judges roles is vital and it is opined that the gavel is thousand times heavier than the usual hammer, psychologically. Their great lordships are burdened with such an obligation to make sure all the wooden made furnitures are all safe and quality assured. All tributes are nonetheless may not have gone to them. Each
gavel's sound, it indicates a decision made which need to take into consideration of policy, political pressure, and the interest of parties before them. Their decisions with a sound reasoning. Of course, people's view differs from time to time. Their view at the time it was decided may not applicable nowadays, outmoded laws. Mistakes are permissible but unlikely for them as judges. If once an unfavorable decisions made, it opens door to severe criticisms. For example, some brave judge with activist blood tends to create new laws, there it attracts negative comments in not respecting parliamentary supremacy. Some passivist judges whereas choose to stick with whatever decided, their hands are however tightened with precedent, similarly, it attracts criticism, too. However, it is to be noted, there can be more than one right answers towards single issue. All these criticisms, commentaries, dissenting judgement however makes law a lively one and would not have bored us, the law students. Whatever decisions made, credits and tributes can never left them.

It was not very long ago, where i think it was an interesting area in the study of law in my year one. This is a paper which i scored with distinction, common law reasoning and institution. I appreciated the chance of me studying this, especially dealing with judicial precedent and statutory interpretation, both are inter-linked. It was also few months ago, i had an intellectual discussion with a friend currently reading law in Oxford on whether a judge should create law to fix current problems or merely to apply the law. She is of the view that, the law itself is of non disputable as it is laid down black and white but the interpretation of each minds are disputed. That makes the law more complicated and uncertain. Anyway, i am still firmed on my perception where exceptions are needed. Lord Denning's creation of proprietary estopel and many others exceptions, undoubtedly, solved many problems.
Regardless, disputes has also relatively and have gradually increased due to these as this society is getting litigative when their rights are made conscious.


William Blackstone's view on judicial creativity is favorable for activists where law has not been created but merely to discover them. It remains dubious as to whether judicial creativity has create more troubles than settle disputes. The United Kingdom has got one characteristics, namely, the rule of law. Diceys postulates on it, where judges are the best protectors. Of course, the judges is supposedly to be fair minded and impartial. If the judges hand are so tight and bound by precedent and may have committed a conceptually wrong of judiciary where it results injustice. Would it then be unconstitutional? Having failed to perform justice, is definitely not the will of citizens, being put in such a cross road. What is their roles? Being the Carpenter, should have just fix whatever necessary as a Carpenter is not an inventor.

The common law started since time immemorial, by Henry Bracton( 1200-1268), he first laid down in latin phrase that :

'Si tamen similia evenerint, per simile judicentur, cum bona sit occasio a similibus procedere ad similia'.

It simply means, similar facts should result in similar ways, the spirit of stare decisis. It is said, judges are to do justice according to law and not doing justice by creating law. Practically, judges are now playing with words as its their expertise. In fact, purposive approach are getting popular by interpreting the words based on the 'intention' of the parliament.

Lord Coke stated:" ...it is the task of the judiciary in interpreting an Act to seek to interpret in 'according to the intent of [the parliament] that made it..."

This is what, doing justice according to 'law' which up to their discretion to interpret what did the parliament intended. In practical effect, at times, the standing of judges still prevails. The classic example would be, the decision in Vandervell v IRCGrey v IRC and Oughtred v IRC.

The people's will stand. No?

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

The Law of Evidence - Hearsay


30th June 2010( Exactly 1 month remaining)

Overview:

My dearest classmates, honorably to announce, Digging a well when in need of water would be the best dress to suit on me at this contemporary moment. Doubtless, everyone of us can never runaway from viva test tomorrow unless you have any justified reasons(your justification).

