NTIn ForceAct
Evidence (National Uniform Legislation) Act 2011
65Exception – criminal proceedings if maker not available
Start here
Get a plain-English read of 65
Turn the raw legal text into a practical explanation grounded in Evidence (National Uniform Legislation) Act 2011.
65 Exception – criminal proceedings if maker not available
(1) This section applies in a criminal proceeding if a person who made
a previous representation is not available to give evidence about an
Evidence (National Uniform Legislation) Act 2011 35
(2) The hearsay rule does not apply to evidence of a previous
representation that is given by a person who saw, heard or
otherwise perceived the representation being made, if the
representation:
(a) was made under a duty to make that representation or to
make representations of that kind; or
(b) was made when or shortly after the asserted fact occurred and
in circumstances that make it unlikely that the representation
is a fabrication; or
(c) was made in circumstances that make it highly probable that
the representation is reliable; or
(d) was:
(i) against the interests of the person who made it at the
time it was made; and
(ii) made in circumstances that make it likely that the
representation is reliable.
(3) The hearsay rule does not apply to evidence of a previous
representation made in the course of giving evidence in an
Australian or overseas proceeding if, in that proceeding, the
defendant in the proceeding to which this section is being applied:
(a) cross-examined the person who made the representation
about it; or
(b) had a reasonable opportunity to cross-examine the person
who made the representation about it.
(4) If there is more than one defendant in the criminal proceeding,
evidence of a previous representation that:
(a) is given in an Australian or overseas proceeding; and
(b) is admitted into evidence in the criminal proceeding because
of subsection (3);
Evidence (National Uniform Legislation) Act 2011 36
cannot be used against a defendant who did not cross-examine,
and did not have a reasonable opportunity to cross-examine, the
person about the representation.
(5) For the purposes of subsections (3) and (4), a defendant is taken to
have had a reasonable opportunity to cross-examine a person if the
defendant was not present at a time when the cross-examination of
a person might have been conducted but:
(a) could reasonably have been present at that time; and
(b) if present could have cross-examined the person.
(6) Evidence of the making of a representation to which subsection (3)
applies may be adduced by producing a transcript, or a recording,
of the representation that is authenticated by:
(a) the person to whom, or the court or other body to which, the
representation was made; or
(b) if applicable, the registrar or other proper officer of the court or
other body to which the representation was made; or
(c) the person or body responsible for producing the transcript or
recording.
(7) Without limiting subsection (2)(d), a representation is taken for the
purposes of that subsection to be against the interests of the
person who made it if it tends:
(a) to damage the person's reputation; or
(b) to show that the person has committed an offence for which
the person has not been convicted; or
(c) to show that the person is liable in an action for damages.
(8) The hearsay rule does not apply to:
(a) evidence of a previous representation adduced by a defendant
if the evidence is given by a person who saw, heard or
otherwise perceived the representation being made; or
(b) a document tendered as evidence by a defendant so far as it
contains a previous representation, or another representation
to which it is reasonably necessary to refer in order to
understand the representation.
Note for subsection (8)
Evidence (National Uniform Legislation) Act 2011 37
(9) If evidence of a previous representation about a matter has been
adduced by a defendant and has been admitted, the hearsay rule
does not apply to evidence of another representation about the
matter that:
(a) is adduced by another party; and
(b) is given by a person who saw, heard or otherwise perceived
the other representation being made.
Note for section 65