Witnesses Flashcards

1
Q

What are the purpose andelements of a “Dead Man’s Statute”? NOTE: NY Distinction

A

Purpose: Death seals lips of 1 party, DMS seals lips of other by making him incompetant to testify 4 elements… 1) In a civil action 2) an interested party IS incompetent to testify in own interest 3) against a decedent’s estate 4) concerning communications/personal trxns between decedent and interested party NOTE: under the FRE (thus MBE) there is NO DMS, so assume a witness is NOT incompetant unless the q states that this jx DOES have a DMS NY DISTINCTION: In an AUTO accident case based on NEGLIGENCE, the surviing interested party: MAY testify about his observations re: the decedant’s conduct/demeanor; BUT
MAY NOT testify about oral stmts made by decedent

		If an agent (executor, administrators, heirs, legatees, devisees) of the deceased testifies to a trxn w/ the interested person, the interested person MAY then testify abt the same trxn (i.e. the door "was opened")
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2
Q

When are leading questions allowed to be asked?

A

Leading qs suggest the answer in the q (e.g. “Isn’t it true that you ran the read light?”) Generally NOT ALLOWED on DIRECT EXAMINATION of a witness (but IS allowed on CROSS) EXCEPTIONS where leading q’s CAN be asked on DIRECT: 1) Preliminary/introductory matters (i.e. to get the qs started) 2) Youthful or forgetful witness 3) A hostile witness (based on declaration from the ct) 4) Adverse party or someone under cntrl of adverse party

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3
Q

When are lay witnesses’opinions admissible?

A

Lay witnesses’ opinions are admissible IF: 1) the opinion is rationally based on witnesses’ perception (i.e. personal knowledge); AND 2) helpful to the jury in deciding a fact Areas where lay witnesses’ opinion usually admissible: Drunk OR soberiety

		Speed of vehicle

		Sane OR insane

		Emotions of another person

		Handwriting (Normal Course)

		Opinion abt character (MBE ONLY, if meets test for relevance)		
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4
Q

What are the 2 competency requirements for a witness to be deemed competent? NOTE: NY Distinction for children

A

A competent witness needs… 1) Personal knowledge (i.e. saw with own eyes; heard with own ears); AND 2)Oath or affirmation (i.e. must demonstrate her willingness to tell the truth) NOTE: for children, the general rule is that a child of ANY age may testify under oath IF the child understands and appreciates the duty to tell the truth NY DISTINCTION: Civil cases: a child MUST be able to testify under oath
Criminal cases: A child UNDER THE AGE OF 9, who cannot understand the duty of an oath MAY STILL TESTIFY (i.e. unsworn testimony), BUT a ∆ CANNOT be convicted SOLELY on the unsworn testimony of a child (i.e. there must be corroborating evidence)

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5
Q

What are the 2 circumstances where WRITINGS are allowed to AID oral testimony? NOTE: NY Distinction

A

1) Refreshing recollection If witnesses’s memory fails, he may be shown a document (or anything) to jog his memory

		The doc is NOT offered into evidence by the using party

		Witness CANNOT read from doc

		Adversary can: (1) inspect the refesher; (2) use it on cross-examination; OR (3) introduce it into evidence

2) Past Recollection Recorded (Hearsay Exception): if memory fails witness, and can't testify, the atty MAY read (but not introduce as evidence) a supporting document, IF...			the doc fails to jog witness’s memory;

		the witness had personal knowledge when doc created;

		writing was EITHER (1) made; OR (2) adopted by witness;

		writing was made/adopted when event fresh in witnesses’s mind; AND

		witness can vouch for accuracy of doc when made

NY DISTINCTION: if factors established above, the writing MAY BE SHOWN to the jury (as opposed to just read to the jury)
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6
Q

What are the 4 requirements for expert testimony? NOTE: NY Distinction

A

4 requirements for expert testimony = 1) Qualifications: education AND/OR experience 2) Proper Subject Matter: scientific, technical or other specialized knowledge that WILL BE helpful (i.e. non-obvious)to jury in deciding a fact 3) Basis of opinion based on “reasonable degree of certainty”, drawn from THESE permissible sources: personal knowledge;

		evid. in trial record made known through hypo;

		facts outside recordIF it's of type relied by experts in this field									NOTE: if an expert is relying on facts OUTSIDE THE RECORD, he MAY generally identify the type of facts underlying the opinion, but MAY NOT disclose the contents of the inadmissible facts to the jury (hearsay!); HOWEVER...															the opponent MAY disclose the underlying facts on CROSS
										the judge has DISCRETION to allow the expert to disclose contents for the NON-HEARSAY PURPOSE of helping the jury evaluate the expert's opinion

