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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.
This book is a practical guide to conducting a proof in the sheriff court, based on the author's thirty years of experience of presenting evidence at proofs and hearings in the sheriff court, the Court of Session and before tribunals. The guide highlights the importance of risk management in an area of law that is fraught with hazards concerning costs, timescales and adverse outcomes. It also identifies many useful steps that ought to be taken with a view to minimising such hazards and making the process of conducting a proof as smooth and as painless as possible. Although the book is aimed primarily at practitioners it describes the practical application of the law of evidence, an area which will interest academics and students. The guide deals with managing clients, advice on preparation and how best to cover your back in this perilous area of practice. Although reference is made to court rules and textbooks the book is first and foremost a practice guide.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Andrew Stevenson S.S.C. is a practising solicitor advocate at Waddell and Mackintosh, Troon. He has undertaken many hundreds of proofs across Scotland since 1992 in virtually all areas of litigation and has long experience of acting as a commissioner to recover evidence in sheriff court actions both civil and criminal. Andrew is a former President of the Glasgow Bar Association and he is currently Secretary of the Scottish Law Agents' Society. He is also a committee member of the Society of Solicitor Advocates. Andrew has written extensively on civil procedure and gives seminars on proofs and litigation. He is a contributor to Greens Litigation Styles. He is a regular columnist for The Scotsman and is a vice convenor of the Discipline Tribunal of the Church of Scotland. He is the author of Style Writs for the Sheriff Court, Bloomsbury 2023.
CONTENTS
Introduction
Risk Management
The Capacities in Which You Are Acting
Officer of the Court
Acting as Direct Agent for a Litigant
Acting as an Agent for Another Solicitor
Acting as an Employee
Recipient of Third Party Funding
Risk Management: How to Avoid Having to Conduct a Proof
Points to Attend to When the Proof Is Being Assigned
Modes of Proof
Managing the Evidence That You Need to Succeed at a Proof
Intimating and Lodging Lists of Documents, Witnesses, Affidavits and Productions
Practical Steps to Make Life as Easy as Possible on the Day
Using Evidence at the Proof; Witnesses
Adducing Objective and Not Subjective Evidence
Calling Witnesses
Credibility Versus Reliability
Objecting to the Opponent's Questions
Cross Examination
Judicial Knowledge
Ordinary Cause Rules on Running a Proof
The Law of Evidence
Running a Hopeless Proof
If the Proof Is Lost
Conclusion
Bibliography
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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.
This book is a practical guide to conducting a proof in the sheriff court, based on the author's thirty years of experience of presenting evidence at proofs and hearings in the sheriff court, the Court of Session and before tribunals. The guide highlights the importance of risk management in an area of law that is fraught with hazards concerning costs, timescales and adverse outcomes. It also identifies many useful steps that ought to be taken with a view to minimising such hazards and making the process of conducting a proof as smooth and as painless as possible. Although the book is aimed primarily at practitioners it describes the practical application of the law of evidence, an area which will interest academics and students. The guide deals with managing clients, advice on preparation and how best to cover your back in this perilous area of practice. Although reference is made to court rules and textbooks the book is first and foremost a practice guide.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Andrew Stevenson S.S.C. is a practising solicitor advocate at Waddell and Mackintosh, Troon. He has undertaken many hundreds of proofs across Scotland since 1992 in virtually all areas of litigation and has long experience of acting as a commissioner to recover evidence in sheriff court actions both civil and criminal. Andrew is a former President of the Glasgow Bar Association and he is currently Secretary of the Scottish Law Agents' Society. He is also a committee member of the Society of Solicitor Advocates. Andrew has written extensively on civil procedure and gives seminars on proofs and litigation. He is a contributor to Greens Litigation Styles. He is a regular columnist for The Scotsman and is a vice convenor of the Discipline Tribunal of the Church of Scotland. He is the author of Style Writs for the Sheriff Court, Bloomsbury 2023.
CONTENTS
Introduction
Risk Management
The Capacities in Which You Are Acting
Officer of the Court
Acting as Direct Agent for a Litigant
Acting as an Agent for Another Solicitor
Acting as an Employee
Recipient of Third Party Funding
Risk Management: How to Avoid Having to Conduct a Proof
Points to Attend to When the Proof Is Being Assigned
Modes of Proof
Managing the Evidence That You Need to Succeed at a Proof
Intimating and Lodging Lists of Documents, Witnesses, Affidavits and Productions
Practical Steps to Make Life as Easy as Possible on the Day
Using Evidence at the Proof; Witnesses
Adducing Objective and Not Subjective Evidence
Calling Witnesses
Credibility Versus Reliability
Objecting to the Opponent's Questions
Cross Examination
Judicial Knowledge
Ordinary Cause Rules on Running a Proof
The Law of Evidence
Running a Hopeless Proof
If the Proof Is Lost
Conclusion
Bibliography