Self-authenticating document
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Self-authenticating_document"
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content
Scales of justice
Evidence
Part of the common law series
Types of evidence
Testimony · Documentary
Physical / Real · Digital
Exculpatory · Scientific
Demonstrative
Eyewitness identification
Genetic (DNA) · Lies
Relevance
Burden of proof · Laying a foundation
Subsequent remedial measure
Character · Habit · Similar fact
Authentication
Chain of custody
Judicial notice · Best evidence rule
Self-authenticating document
Ancient document
Witnesses
Competence · Privilege
Direct examination · Cross-examination
Impeachment · Recorded recollection
Expert witness · Dead man statute
Hearsay and exceptions
in English law · in United States law
Confessions · Business records
Excited utterance · Dying declaration
Party admission · Ancient document
Declarations against interest
Present sense impression · Res gestae
Learned treatise · Implied assertion
Other common law areas
Contract · Tort · Property
Wills, trusts and estates
Criminal law
v  d  e

A self-authenticating document, under the law of evidence in the United States, is any document that can be admitted into evidence at a trial without proof being submitted to support the claim that the document is what it appears to be. Several categories of documents are deemed to be self-authenticating:

  1. Certified copy of public or business records;
  2. Official publications of government agencies;
  3. Newspaper articles;
  4. Trade inscriptions, such as labels on products;
  5. Acknowledged documents (wherein the signer also gets a paper notarized); and
  6. Commercial paper under the Uniform Commercial Code.

Although most U.S. states have evidentiary rules similar to the Federal Rules of Evidence, the California Evidence Code diverges significantly from the FRE in that it does not treat trade inscriptions as self-authenticating. This means that if a defendant does not stipulate to the authenticity and accuracy of a trade inscription, the plaintiff must use expert testimony to establish the authenticity of the inscription and to get around the obvious hearsay issue (to establish, based on common practice within the trade, that the product is what the inscription says it is).

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