Oral evidence must be direct
62.—(1)  Oral evidence must in all cases whatever be direct —
(a)if it refers to a fact which could be seen, it must be the evidence of a witness who says he saw that fact;
(b)if it refers to a fact which could be heard, it must be the evidence of a witness who says he heard that fact;
(c)if it refers to a fact which could be perceived by any other sense or in any other manner, it must be the evidence of a witness who says he perceived that fact by that sense or in that manner;
(d)if it refers to an opinion or to the grounds on which that opinion is held, it must be the evidence of the person who holds that opinion on those grounds.
(2)  The opinions of experts expressed in any treatise commonly offered for sale and the grounds on which such opinions are held may be proved by the production of such treatise if the author is dead or cannot be found or has become incapable of giving evidence or cannot be called as a witness without an amount of delay or expense which the court regards as unreasonable.
(3)  If oral evidence refers to the existence or condition of any material thing other than a document, the court may, if it thinks fit, require the production of such material thing for its inspection.