What Is Trial Evidence?
Trial evidence is information presented at a trial and used to prove one of the elements of a plaintiff’s, prosecutor’s or defendant’s case. The types of evidence vary depending on the nature of the case and depending on what the person presenting it is trying to prove. Generally, all evidence admitted in a trial must follow the evidence rules of the jurisdiction in which the trial is taking place. The appropriate trial evidence is evidence designed to prove one of the elements of a case, or designed to introduce doubt. A plaintiff, for example, must prove different things in different cases. If he is trying to prove that a contract was breached, he must provide evidence that a contract existed and he must provide evidence that the defendant did not live up to the terms of the contract. In such a case, the defendant would try to introduce doubt about the fact that a contract existed or would try to introduce doubt about whether he actually failed to perform the terms of the contract. H
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