4) Relevance and reliability: Determined by ct based on 4 Factors: T-R-A-P			Testing of pinciples or methodology

		Rate of error

		Acceptance by other experts in field (not necessarily general acceptance)									NY DISTINCTION: GENERAL acceptance is required in the relevant field

		Peer review and publication
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7
Q

When and how can aparty invoke hearsay exception to use a “learned treatise” in aid of expert testimony? NOTE: NY Distinctions

A

1) On DIRECT examination of a party’s OWN expert: relevant portions of a treatise (periodical or pamphlet) MAY be read into evidence as substantive evidence (to prove the truth of the matter asserted) IF established as reliable authority 2) On CROSS examination of opponent’s expert: relevant portions of treatise (periodical or pamphlet) MAY be read into evidence to IMPEACH and contradict the opponent’s expert, which comes in as SUBSTANTIVE evidence NOTE: the treatise is NOT admissable by itself; it CAN ONLY be read into evidence NY DISTINCTIONS: 1) On DIRECT examination of a party’s OWN expert: there is NO HEARSAY EXCEPTION for the contents of a learned treatise (i.e. it can ONLY be used to show general basis if the expert’s testimony [non-hearsay purpose]; CAN’T be substantive evidence) 2) On CROSS examination of opponent’s expert: the learned treatise may ONLY BE USED to IMPEACH the expert’s credibility (NOT as substantive evidence); AND ONLY IF the expert relied on the treatise in developing her own opinion (ORacknowledged on cross that it is a reliable authority)

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8
Q

When can a witness testify to the ultimate issue in a case?

A

Both expert AND lay witnesses can generally address the ultimate issue in a case Limitations: 1) Criminal case: EXPERT CANNOT give opinion as to Δ’s mental state 2) Witness CANNOT testify in legal jargon or give conclusive legal opinion, b/c is NOT helpful to jury

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9
Q

What is the proper subject matter for a cross examination?

A

A party has the RIGHT to CROSS examine ANY opposing witness who testifies at the trial (NOTE: if this right is impaired, the testimony will be striken at the minimum) Proper subject matter: 1) Matters w/in scope of DIRECT examination; AND 2) Matters that test the witness’s CREDIBILITY

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10
Q

How and when can aparty impeach or bolstertheir OWN witness? NOTE: NY Distinction

A

1) Bolstering own witness isNOT allowed until witness’s credibility is attacked (impeached) No prior consistent statements allowed on direct (hearsay and limited probative value)

		EXCEPTION: the witness's prior ID of a person ("I picked ∆ out of a line up") comes in a SUBSTANTIVE evidence; PROVIDED the witness is subject to CROSS examination

2) Impeaching own witness is allowed by ANY method of impeachment			NY DISTINCTION: general rule is that a party MAY NOT impeach their OWN witness									EXCEPTION: A party may impeach their own witness with a prior inconsistent stmt BUT ONLY IF it was (i) made in writing and signed by witness; OR (ii) made in oral testimony under oath; AND (iii) IF a CRIMINAL case, the witness's testimony is AFFIRMATIVELY damaging to the party that called the witness (vs. not helpful testimony or cloudy testimony)
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11
Q

What are the 7impeachment methods?

A

When a party seeks to prove that opposing witness is either lying or mistaken… 1. Prior inconsistent statements 2. Bias, interest, or motive to misrepresent 3. Sensory deficiencies 4. Bad reputation for truthfulness 5. Criminal convictions (felony OR any crime relating to truthfulness) 6. Bad acts (w/o conviction that reflect adversely on witness’s truthfulness ) 7. Contradiction

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12
Q

What are the 2 ways to use the impeachment methods?

