Rule 801 Flashcards
Rule 801
Declarant – the person who said it
Statement – has to be an assertion
Hearsay means a statement that: (1) the declarant does not make while testifying at the current trial or hearing; and
(2) a party offers in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted in the statement.
801(d) are exceptions
Must ask two questions to decide whether any particular out-of-court statement is hearsay:
- Is the party offering the statement to prove (the truth of) what it says or was meant to say?
- Did the declarant assert/mean to communicate that fact?
Nonhearsay uses of out-of-court statements
- Words offered to prove their effect on the listener
- Legally operative words
- Inconsistent statements offered to impeach
Words offered to prove their effect on the listener
Saying “Joe is looking for you” when offered to prove the Defendant’s state of mind rather than the fact that Joe was looking for him. We don’t care if Joe really was looking for the Defendant.
Legally operative words
Saying “I do” at the altar makes a marriage
If other conditions are met, saying “I accept” after an offer can create a contract
Saying “He’s a thief” in public can be slander
Inconsistent statements offered to impeach
Saying “The light was red” and later “The light was green.”
Declarative statements
things that on their face don’t look like assertions but might be
A command, question, threat, or exclamation
Statements that can be hearsay: Oral statements
Look at outline for examples
Statements that can be hearsay: Assertive conduct
I.e. Remember the Sea Captain example: not intended to be assertive, not trying to communicate, therefore not hearsay
I.e. James Schlisinger takes his family to a town where there’s a Nuclear Facility, his conduct is asserting that nuclear facilities are safe.