Privileges Flashcards
Not recognized Privileges
- Parent/child
- Accountant
- Physician/patient
Psycho Therapy Privilege
Privilege is not absolute. Threat of harm to patient and others can override it.
Two Rationales for Privileges:
- Promoting Social Goals (Professional Privileges)
- Injury to relationship greater than admissibility of evidence - Confidentiality itself (Personal Privileges)
Privileged communication
means it will remain confidential.
Privilege with priest?
Privileges depends whether statement was said during a sacramental confession or in a regular conversation.
Court said inadmissible hearsay.
Scope of the lawyer-client privilege
Privilege survives the client’s death but weakens the privilege when balancing harm of disclosure.
The privilege is the client’s
The privilege protects only those confidential communications made to facilitate professional services
The privilege protects only confidential communications
The identity of the client is not privileged and fee arrangements are also not privileged
What happens when privileged lawyer/client communication is disclosed?
Two approaches:
- Intentional= Waiver
- Inadvertently = Not Waiver if:
(1) Inadvertent
(2) Reasonable steps to prevent
(3) Once out reasonable steps to rectify
Privilege against self-incrimination
5th amendment privilege will always win.
State can erase 5th amendment right if offered immunity from prosecution.
The Spousal Testimonial Privilege (what it is)
Asserted only during marriage
Applies to pre-marriage statements
Only applies in criminal cases and only when defendant is spouse
Bars any adverse testimony
Even after marriage ends communication still privilege.
Exception for crime/fraud:
If both are engaged in criminal activity their communication is not privileged
Exception for domestic abuse
Exception if the communication relates to the abuse of a spouse or of their child
The Spousal Testimonial Privilege (3 forms)
- The witness-spouse is the one that can choose/refuse to testify against the defendant-spouse (Most common)
- Defendant can prevent the other spouse from testifying (less common)
- Either one can hold the privilege (traditional form)