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  1. Discover the Legal Definition of Facsimile & Its Significance - Learn how facsimiles guarantee document accuracy, transmit contracts, preserve historical artifacts, and present evidence in legal matters.

  2. Facsimile Number. {Fax_No} E-mail: {Email_Address} Attention: {Mr. / Ms. XXX} 50 Such notices, demands or other communications shall be addressed as provided in Clause 49 and, if so addressed, shall be deemed to have been duly given or made as follows, whichever is earlier:

  3. If you have a question about this topic you can contact the Citizens Information Phone Service on 0818 07 4000 (Monday to Friday, 9am to 8pm). You can also contact your local Citizens Information Centre .

  4. Definition: Facsimile means an exact copy or duplicate of something. It can also refer to a fax machine or the act of sending a fax. 1. The museum displayed a facsimile of the original manuscript. 2. I need to send a facsimile of the contract to my lawyer. 3.

    • The Statement Is True
    • Absolute Privilege
    • Qualified Privilege
    • Honest Opinion
    • Fair and Reasonable Publication
    • Innocent Publication

    A statement is not defamatory if it is true or substantially true. The onus of proving that the statement is true rests on the person defending the action (the person who made the statement). Even if the statement is untrue, it is only defamatory if it damages the reputation of the person making the complaint.

    Some statements, when made in an official capacity or as part of a testimony, have the protection of absolute privilege. This means that the person making the statement is protected from a claim of defamation. Examples of absolute privilege include statements made: 1. By a TD in the Dáil or a Senator in the Seanad 2. By an MEP in the European Parli...

    Certain statements may be privileged, but can lose the privilege if the statement was made maliciously, or if the person later refuses to correct an inaccuracy. This includes statements made by you to: 1. A person who had a duty or interest in receiving the statement or 2. A person who you reasonably believed had a duty or interest in receiving the...

    The defence of ‘honest opinion’ may apply where you give your opinion and all of these conditions are met: 1. The opinion is honestly held 2. The opinion is based on allegations of facts that are set out with the statement or known to the person complaining of defamation (or that they could reasonably be expected to have known), or based on allegat...

    A statement made in good faith and about something that is in the public interest may not be defamatory. The court will consider: 1. The seriousness of the allegations 2. How much the statement was about the performance of a person’s public duties 3. If the statement made it clear that when it was discussing allegations or suspicions, rather than f...

    Innocent publication may apply where a person is not responsible for the statement or the publication of the statement, but contributed to distributing the statement in some way. For example, a company that prints newspapers, or delivers newspapers to shops is not responsible for the content of the newspapers and would not usually be liable for def...

  5. A facsimile signature clause stipulates that signatures transmitted via fax or other electronic means are considered legally binding and equivalent to original handwritten signatures. This provision facilitates quicker contract execution by recognizing electronic copies of signatures in legal documents.

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  7. The original document is scanned at the sending station, converted into an analog or digital representation, and sent over a communication channel to the receiving station, which constructs a duplicate image on paper; this image is referred to as a facsimile.

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