Q: 7
Which of the following statements concerning the appointment of expert witnesses at that is
accurate?
Options
Discussion
Option A
Not seeing it for C, option A is more accurate here. In inquisitorial jurisdictions, the court is generally the one appointing key expert witnesses, not the parties. It's easy to mix up with adversarial systems where parties select their own experts-classic trap on these questions. Pretty confident that's what they're going for.
Pretty sure it should be C, because adversarial systems sometimes have situations where the court actually selects experts if needed. If the question is about regular practice though, could be off.
Its A here. In inquisitorial systems, the court usually takes charge of appointing the expert witnesses, not the parties themselves. That’s a key difference from adversarial systems where each side brings their own experts. Pretty sure that’s what they’re testing on this one, but let me know if I’m missing something.
Is it always true that in inquisitorial systems, only the court can pick the expert? I thought sometimes the parties could bring their own as well. Not clear if the question means only one approach or both are possible.
A
I don’t think it’s A, more likely D since that fits adversarial systems.
I don’t think it’s D, A fits better. In inquisitorial jurisdictions, the court usually picks the main experts, while D mixes up adversarial systems where parties pick their own. Seen similar questions before, pretty sure on this one. Disagree?
Actually, it's A. In inquisitorial jurisdictions the court tends to appoint the main experts, not the parties. D is more for adversarial systems, easy to mix those two up.
A is the right pick here.
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