25 HANDY HINTS ON AFFIDAVITS IN VICTORIA
October 4th, 2007     
   
    
I presented a seminar with Glenn McGowan SC on affidavits and written
 evidence recently. I wrote a long paper, mainly about the state courts,
 but incorporating some aspects of Federal Court procedure, which I will
 send to anyone who asks for a copy, and which will probably end up on 
the blog replete with useful hyperlinks one day. Meanwhile, here are 
some handy hints on affidavits which are not always properly understood:
- a deponent who makes an affidavit in a work capacity can state their
 business address instead of their residential address, but the 
condition of doing so is that they state the name of their firm or 
employer, if any, and the position they hold: Supreme Court Rule 
43.01(3);
- in the Supreme Court, you can call for an electronic copy of an 
affidavit to be emailed to you if served with a hard copy, by invoking Practice Note No. 1 of 2002, (2002) VR 107;
- you can call for any document referred to in an affidavit by a 
notice to produce under Supreme Court Rule 29.10(2),  and the rule is 
interpreted to mean that you can call for production of any document 
referred to in an exhibit to an affidavit: Williams [I 29.01.345] citing
 Re Hinchcliffe [1895] 1 Ch 117;
- generally, only facts within the personal knowledge of the deponent may be included in an affidavit: Supreme Court Rule 43.03;
- in interlocutory applications, though, hearsay (coded in the rules 
as ‘information and belief’) may be used, but only if the deponent says 
where he sourced the information (e.g. ‘Peter Porter of Manfredini &
 Co told me he saw …’) , and swears to a positive belief in the truth of
 the information (e.g. ‘I have known him as a trustworthy and honest man
 for 4 months and I believe him’);
- not all pre-trial applications are interlocutory, for example 
summary judgment applications are not and in a plaintiff’s application 
for summary judgment, hearsay is not admissible except with leave of the
 court which ought to be granted only sparingly, but the defendant can 
rely on hearsay in an affidavit in response;
- but there is a different relaxation of the rule against hearsay in 
affidavits in the case of affidavits in support of a plaintiff’s 
application for summary judgment: Supreme Court Rule 22.03(2) says an 
affidavit may set forth a statement in a document if the document would 
be admissible at trial under the Evidence Act, 1958 (Vic.) (the most 
relevant provisions being the bankers books and business records 
provisions, computer statements provisions, and the provisions about 
copy documents);
- affidavits should never commence ‘I make this affidavit from my own 
knowledge, information and belief except where otherwise stated’ because
 knowledge and information and belief is the whole class of information 
which may be deposed to and there could be no occasion to ‘otherwise 
state’;
- what is own knowledge and what is information and belief should be able to be readily discerned from the affidavit;
- wherever possible, affidavits should commence ‘I make this affidavit
 from my own knowledge’ — affidavits don’t get any better than that;
- but if appropriate (for example a solicitor’s affidavit containing 
only her client’s instructions) an affidavit should commence ‘I make 
this affidavit from information and belief’, in which case at least the 
affidavit is not being dressed up to appear any better than it is;
- there is no need to ‘crave leave’ to refer to an earlier affidavit, or someone else’s affidavit;
- it is undesirable for one deponent to refer to another’s affidavit 
and effectively incorporate it by reference; much better to reiterate 
the whole story in the second witness’s own words;
- a few inconsistencies between affidavits enhance their credibility 
rather than detract from it — you can get all your ducks in an 
implausibly neat line, in other words: see Timms v Commonwealth Bank of Australia [2001] NSWSC 560 at [69]ff by way of example;
- if you are a lawyer and you are personally a party to proceedings, 
an employee or a partner in your practice may witness your affidavit 
these days, except in the Magistrates’ Court: Magistrates’ Court Rule 
18.10, which also prohibits an in-house counsel witnessing an affidavit 
in that Court sworn by an officer or employee of his or her employer 
company if the company is a party to the proceedings;
- the witness signs every page in the Magistrates’, County, Supreme, 
and Federal Courts; only in the Federal Court must the deponent sign 
every page as well;
- strictly speaking, the exhibits should be stapled to the exhibit 
sheets at the time of swearing, and should not be unstapled for the 
purposes of copying;
- the Evidence Act, 1958 (Vic.) says at s. 100(4) that ‘the 
witness shall without question administer the oath’ unless the deponent 
‘voluntarily object to take the oath’ so, strictly, it is not proper to 
enquire of the deponent whether he or she wishes to swear or affirm, but
 if the deponent does object to swearing on a holy book, you can 
administer the affirmation (‘I, Stephen Alexander Warne, do solemnly, 
sincerely and truly declare and affirm that this is my name and 
handwriting and that the contents of this my affidavit are true and 
correct in every particular [and these are the exhibits referred to 
therein]‘;
- there is another little known circumstance in which it is 
permissible for the deponent to affirm: when, in the circumstances, it 
would not be ‘reasonably practicable without inconvenience or delay to 
administer the oath’: s. 102, Evidence Act, 1958 (Vic.);
- a good place to write out the words of the oath and affirmation is 
on the side of your solicitor’s stamp, otherwise, they may be found in 
the Law Institute Diary;
- there is no general rule which requires the service of exhibits with
 affidavits (though some specific rules require it), a proposition which
 should be relied on only if you forget to serve an exhibit, or the 
other side claims that one exhibit was missing from the material served;
- exhibits may be and should ordinarily be filed along with the 
affidavit in the Magistrates’ Court, Federal Court (despite what its 
website says), but in the Supreme Court and County Court, exhibits will 
not generally be accepted for filing along with the affidavit, which 
means that someone has to remember to bring the original exhibits on the
 day of the hearing to be filed by being handed up to the decision 
maker;
- there are exceptions to this general principle in the Supreme Court 
in relation to proceedings in the Commercial List, hearings before a 
judge in the Corporations List, and hearings before the Listing Master, 
Master Kings;
- if you want the Supreme Court decision maker to read exhibits to 
affidavits before a hearing, the thing to do is to deliver them directly
 to the judge’s associate or master’s secretary;
- those who witness execution of documents will often owe a duty of 
care to ensure that the person in whose name the document is drafted is 
in fact the person who purported to sign the document (see Graham v Hall [2006] NSWCA 208 noted earlier on this blog)
 and so if you do not know the person whose signature you are asked to 
witness, you should satisfy yourself of identity by requiring production
 of the kinds of documents necessary to open a bank account before 
witnessing.

 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hi! Great write up thanks for sharing. Any idea where to send to from Australia??? it's a bit of a mystery, I was just about to send a couple off to where they came from but my bro has just had a couple come back from doing that!
ReplyDeleteAny ideas would be awesome, cheers!
Mick :)