R. v. Seaboyer; R. v. Gayme
- 1991 CanLII 76 (SCC)
- Go to CanLII for full text
The above case is referenced within:
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British Columbia Civil Trial Handbook
(Current to: July 01 2021)
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Chapter 12. Objections at Trial
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V. Common Objections [§12.19]
- B. Common Objections to Witness Evidence [§12.25]
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V. Common Objections [§12.19]
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Chapter 12. Objections at Trial
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Canadian Criminal Jury Instructions
(Current to: August 24 2023)
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Chapter 4. Special Direction: Caution—Bias, Prejudice, and Stereotypes—CRIMJI 1.02A
- II. Caution—Specific Biases and Stereotypes [§4.2]
- Chapter 13. Caution when Prior Sexual Conduct of the Complainant Is Admitted—CRIMJI 2.08
- Chapter 26. Caution When Prior Sexual Conduct of the Complainant Is Admitted—CRIMJI 4.19
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Chapter 104. Sexual Assault (ss. 265, 271, 272, 273) —CRIMJI 6.66
- I. Introduction [§104.1]
- XIII. Special Directions [§104.48]
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Chapter 4. Special Direction: Caution—Bias, Prejudice, and Stereotypes—CRIMJI 1.02A
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Expert Evidence in British Columbia Civil Proceedings
(Current to: July 01 2021)
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Chapter 1. Expert Evidence in the Context of the Law of Evidence at Large
- III. Admissibility of Expert Evidence [§1.15]
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Chapter 2. What Is an Expert?
- IV. The Ultimate Issue Rule [§2.17]
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Chapter 1. Expert Evidence in the Context of the Law of Evidence at Large
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Introducing Evidence at Trial: A British Columbia Handbook
(Current to: September 01 2020)
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Chapter 1. The Basic Concepts of the Law of Evidence
- IV. Consider Relevance of the Evidence [§1.4]
- VI. Consider the Potential for Prejudice [§1.10]
- Chapter 7. Collateral Facts Rule
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Chapter 13. Opinion Evidence
- II. Admissibility of Expert Opinion Evidence [§13.2]
- Chapter 19. Similar Fact Evidence
- Chapter 29. Exclusion of Evidence
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Chapter 1. The Basic Concepts of the Law of Evidence