fact in evidence
A fact that a tribunal considers in reaching a conclusion; a fact that has been admitted into evidence in a trial or hearing. — Also written fact-in-evidence. — Also termed evidentiary fact.
A fact that a tribunal considers in reaching a conclusion; a fact that has been admitted into evidence in a trial or hearing. — Also written fact-in-evidence. — Also termed evidentiary fact.
full and satisfactory evidence 充分且令人满意的证据 民事诉讼中比证据优势〔preponderance of evidence〕要求更高的一种证明程度。在制定法规定仅依充分且令人满意的证据可准予离婚的情况下,并不意味着对原告的证言〔testimony〕必须加以佐证。
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Evidence that is sufficient to satisfy an unprejudiced mind seeking the truth. — Also termed sufficient evidence; satisfactory proof. [Cases: Evidence 584(1). C.J.S. Evidence §§ 226, 729, 1300–1305, 1320, 1324, 1326–1327, 1342, 1345.]
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satisfactory evidence 充分的证据;可信的证据 有时也称sufficient evidence,意指其数量和证明力足以使法官或陪审团相信其所证明的事实或主张成立的证据。
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A fact that the court accepts as proved without hearing evidence. See JUDICIAL NOTICE. [Cases: Criminal Law 304; Evidence 1. C.J.S. Criminal Law § 657; Evidence §§ 8–11, 106.]
finding of fact. A determination by a judge, jury, or administrative agency of a fact supported by the evidence in the record, usu. presented at the trial or hearing (he agreed with the jury’s finding of fact that the driver did not stop before proceeding into the intersection). — Often shortened to finding. See FACT-FINDER.
sufficiency-of-evidence test. Criminal procedure. 1. The guideline for a grand jury considering whether to indict a suspect: if all the evidence presented were uncontradicted and unexplained, it would warrant a conviction by the fact-trier. [Cases: Indictment and Information 10. 2. C.J.S. Indictments and Informations § 21.] 2. A standard for reviewing a criminal conviction on
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Evidence without which a particular fact cannot be proved.
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fact-finding. 1. The process of taking evidence to determine the truth about a disputed point of fact. 2. Int’l law. The gathering of information for purposes of international relations, including the peaceful settlement of disputes and the supervision of international agreements. • Examples of fact-finding include legislative tours and the acquisition of information required for
Evidence that does not come directly under judicial cognizance but nevertheless constitutes an intermediate link between judicial evidence and the fact requiring proof. • It includes all facts that are known to the tribunal only by way of inference from some form of judicial evidence. See JUDICIAL NOTICE. Cf. judicial evidence.
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