'Justified'- in accordance to Cambridge English Dictionary, it simply means one to give a good reason. In Christian theology, 'justification' is God's act of declaring or making a sinner righteous before God. The concept of justification occurs in many books of the Old and New Testaments. In the eyes of Buddhism, it is opined where one has done something with no harm but to do good. Having such a long winded statement of me here might raise your thought of serving no point reading these when the heading states Hearsay. Be patience, it does lead you to a longer journey. However, whether one's reason is justified is to be looked and assessed by the relevant society. My point is, no matter how convincing you think your reasons were to be a justified one in your mind. It does not apply to our law school, if one were to stick that thought in his/her mind, its better to bring that mind to where you belonged to. This world is full with contradictions where all society's mind could be differ. Though a contradict one, it is a 'justified' one.

As per Myers(James William) v DPP[1965] AC 1001 ,Lord Reid in House of Lord expressed his perspective when it comes to the discussion of ' Too many of discretion of the courts which makes the law of hearsay being neither sufficiently clear nor at all predictable'. His Lordship stated where hearsay test has satisfied, the judges has no discretion but to exclude the evidence, no matter how cogent it seems to be. Likewise, in our case, no matter how convincing you are, the admin would at the higher likelihood on not to 'admit' your 'evidence'. We better get prepared then !

Regardless, it is imaginable to have anticipate or it needs not even to predict where we cannot ignore the obvious - we are all cracking on evidence books( of course pray hard so everything will be fine tomorrow). A large number of us are choosing burden of proof as their viva test topic on the very understandable ground that it is rather easy to grasp on as compared to hearsay. The inevitable nature of our life has resulted in one way by leaving us no way but to face it and this letting us getting used to it.Of course, it remains dubious whether we as the homosapiens are that optimistic.

Seeing the hands waving from the starting point, we shall back to our initial concern. It is said, when one has chosen hearsay as their topic, one must be showing the heroism. Nonetheless, it is definitely not at all my case, the reason of me choosing this topic is, this topic is as bulky but it is within our syllabus. Hence, i have made my mind on taking this viva test as my revision so my shoulder at least not so burdened.

Introduction

What is hearsay, the word itself may have already given us a first impression. In a layman language, you heard it somewhere and say it. Before going deeper to our discussion, one principle must first lay down as a foundation in our mind. In general, the court of law does not admit the evidence of hearsay ( HENCE, AN EXCLUSIONARY RULE). Fine, one contentious argument where we may have thought of, why would the court not admitting the hearsay statement even when it appears to be an imperative one? Wouldn't it abuse our right to a fair trial under Art.6 European Convention of Human Right ? Keep that thought floating in your mind first, it will soon be dealt with.

1.0- What is Hearsay?

First at all, what is hearsay in law? It can be found as defined in Sc. 121(2) in Criminal Justice Act 2003- CJA2003.

It reads, "hearsay for the purpose of that section as ' a statement not made in oral evidence, that is relied on as evidence of a matter stated in it." Yes, it does not speak much in this section where common law has a better definition.

A leading legal academician, Sir Rupert Cross has once stated,



"hearsay is an assertion other than one made by a person while giving oral evidence in the proceedings is inadmissible as evidence of any fact asserted."

This quote was latter used by Lord Havers in the land marked case of hearsay which is R v Sharp(Colin) [1988] 1 W.L.R 7 HL.Till now, this definition remains to be the influential and most quoted one when one dealing with hearsay.( It is now codified under CJA 2003) In short, any hearsay statements shall be excluded.

1.1 WHY CANNOT ADMIT?


Logically, how reliable is the hearsay statement? if it were to be classified to be that reliable and should be admissible, why would the seeking of evidence by the parties that is blatantly costly and time consuming when we can simply get any hearsay statement admitted? Every logical minded person would have that lies on their mind. Therefore, the court, the institute of reasoning, would at times not leaving one principle half hanged but with a rationale. Lord Normand sat in the case of Teper v R[1952] AC 480(PC), laid down the rationales behind it:

(a) It is not made under oath

(b) There cannot be cross examination

(c) Repetation is dangerous because ' Evidence of this kind may be fabricated'

* Byles J, R V Jenkins(1869) LR 1 CCR 187 - also stated the same as Lord Normand stated. In Lord Devlin's words, the danger of hearsay is that the juryman, unused to shifting evidence, might treat it as first hand.

