Business Records Under Common Law: Difference between revisions
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Evidence surrounding the making of the record goes to weight and not admissibility of the record.<ref> | Evidence surrounding the making of the record goes to weight and not admissibility of the record.<ref> | ||
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; Copy Quality | |||
Where there is an issue with the quality of the copy, the judge must assess whether the document is of sufficient quality to be put to the "use intended."<Ref> | |||
{{CanLIIRPC|Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Skomatchuk|1nlcp|2006 FC 730 (CanLII)}}{{AtL|1nlcp|25}}<br> | |||
{{CanLIIRPC|Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Fast (T.D.)|l71|2002 FCT 269 (CanLII)|[2002] 4 FC 584}}{{atL|l71|10}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 07:07, 23 July 2024
This page was last substantively updated or reviewed January 2017. (Rev. # 95752) |
General Principles
Business documents are admissible without notice under the common law where they meet the following requirements:[1]
- it is an original entry;
- it was made at the time of the event;
- it was made in the routine of business;
- it was made by a person who has personal knowledge of the thing recorded;
- who had a duty to make the record; and
- the maker had no motive to misrepresent
Stated in another way:[2]
- Statements made by an unavailable Declarant under a duty to another person to do an act and record it in the ordinary practice of the defendant’s business or calling or admissible in evidence provided they were made contemporaneous with the facts stated and without motive or intent to misrepresent the facts. Each component must be satisfied.
The fundamental rationale behind this rule that permits records being tendered into evidence without calling the author is not to avoid the inconvenience of bringing in the witnesses or because of no reasonable alternative. Rather it is premised on the documents having been created "under circumstances which makes them inherently trustworthy. Where an established system in a business or other organization produces records which are regarded as reliable and customarily accepted by those affected by them, they should be admitted as prima facie evidence." [3]
The reliability arises from the existence of a "business duty". By contrast, a person who "provides information gratuitously" should be treated as less trustworthy.[4]
Evidence surrounding the making of the record goes to weight and not admissibility of the record.[5]
- Copy Quality
Where there is an issue with the quality of the copy, the judge must assess whether the document is of sufficient quality to be put to the "use intended."[6]
- ↑
R v Monkhouse, 1987 ABCA 227 (CanLII), [1988] 1 WWR 725, per Laycraft CJ, at paras 23 to 25
Ares v Venner, 1970 CanLII 5 (SCC), [1970] SCR 608, per Hall J
R v O'Neil, 2012 ABCA 162 (CanLII), 545 WAC 351, per curiam
R v Oster, 2013 ONCJ 38 (CanLII), per Bishop J, at para 30
- ↑
R v Oster, 2013 ONCJ 38 (CanLII), per Bishop J, at para 13
citing Palter Cap Co v Great West Life [1936], and Conley v Conley, 1968 CanLII 236 (ON CA), [1968] 2 OR 677, per MacKay JA - ↑ R v Monkhouse, 1987 ABCA 227 (CanLII), 61 CR (3d) 343, per Laycraft CJ, at p. 350 to 351
- ↑ R v Clarke, 2016 ONSC 575 (CanLII), per BA Allen J
- ↑ R v Zundel, 1987 CanLII 121 (ON CA), 31 CCC (3d) 97, per curiam
- ↑
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Skomatchuk, 2006 FC 730 (CanLII), {{{4}}}, at para 25
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Fast (T.D.), 2002 FCT 269 (CanLII), [2002] 4 FC 584, at para 10