Article 4 Flashcards

0
Q

Any tendency to make a fact more or less probable

A
  1. individual pieces of evidence can be relevant even if they do not establish a fact by itself, as long as it makes the evidence it goes to slightly more/less probable ( does it move the ball at all?)
  2. Doesnt have to be the ultimate fact
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1
Q

FRCP 401

A

Evidence is relevant if:

(1) It has -any tendency- to make a -fact more or less probable -than it would be without the evidence;
(2) and the fact is -of consequence- in determining the action

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2
Q

A fact of consequence

A

The fact itself must be related to/have a bearing on the Cause of Action (COA)
Exam Tip: If you are objecting to relevance you must say “it has no tendency” because “less tendency” would mean the evidence is still relevant.

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3
Q

Objection, irrelevance, 401

A

Your honor, the evidence that ( fact) has no tendency to make it more or less probable that ( ) than it would without the evidence because ( ). Therefore, you should sustain the objection and exclude the evidence.

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4
Q

Response to 401 Objection

A

Your honor, the evidence that ( ) has some tendency to make the fact ( ) more/less probable than it would be without the evidence because ( ). This evidence is of consequence because ( ). Therefore, you should overrule the objection and admit the evidence.

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5
Q

FRCP 402

A

All relevant evidence is admissable, except unless provided by the constitution, federal statute, the FRE or rule from the Supreme Court.

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6
Q

Weight in relevance

A

If the opposing counsel is saying that this evidence doesn’t move the ball enough, respond that this goes to weight, no admissability. Weak evidence is still admitted.

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7
Q

FRCP 403

A

The court may exclude relevant evidence if:

(1) its probative value is substantially outweighed by a danger of:
(2) unfair predjudice, confusing the issues, misleading the jury, undue delay, wasting time, or needlessly presenting cumulative evidence.

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8
Q

403 Prejudice and Unfairness

A

Evidence presented by the opposing side is always predjudicial to your case, but it is not always unfair and will be admitted unless the evidence rises tot he unfair level.
Prejudice alone is not sufficient, it must be unfair prejudice and you must always say it is substantially unfair.

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9
Q

Probative Value

A

PB only considered after evidence is admitted.

Probative value is synonymous with the evidence weight.

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10
Q

403 Balancing Test–Objection and example

A

Your honor, the evidence of ( ) is highly and unfairly prejudicial because ( ). This unfair prejudice substantially outweighs the low/no probative value of the evidence because ( ). Therefore, you should exercise your discretion to sustain the objection and exclude the evidence.

Example
Your honor, the evidence of the defendants spending money on plastic surgery, and gambling at the strip club is highly and unfairly prejudicial because it is being offered to inflame the sensible minds of the jury. This substantially outweighs the low probative value of the evidence because it does not go to how the defendants acquired the money. Therefore, you should exercise your discretion to sustain the objection and exclude the evidence.

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11
Q

403 Response to objection and example

A

Your honore, this evidence (describe) has high probative value because …… Although it is prejudicial, it is not unfairly prejudicial because ( ). As a result the prejudice cannot be said to substantially outweigh the evidence’s high probative value. Therefore, you should overrule the objection and admit the evidence.

Example
The crime scene photo has high probative value because the cause of death is at issue and it is not unfair because it goes to a question in the case and therefore it cannot be said that the prejudice substantially outweighs the probative value.

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12
Q

Policy behind 403

A
  1. We want juries to decide the evidence on the merits, not based on their emotions… cases should be decided upon neutral evaluation of the evidence (cold) and not upon emotional reactions (hot).
  2. Evidence should not be admitted only to enflame the passions of the jury.
  3. Evidence should not be admitted only to provoke an emotional reaction.
  4. If you are objection to evidence being unfairly prejudicial you are arguing that these could be some of the unfair reasons.
  5. Stipulations don’t destroy relevance but they can be prejudicial if the sides don’t follow the stipulation b/c the jury will assume that you have already committed the current crime.
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13
Q

Policy Rules 407 - 411

A

407: Subsequent remedial measures
408: Offers to compromise ( + settlement talks)
409: Offers to pay medical expenses
410: Criminal Plea Bargaining
411: Liability Insurance

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14
Q

407: Subsequent Remedial Measures Foundational Elements

A
  1. Measures were taken
  2. After an injury or harm
  3. If those measures were previously taken, the injury would have been less likely to occur.
  4. Not admissible to prove (bad purpose)
  5. Admissible to prove certain good purpose
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15
Q

407: Measures Taken

A

i.e. changes/recalling a product, changing a policy, warnings

16
Q

407 Not admissible to prove bad purposes

A

Negligence, culpability, a defect in product or its design, or a need for a warning; other use to show the defendant was at fault

17
Q

407 admissible to prove

A

Impeachment, or if disputed: proving ownership, control or the feasibility of precautionary measures, remedial measures by 3rd parties.

