Tasmanian Consolidated Acts
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EVIDENCE ACT 2001 - SECT 131
Exclusion of evidence of settlement negotiations
(1) Evidence is not to be adduced of
(a) a communication made between persons in dispute, or between one or more
persons in dispute and a third party, in connection with an attempt to
negotiate a settlement of the dispute; or
(b) a document, whether delivered or not, prepared in connection with an
attempt to negotiate a settlement of a dispute.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if
(a) the persons in dispute consent to the evidence being adduced in the
proceeding concerned or, if any of those persons has tendered the
communication or document in evidence in another Australian or overseas
proceeding, all the other persons so consent; or
(b) the substance of the evidence has been disclosed with the express or
implied consent of all the persons in dispute; or
(c) the substance of the evidence has been partly disclosed with the express
or implied consent of the persons in dispute, and full disclosure of the
evidence is reasonably necessary to enable a proper understanding of the other
evidence already adduced; or
(d) the communication or document included a statement to the effect that it
was not to be treated as confidential; or
(e) the evidence tends to contradict or to qualify evidence already admitted
about the course of an attempt to settle the dispute; or
(f) the proceeding in which it is sought to adduce the evidence is a
proceeding to enforce an agreement between the persons in dispute to settle
the dispute, or a proceeding in which the making of such an agreement is in
issue; or
(g) evidence that has been adduced in the proceeding, or an inference from
evidence that has been adduced in the proceeding, is likely to mislead the
court unless evidence of the communication or document is adduced to
contradict or to qualify that evidence; or
(h) the communication or document is relevant to determining liability for
costs; or
(i) making the communication, or preparing the document, affects a right of a
person; or
(j) the communication was made, or the document was prepared, in furtherance
of the commission of a fraud or an offence or the commission of an act that
renders a person liable to a civil penalty; or
(k) one of the persons in dispute, or an employee or agent of such a person,
knew or ought reasonably to have known that the communication was made, or the
document was prepared, in furtherance of a deliberate abuse of a power.
(3) For the purpose of subsection (2)(j) , if commission of the
fraud, offence or act is a fact in issue and there are reasonable grounds for
finding that
(a) the fraud, offence or act was committed; and
(b) a communication was made or document prepared in furtherance of the
commission of the fraud, offence or act
the court may find that
the communication was so made or the document so prepared.
(4) For the purpose of subsection (2)(k) , if
(a) the abuse of power is a fact in issue; and
(b) there are reasonable grounds for finding that a communication was made or
document prepared in furtherance of the abuse of power
the court
may find that the communication was so made or the document so prepared.
(5) In this section
(a) a reference to a dispute is a reference to a dispute of a kind in respect
of which relief may be given in an Australian or overseas proceeding; and
(b) a reference to an attempt to negotiate the settlement of a dispute does
not include a reference to an attempt to negotiate the settlement of a
criminal proceeding or an anticipated criminal proceeding; and
(c) a reference to a communication made by a person in dispute includes a
reference to a communication made by an employee or agent of such a person;
and
(d) a reference to the consent of a person in dispute includes a reference to
the consent of an employee or agent of such a person who is authorised so to
consent; and
(e) a reference to commission of an act includes a reference to a failure to
act.
(6) In this section, power means a power conferred by or under an
Australian law.
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