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(1)The following provisions (being provisions corresponding to sections 199 and 200 of the Army Act 1955 and the Air Force Act 1955) shall be inserted in the [1957 c. 53.] Naval Discipline Act 1957 after the provision inserted therein as section 129A by section 45(2) of this Act:—
(1)Where a person subject to this Act has been tried before a civil court (whether at the time of the trial he was subject to this Act or not), a certificate signed by the clerk of the court stating all or any of the following matters—
(a)that the said person has been tried before the court for the offences specified in that certificate,
(b)the result of the trial,
(c)what judgment or order was given or made by the court,
(d)that other offences specified in the certificate were taken into consideration at the trial,
shall for the purposes of this Act be evidence of the matters stated in the certificate.
(2)The clerk of the court shall, if required by the commanding officer of the person in question or any other officer, furnish a certificate under this section, and shall be paid such fee as may be prescribed by regulations made by a Secretary of State.
(3)A document purporting to be a certificate under this section and to be signed by the clerk of the court shall, unless the contrary is shown, be deemed such a certificate.
(4)References in this section to the clerk of the court include references to his deputy, and to any other person having the custody of the records of the court.
(1)The original proceedings of a court-martial purporting to be signed by the judge advocate appointed for the purposes of the court and being in the custody of a Secretary of State or of any person having the lawful custody thereof shall be admissible in evidence on production from that custody.
(2)A document purporting to be a copy of the original proceedings of a court-martial or any part thereof and to be certified by a Secretary of State or any person authorised by him, or by any other person having the lawful custody of the proceedings, to be a true copy shall be evidence of the contents of the proceedings or the part to which the document relates, as the case may be.
(3)This section applies to evidence given in any court, whether civil or criminal and whether in the United Kingdom or in any colony.”
(2)Paragraph 1 of Schedule 1 to the [1968 c. 20.] Courts-Martial (Appeals) Act 1968 (under which, where the record of any evidence given before a naval court-martial may be read as evidence on a retrial, it may be so read without further proof if it is produced from the custody of the Defence Council) shall be amended by substituting for the words " if it is produced from the custody of the Defence Council " the words " if it forms part of the original proceedings of the original court-martial or a copy thereof and those proceedings are, or that copy is, admissible as evidence under section 129C of the Naval Discipline Act ".
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