Hearsay Flashcards
What are the three evidential principles?
- relevance
- excluding evidence
- hearsay
Subject to the exclusionary rules - is all evidence which is sufficiently relevant to the facts in issue, admissible?
Yes
What should be done with all evidence which is irrelevant to the facts in issue?
Should be excluded
What is the effect of an exclusionary rule?
If an exclusionary rule applies, it doesn’t matter how relevant the evidence in question may be, it will be inadmissible.
What is the rule against hearsay?
A statement made out of court may not be presented in evidence as proof of its contents
What is the general rule of hearsay?
That it’s inadmissible (example of exclusionary rule)
What are the two questions which must be asked (separately)?
1) does the evidence fall within the definition of hearsay evidence?
if yes, then it’s prima facie inadmissible
2) does it fall within one of the exceptions to the general exclusionary rule?
The common law excluded statements apart from which ones?
Apart from statements made in oral evidence given in court from being admitted as evidence of the truth of their contents
(the main reason for this was that the maker of the out of court statement wasn’t available to be cross-examined so the quality of the evidence couldn’t be tested)
example …
For example, in D’s trial for the murder of V, A gives evidence that B said that D killed V.
The problem is that only A is in court to be cross-examined. There is no way of testing the credibility of B’s statement.
B may have had a motive for wanting to get D into trouble. B may be passing on what someone else said. B may simply be mistaken. What B said may have been misunderstood.
In any event, it could not be safe for a conviction to be founded on this evidence.
Because hearsay evidence can’t be tested by cross examination in court, is there a risk of unfairness to the defendant where it is admitted?
yes - that risk gets greater as the importance of the hearsay evidence to the prosecution case increases… the ECHR Article 6 right to a fair trial may be engaged where hearsay evidence is admitted
the UKSC and the ECHR have considered the effect of hearsay evidence on the fairness of trials - principles that emerged from the decided cases…
- the UK statutory framework for the admission of the evidence of absent witnesses is sufficient, properly applied, to provide for a fair trial
- the court must always be satisfied that there’s sufficient basis for the absence of the witness and that a fair trial will be possible
- it will be harder for the court to be satisfied that fair trial will be possible if the evidence of the absent witness is the sole or decisive evidence against the accused
Where the hearsay evidence is critical to the case, the question of whether there can be a fair trial depends on three principal factors - what are they?
1) whether there’s a good reason to admit the evidence pursuant to the CJA 2003
2) Whether the evidence can be shown to be reliable
3) the extent to which counterbalancing measures have been properly applied (eg exclusionary discretion, proper directions to the jury in summing up
What does s114 CJA 2003 say about hearsay?
That it’s admissible, but only if it falls within one of the exceptions in s114(1)
S114(1) CJA 2003 - admissibility of hearsay evidence
1) in criminal proceedings a statement not made in oral evidence in the proceedings is admissible as evidence of any matter stated, but only if..
a) any provision. of this chapter or any other statutory provision makes it admissible
b) any rule of law preserved by s118 makes it admissible
c) all parties to the proceedings agree to it being admissible
d) the court’s satisfied that it’s in the interests of justice for it to be admissible
s115 CJA 2003 - statements & matters stated
1) In this chapter references to a statement or to a matter stated are to be read as followed
2) a statement is any representation of fact or opinion made by a person by whatever means; and it includes a representation made in a sketch, photofit or other pictorial form
3) a matter stated is one to which this chapter applies (and only if) the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the person making the statement appears to the court to have been
a) to cause another person to believe the matter or
b) to cause another person to act or a machine to operate on the basis that the matter is as stated