In addition, even such an unreliable matter were to be admitted, its also go against the Golden Thread Rule in Woolmington v DPP, by Viscount Sankey where everyone is innocent unless proven guilty.



As Blackstonean maxims stated,


"its better that ten guilty persons escape, than that one innocent suffer."

It is to be noted, both Sharp and Teper are both decided prior to the Human Right Act 1998. It has been argued, this assumption may turn out to be completely erroneous and perhaps, out of date.

2.0. The Rule of Hearsay

Importantly, it is necessary to satisfy the test of hearsay in order to render the statements made as 'hearsay' if it successfully passed the test, it can be tendered as original evidence. Be cautious, at this stage, it is not an exception even though it is made as original evidence and admissible. It is admissible when it is NOT a hearsay.In considering of many issues, a general always follow by exceptions. Where the statement didnt pass the test of hearsay and proved to be a hearsay statement nonetheless admitted. As such, it can be classified as an exception. The current test is laid down in:

  • Subramanian v DPP[1956] 1 W.L.R 965(PC), it is commonly known as the two tiered test by Mr L.M D De Silva.

-FIRST: There must be a statement made out of court

( Patel v Comptroller of Customs [1966] AC 356 PC, Lord Hodson )


F: The defendant was charged with making a false entry in a Customs form about the provenance of begs of coriander seed,by untruthfully alleged they came from India when in fact there were marked as 'Produce of Morroco'. The prosecution wanted to tender the marks on the bags but it was held, since it is tendered for truth to prove it is not as alleged by the defendant. Therefore, it is a written out of court hearsay statement.

( Chandrasekera v R [1937] AC 220, statement made by gesture )
Another vital issue in regards with this issue, where an implied assertions are subjected to the rule of hearsay therefore inadmissible. R v Kearley - Someone came to the door asking for drugs and calls for drugs under s.115(3) to have the purpose of causing another to believe the matter. Birch argues its to be radical one.

However, it has been overruled by R v Singh(2006), Rose LJ in which an implied assertion no longer subjected to hearsay.


-SECOND: It must be tendered for its testimonial effect

( R v Sparks) - It is tendered for its truth where the 4 yo girl was assaulted, her mother took the statement where the girl told her the man is in coloured, the defendant is white.

( R v Lydon) - Robbery case, papers was found written as 'Sean rule'. There was no one named Sean charged by prosecution,Hence, not tender for truth - admissible.

( R v Turner) - Confession of Third Party, hearsay, inadmissible

( R v Ratten) - Charged for Murder his wife and the gun accidentally shot.The telephone call of the wife asking for police is not tendered for the purpose of truth. Therefore, it was not caught under hearsay rule.

3.0 EXCEPTIONS:

Remember we have something left floating in our mind? Where it would lead to some unjust and unfair if hearsay statement cannot be admitted? Here we go with the exceptions where hearsay statement is admissible.

(a) Common Law Exceptions( No longer effective)
  1. Dying Declaration
  2. Res Gestae - Things is part of the event [ Preserved in 118(1)]

->R v Ratten by Lord Wilberforce

->R v Andrews- Andrew has a conviction of manslaughter, there was evidence where the victim replied to a question of a constable saying its Donald that injured him, but the constable wrote as 'Donavon'.It is evidenced that the victim has Scottish accent and had drunk. The HL admitted the evidence via Res gastea.

This rule has been criticised to be obscure and hazy till today.

(b) Statutory exceptions which codified in CJA 2003

Hearsay statement maybe admitted via the admissibility sections under S.114 & 115

* S114(1) Lord Havers Definition + S115 explains the 'matter stated' as:

representation of fact or opinion made by person which includes a representation made in sketch, photo fit or pictorial form that cause another to believe or cause other to act or a machine to operate

( R v Coventry exp Bullard)


->>>S114(1)(a) provisioned that admit the evidence of hearsay that inclusive of S.116 ( The unavailability section) and S.117(Business and other documents)

  • S.116(1)must satisfy all the subsections.