18
Q

407 Policy

A

Encourages a defendant to quickly fix the condition without worrying about the effects of the repairs on pending litigation; motivates the defendant to make its products safer without hesitation for fear of repairs used against them.

19
Q

407 Objection

A

your honor, the evidence is of a subsequent remedial measure because ( ) which taken after an injury which would have made the injury less likely to occur because ( ) and is being admitted to prove fault because ( ), therefore you should sustain the objection and exclude the evidence.

20
Q

407 Response (proponent)

A

Your honor, while this is a subsequent measure, (1) we are not offering for proof of negligence, rather we are offering it for the limited purpose of ( ) …..or (2) it is (missing an element to sustain the objection) Therefore, you should overrule the objection and admit the evidence.

21
Q

FRCP 408 - Offers to Compromise (+settlement talks and statements)

A

Foundational Elements

  1. Claim (has been filed)
  2. Dispute
  3. Offers to compromise or statements made during an offer to compromise
  4. Not admissible to prove bad purpose
  5. admissible for certain instances.
22
Q

408 Not admissible to prove

A

Liability, amount of disputed claim

Impeachment by prior inconsistent statement

23
Q

408 Admissible to Prove

A
  • A witness’ bias or prejudice
  • In criminal cases where the public office is functioning in its regulatory capacity to investigate/ initiate enforcement
  • To negate a contention of undue delay or prove an effort to obstruct a criminal investigation or prosecution
24
Q

408 Policy

A
  • If the talks and statements weren’t protected, parties would be releuctant to discuss their claims candidly before trial and there would be fewer settlements
  • Protects settlement offers and any statements made during the settlement talks (“Settlement bubble” in which you trigger the foundational elements);
  • Unilateral offers are not settlement discussions and are not covered by 408 even if there is a claim and dispute
  • R 408 applies to both parties- neither party can offer evidence of the talks
  • Statements equally protected in civil and criminal suits
25
Q

FRCP 409- Offers to Pay Medical expenses Foundational elements

A
  1. Evidence of actually paying, promising to pay, or offering to pay medical, hospital or similar expenses resulting from an injury
  2. Not admissible to prove (bad purposes): liability for the injury
  3. Admissible to prove any fact of consequence that is not liability
26
Q

408 Offers to compromise or statements made during an offer to compromise

A
  • Formal negotiations
  • Non-formal: concrete offers, whether the statement was unilateral, where attorneys are involved, where common settlement phrases are used
27
Q

409 Policy

A
  • Encourages individuals/organizations to pay medical expenses for injured people, encourages customer relations/makes financial sense
  • Good Samaritans shouldn’t fear their actions will be construed as admission of liability
28
Q

FRCP 410- Criminal Plea Bargaining Foundational Elements

A
  1. Criminal Trial
  2. Plea Bargaining/ Discussions (+offers and statements)
  3. No finalized guilty plea
  4. Not admissible to prove bad purposes
29
Q

410 Plea Bargaining/Disucussions

A
  • Formal sessions: occurs “with an attorney for the prosecuting authority”
  • Ambiguous sessions two part test: (1) defendant had an actual subjective expectation to negotiate a plea and (2) that expectation was reasonable give the circumstances
  • Doesn’t apply to lawenforcement, only attorney working for the govt
30
Q

410 Not admissible to prove

A
  • Prohibits the introduction of any evidence against the criminal defendant who participated in the plea bargaining
  • Includes situations where: guilty plea was withdrawn; “no contest” plea is entered -not conceding guilt; statements made during plea discussions with an attorney for the prosecution that did not result in a guilty plea
31
Q

410 Policy

A
  1. Evidence introduced against defendant who participated in plea bargaining is bared (unless there is a finalized and accepted guilty plea) and the defendant can introduce any evidence from the bargaining against the prosecution
  2. Advances the social interest to protect defendants from aggressive prosecutors. Plea bargains can be unfair to defendants b/c if the jury discovers the defendant tried to bargain they will assume they are guilty
  3. Analogous to Rule 408
  4. Also bars the evidence of criminal pleas/ negotiations from use in civil trial
32
Q

410 Waiver

A

Most prosecutors want defendants to waive 410

33
Q

FRCP 411- Liability insurance Foundational Elements

A
  1. Evidence that a person was or was not insured against liability
  2. Not admissible to prove bad purpose of negligence, liability, or ability to pay/not pay
  3. Admissible to prove a witness bias/ predjudice; agency, ownership, or control.
34
Q

411 Policy

A
  • Encourages individuals and organizations to obtain liability insurance
  • If not excluded parties would offer it in hopes of persuading the jury into granting larger damages.