Declaration inadmissible in evidence protects declarants by excluding specified statutory declarations from most proceedings. A statutory rule protects a declaration made under the specified provision by rendering it inadmissible in evidence against the declarant for purposes of proceedings under any Act, except for those Acts expressly preserved elsewhere in the statute. This creates a limited evidentiary exclusion that shields the declarant from having that declaration used against them in most proceedings, while maintaining a carve out for specified Acts identified by the statute.
Cases where this provision is explicitly mentioned in the judgment/order text; may not be exhaustive. To view the complete list of cases mentioning this section, Click here.
Provisions expressly mentioned in the judgment/order text.
Declaration inadmissible in evidence protects declarants by excluding specified statutory declarations from most proceedings.
A statutory rule protects a declaration made under the specified provision by rendering it inadmissible in evidence against the declarant for purposes of proceedings under any Act, except for those Acts expressly preserved elsewhere in the statute. This creates a limited evidentiary exclusion that shields the declarant from having that declaration used against them in most proceedings, while maintaining a carve out for specified Acts identified by the statute.
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