  • (a) oral evidence by the person who made the statement would admissible.
  • (b)the person made statement is identified to the court satisfaction
  • (c) subsection two applies

  • 116(2) - dead, unfit, outside UK, cannot be found, fear( S116(3)- Death,PI, Financial loss R v Martin) but all to be obtained by leave from court as per S.116(2)(e) R v Acton.

S.117 (1) ,in conjunctive reading, to satisfy:
  • (a) oral evidence given and admissible
  • (b) 117(2) to be satisfied,
- created or received by person in the course of trade, business, profession or other occupation, or as the holder of a paid and unpaid office


- the person who supplied the document had personal knowledge





- each person through whom the information was supplied from relevant person mentioned in para (a) received the information in the course of trade, business, profession, or other occupation or as the holder of paid and unpaid office.


  • (c)if 117(4) requires, then s117(5) needs to be satisfied too.
  • (4) - If the documents was prepared for criminal proceeding or investigation then (5) must satisfied, either unavailable as 116(2) or the person cannot reasonably be expected to recollect the matters, which means too long.

However, it must also be appreciated that, if any documents contains doubtful view of its contents, source of info, how it supplied and received and it maybe created as stated in S.117(6). This reflects Lord Normand concerns in Teper v R.

A copy of the documents may also be admitted by those who has read it if the original evidence is lost, damaged or cannot be found. If not, original copy must be tendered.S.133 CJA 2003. R v Nazeer

S114(1)(b) - Preserved Common law exceptions

As provisioned in S.118(2), the common law exceptions are expressly abolished.

Technically, it is still preserved under 118(1) rule 4 of res gestae, it is admitted:

(A) Made emotionally overpowered where there are spontaneous exclamations of the victim of an offence.- may include dying declaration???




(B) Statement relating with the makers performance act. R v Mc Cay - ID

PARADE , POLICE ARE ALLOWED TO GIVE EVIDENCE




(C) Relating to physical sensation ( R v Gloster -dying women making statement named the person responsible, inadmissible) Limited usage.

Relating to mental state ( if its relevant or in issue, is contemporaneous, indicates the maker's mind)
R v Dixon - statement made after killing
R v Ball - Statement of antipathy feeling
R v Glifoyle - Norman charged for murder of his wife, a suicide note was presented. Wife's friend said, Norman asked Paula to write a suicide note in the course of his project. CA admit it should have been admitted under hearsay rule as its reflects the state of mind.

114(1)(c) - Non contentious one, all partied agreed to tender the hearsay statement.

114(1)(d) - It is a inclusionary discretion in which the judge can admit it in the interest of justice , R v J (2009) and R v Sparks may have been different if it is decided today. Lord Cooke is of the view it should be reformed. It should be used sparingly as Lord Standley Burton stated in R v Z(2009) where its a rape case, there is a third pary whom he had abused.


MULTIPLE HEARSAY EVIDENCE

By invoking S.121(1)- cannot admit an earlier hearsay unless it is under s.117,119, 120 or all agreed or in the interest of justice.

Mc Gillvray - if the middle person is merely conduit pipe then its not second hand hearsay.

Another important elements if one wants to admit an hearsay evidence, the maker must be capable( s.123) and creditable ( s.124).

In the new act, it provides various of discretion to judges like 114(1)(d), 116(4), 117(7) and s126(1)(b)- if waste of time. S125, if too much of hearsay evidence, judges hold the power too.

Notwithstanding large chunk of criticism has been made towards the fact the judges hold too much power. But, an inclusionary discretion is now an inevitable feature of a statutory concept.



Sources:
Evidence Textbook, Gregory Durston, Oxford Publisher

Miss Christina Chelliah Guidelines on 'Hearsay'
Brickfields Asia College Textbook, Mr Raja Singam
Blackstone Statute Book on Evidence, 10th Edition