JayUtah
Penultimate Amazing
Please read carefully.
Don't lecture me. We've already shown that you don't really read my posts and can't remember what I've said in the past.
I stated that an eyewitness if deemed credible by a court of law, is an example of direct evidence.
You're equivocating "credible." A witness that survives voir dire is eligible to present direct evidence, yes. That doesn't mean that everything the witness says is direct evidence; it could be conjecture or interpretation, at which point the court will rule on its admissibility. Whether the witness is credible depends on whether the testimony is believed.
...then that is evidence and it cannot be appealed against except on a point of law...
Legal restrictions on appealability are for res judicata jurisprudential reasons and don't factor into the fundamental concepts of whether a witness is reporting what he perceived with his senses versus what he conjectured might be happening. Res judicata presumes a judgment has occurred, and that the voir dire of the witness is part of that, and that all the issues of admissibility were previously resolved. That doesn't guarantee that the portion of the witness' statement that survived all that was the entirety of what he came into the court with.