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EVIDENCE ACT 1995 - SECT 122
Loss of client legal privilege: consent and related matters
122 Loss of client legal privilege: consent and related matters
(1) This
Division does not prevent the adducing of evidence given with the consent of
the client or party concerned.
(2) Subject to subsection (5), this Division
does not prevent the adducing of evidence if the client or party concerned has
acted in a way that is inconsistent with the client or party objecting to the
adducing of the evidence because it would result in a disclosure of a kind
referred to in section 118, 119 or 120.
(3) Without limiting subsection (2),
a client or party is taken to have so acted if: (a) the client or party
knowingly and voluntarily disclosed the substance of the evidence to another
person, or
(b) the substance of the evidence has been disclosed with the
express or implied consent of the client or party.
(4) The reference in
subsection (3) (a) to a knowing and voluntary disclosure does not include a
reference to a disclosure by a person who was, at the time of the disclosure,
an employee or agent of the client or party, or of a lawyer of the client or
party, unless the employee or agent was authorised by the client, party or
lawyer to make the disclosure.
(5) A client or party is not taken to have
acted in a manner inconsistent with the client or party objecting to the
adducing of the evidence merely because: (a) the substance of the evidence has
been disclosed: (i) in the course of making a confidential communication or
preparing a confidential document, or
(ii) as a result of duress or
deception, or
(iii) under compulsion of law, or
(iv) if the client or party
is a body established by, or a person holding an office under, an Australian
law-to the Minister, or the Minister of the Commonwealth, the State or
Territory, administering the law, or part of the law, under which the body is
established or the office is held, or
(b) of a disclosure by a client to
another person if the disclosure concerns a matter in relation to which the
same lawyer is providing, or is to provide, professional legal services to
both the client and the other person, or
(c) of a disclosure to a person with
whom the client or party had, at the time of the disclosure, a common interest
relating to the proceeding or an anticipated or pending proceeding in an
Australian court or a foreign court.
(6) This Division does not prevent the
adducing of evidence of a document that a witness has used to try to revive
the witness’s memory about a fact or opinion or has used as mentioned in
section 32 (Attempts to revive memory in court) or 33 (Evidence given by
police officers).
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