Preliminary
Relevancy of facts
Admissions and confessions
Statements made under special circumstances
How much of a statement is to be proved
Judgments of courts of justice when relevant
Opinions of third persons when relevant
Character when relevant
Facts which need not be proved
Oral evidence
Documentary evidence
Public documents
Presumptions as to documents
Exclusion of oral by documentary evidence
Burden of proof
Estoppel
Witnesses
Examination of witnesses
Improper admission and rejection of evidence
| Evidence as to application of language to one of two sets of facts to neither of which the whole correctly applies |
99. When the language used applies partly to one set of existing facts and partly to another set of existing facts, but the whole of it does not apply correctly to either, evidence may be given to show to which of the 2 it was meant to apply.
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