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Evidence

University of Michigan Law School

Journal

Admissible evidence

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Declarations In The Course Of Duty Herein Of Refreshing Recollection, A N. Whitlock Mar 1913

Declarations In The Course Of Duty Herein Of Refreshing Recollection, A N. Whitlock

Michigan Law Review

The law of evidence is largely a law of exceptions. Lawyers and judges are not so frequently troubled with the question as to whether a certain bit of testimony is relevant, as they are in determining whether a certain bit of relevant testimony is admissible. In other words, the bulk of the law of evidence is concerned with exceptions to the general proposition that everything that is relevant is admissible. It should be noted that relevant is used as meaning "logically probative." The hearsay rule, various rules. With reference to opinion evidence, real evidence and evidence of character and the …