Affidavits
An affidavit is a document that may be used as evidence in court.
The affidavit may be prepared by your lawyer
e.g. an application for a limited licence to drive.
It might be part of a Ministry of Justice form
e.g. an application to dissolve a marriage.
You have to make a statement, in front of an authorised witness, that the contents of the affidavit are true.
You do this by
- swearing an oath on a religious book such as the Bible or Qur’an.
- making an affirmation (a non-religious, solemn and sincere statement).
or
Affirming and swearing have the same legal status.
Getting an affidavit witnessed by a Justice of the Peace.
- Fill in your full name, home address, and occupation, before seeing the JP.
- Do not sign the document until you are with the JP.
- Bring your affidavit to the Justice of the Peace yourself.
- Take a photo ID document such as Passport, Driver Licence, Firearms Licence, Kiwi Access card etc.
- The Justice will ask you if the contents of your affidavit are true.
- You must answer the question out loud (“yes” or “I do”).
- Once you have sworn your oath or made your affirmation the Justice will ask you to sign the document.
- The Justice will sign, date and stamp the affidavit.
- If the affidavit has more than one page, both you and the JP will initial the other pages.
- Some affidavits have additional evidence attached. These items are called exhibits. The JP will process them.