Evidentiary Objectives

Evidentiary Objectives - Evidentiary Objectives refer to the goals or purposes of presenting and challenging evidence in a legal proceeding. These objectives include ensuring the relevance, reliability, and fairness of the evidence, as well as preventing undue prejudice or confusion.

Class Information

Identification

Label (rdfs)
Evidentiary Objectives
Preferred Label
None
Alternative Labels
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Identifier
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Definition and Examples

Definition
Evidentiary Objectives refer to the goals or purposes of presenting and challenging evidence in a legal proceeding. These objectives include ensuring the relevance, reliability, and fairness of the evidence, as well as preventing undue prejudice or confusion.
Examples
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Translations

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Class Relationships

Sub Class Of
Is Defined By
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See Also
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Additional Information

Comment
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Description
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Notes
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Deprecated
False

Metadata

History Note
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Editorial Note
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In Scheme
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Source
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Country
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Graph

Evidentiary ObjectivesEvidentiary Objectives - Evidentiary Objectives refer to the goals or purposes of presenting and challenging evidence in a legal proceeding. These objectives include ensuring the relevance, reliability, and fairness of the evidence, as well as preventing undue prejudice or confusion.Litigation ObjectivesLitigation Objectives - Legal elements to be proven or disproven (e.g., claims, defenses, remedies, burdens, standards of review).Testimonial ObjectivesTestimonial Objectives - Testimonial Objectives refer to the various arguments, purposes, or exceptions regarding testimonial evidence. Examples include out-of-court statements that might be admitted into evidence. These testimonial objectives can include items such as present sense impression, excited utterance, and situations where the declarant is unavailable to testify in person.Evidentiary ObjectionEvidentiary Objection - An evidentiary objection is a formal protest raised by a party in a legal proceeding, challenging the admissibility of specific evidence. Common grounds for such objections include lack of foundation, hearsay, irrelevance, and prejudicial nature.sub_class_ofparent_class_ofsee_alsois_defined_byselfsub_class_ofparent_class_ofsee_alsois_defined_by