CRITICAL APPRAISAL OF THE RELEVANCY AND ADMISSIBILITY OF ELECTRONICALLY GENERATED EVIDENCE IN NIGERIA
ABSTRACT
ABSTRACT
In
an attempt to address this fundamental issue regarding the admissibility of electronically
generated evidence, recourse shall be paid had to the word evidence itself. Evidence
is the means by which facts are proved excluding inferences and arguments. There
are times in court when we desperately need to rely on evidence in order to
prove a very vital point or issue in court. This point can be proved through
the use of electronic generated documents which are believed to be in line with
section 97 of the evidence act. Due to growth in technology, the use of
electronic device such as computer printout, storage and communication system
have risen sharply, especially in commercial and financial transactions in
Nigeria and the world over which makes business communication greater in use.
It would therefore be wrong for these electronic devices not to be accepted in
court, if it has been valued and accepted all over the world. The thesis
considers the problems posed to the admissibility of electronically generated evidence
and the challenges bothering on authenticity, integrity, and confidentiality of
the evidence and offers solutions to the problems or challenges that
electronically generated evidence is facing. The essence of the foregoing is
basically to give a detailed and sufficient analysis of the subject matter. As
we know tendering and taking of evidence is inevitable in court proceedings and
this thesis is set to focus on the electronically generated evidence; its importance
and effect in our judicial system.
CHAPTER
ONE
GENERAL
INTRODUCTION
1.0.0:
INTRODUCTION
Perhaps,
the most revolutionary implication of contemporary, technology development is the
evolution of a paperless environment, characterized by three principal trends,
namely; dematerialization of the work place; Omnipresence, and malleability of
electronic devices.1 The term ‘dematerialization’ ‘omnipresence’ ‘malleability’
as respectively used above, means the process of the migration of information
from the material world to the electronic world popularly called Cyberspace,2 a
process, where physical or geographical distances have been removed as if were
through the use communication gadgets, the adaptation of computer to the
mutation of IT process from one form to another.3 With the technology
advancement in the world that are being operated by individuals and corporate
bodies in domestic works and financial transactions, one cannot help but wonder
why the Act does not provide for such. These devices, the product of technology
can be used for legal and illegal act s.4 However, the judiciary has come to the rescue
at least in some area of the law. It has done this by interpreting and applying
existing statutory and common law principles in ways and manners that
incorporate the existing social realities and do justice not only directly to
the litigating parties who have gone to court but also indirectly to the entire
society. In playing that wonderful role, the judiciary clearly demonstrates
that indeed whatever the arguments may be in theoretical jurisprudence on
whether or not the courts should make law in developing legal cultures, they
should and actually do make law. As one of Nigeria’s most liberal and intelligent
judges would say,
“It
is said that the function of the court is to interpret laws made by the
legislature and not to make laws. In theory that is so. But it must equally be
admitted that judges are not robots (or Zombies) who have no mind of their own
except to follow precedents … As the society is eternally dynamic and with fast
changing nature of things. In the ever changing world and their attendants,
complexities, the court should, empirically speaking, situate its decision on
realistic premise regard being had to the society’s construct and understanding
of issues that affect the development of jurisprudence.”5 While the Evidence
Act made by the British colonial government in 1945 continues in operation as
about the only source of the law of Evidence in the country.6 Developments in
such area as information, technology have gone way beyond what that statute
could have envisaged at its enactment. For instance, when information recorded
or stored in the memory of a computer is printed out in paper if it is not easy
to say that the version in the memory is a document. Nor is it easy to assert
that the print out is an original or a copy. In the face of such a worrisome
situation the Nigeria courts have been very alert in interpreting, the Act
complimentary case law or common law principles in away that, it principally
solves the problem of admissibility of pieces of evidence generated information
technology. In effect, they have fashioned out rules and principles by which all
electronically generated evidence can be admitted and acted upon by Nigeria
courts. As we shall see hereafter however, some challenges attend the admission
and use of those electronically generated materials, which challenges the
courts have not even discussed talk the less of finding solution for. Also,
even if such things (audio, tape recording, a video tape recording, electronic
mail on computer screen) when presented as evidence and such things as
electronically transmitted mandates in commercial transactions can be regarded
as document.
1.1.0:
BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY
The
latter part of the twentieth century was marked by the electronic transistor
and machines and ideas made possible by it. As a result; the world changed from
analogue to digital. Although the computer reigns supreme in the digital /
electronic domain, it is not the only electronic device. An entire
constellation of audio, video, communication and photographic devices are
becoming so closely associated with the computer as to have converged with it. Also,
a motion was moved by a former Senator to permit admissibility of electronic
and computer generated evidence7 and it was read for the first time at the
senate last year. It was opined that since the Evidence Act was enacted 64
years ago, apart from some minor amendments effected between 1948 and 1958 and
another minor amendment in 1999, the Act has remained unchanged. The problem of
the Act is that it does not recognize any record except one written on a piece
of paper.8 Apart from records produced by stenography and photo copies, it does
not recognize any form of record produced by more advanced technology that has
emerged since the enactment of that law in Nigeria.9 Finally, as courts like society
become more familiar with digital / electronic documents, they bucked away from
the higher standard. Courts have since held in US V Scholle that “Computer data
compilations … should be treated as any other records. However if data are
stored in a computer … any printout or other output readable by sight, shown to
reflect the data accurately is an original.”
Department: Law
Format: Microsoft Word
Format: Microsoft Word
Chapters: 1 - 5, Preliminary Pages, Abstract, Bibliography.
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
No. of Pages: 95
Price: 3000 NGN
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