A

1) Ask the witness abt the impeaching fact with the aim of having the witness ADMIT IT (i.e. “confronting” the witness) 2) Prove the impeaching fact with “EXTRINSIC” evidence (i.e. documentary evidence or testimony from other witnesses)

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13
Q

How does the “prior INCONSISTENT stmt” impeachment method work? NOTE: NY Distinction

A

Definition: witness previously made material statement (orally or in writing) that’s inconsistent w/ her trial testimony Generally, prior statement ONLY for impeachment (b/c it is usually hearsay) and CANNOT be used as SUBSTANTIVE evidence EXCEPTION: a prior inconsistent stmt can be used BOTH to impeach AND as substantive evidence, IF the stmt was made (i) orally under oath; AND (ii) as part of a formal hearing, trial, proceeding, or deposition NY DISTINCTION: this exception DOES not exist in NY, prior inconsistent stmt can ONLY be used to impeach

Procedure:	For MBE: confrontation timing is FLEXIBLE; not req'd to IMMEDIATELY confront the witness, but after proof by extrinsic evidence, witness must be given an opportunity to explain/deny; BUT no need to give witness opp to explain, IF she is OPPOSING PARTY	For NY: witness MUST be confronted w/ prior inconsistent stmt while she was on stand (and must give specific details about the stmt, i.e. when/where); BUT no need to give witness opp to explain, IF she is OPPOSING PARTY		
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14
Q

How does the “bias, interest or motive to misrepresent” impeachment method work? NOTE: NY Distinction

A

Bias, interest, & motive to misrepresent are all critical issues, so parties can use extrinsic evidence to show Procedure: For MBE, witness MUST be confronted while on stand For NY, confrontation of witness is NOT REQUIRED If confrontation prereq is met (if required), then bias, etc may be proven by extrinsic evidence

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15
Q

How does the “sensory deficiencies” impeachment method work?

A

Anything that can effect witness’s perception OR memory is usable (e.g. bad eyes, bad hearing, being high) Can be proven by extrinsic evidence

		Confrontation is NOT required
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16
Q

How does the “bad reputation/opinion for truthfulness” impeachment method work? NOTE: NY Distinction

A

Bad community reputation OR witness’ opinion that another witness has bad character for truthfulness 1) Confrontation is NOT req’d 2) To bring in extrinsic evidence… Call character witnessto testify abt target witness’s community reputation OR the character witness’s opinion of target witness’s character for truthfulness, butNEVER with specific acts NY DISTINCTION: character witness can ONLY testify abt community reputation (NOT opinion)

17
Q

How does the “criminal conviction” impeachment method work? NOTE: NY Distinction

A

Purpose: to suggest false testimony [NOTE: do NOT confuse these rules of IMPEACHMENT w/ rules governing MIMIC crimes used as SUBSTANTIVE evidence to prove ∆’s gult] Permissible types of convictions: 1) Conviction of ANY crime (felony or misdemeanor)as to which the proscution was REQUIRED to prove FALSE STMT as an element of the crime (e.g. fraud, perjury, etc); PROVIDED conviction/release from prison (whichever later) is ≤ 10 yrs old NOTE: judge has NO discretion TO EXCLUDE once this test is met

2) Conviction of any type of FELONY;PROVIDED conviction/release from prison (whichever later) is ≤ 10 yrs old			NOTE: judge may exclude in his discretion (if there is danger of unfair prejudice vs. probative value)

Method of proof:	1) Ask witness to admit prior conviction; OR	2) Introduce record of conviction as extrinsic evidence (WITHOUT confrontation)	NY DISDINCTION: any witness may be impeached with a conviction for ANY TYPE of crime, REGARDLESS of how OLD the conviction is and WITHOUT balancing probative value vs. unfair prejudice.			EXCEPTION for CRIMINAL ∆s: when a ∆ is testifying as HIS OWN WITNESS, the ct must conduct a hearing to balance the probative value of the conviction vs. unfair prejudice									Factors that make a conviction probative: (i) seriousness of the crime; (ii) crime's relation to trust and deception
						Factors that make a conviction unfairly prejudicial: (i) similarity to the currenly charged offense; (ii) inflamatory nature of conviction (e.g. child molestation)
18
Q

How does the “bad acts w/o conviction” impeachment method work? NOTE: NY Distinction

A

A witness may be asked about a PRIOR BAD ACT if it relates to DECEIT OR DISHONESTY (doesn’t have to be a crime, e.g. lying on a resume) Procedure: ONLY permitted with CONFRONTATION on CROSS examination with good faith basis Whether to allow is in the ct’s DISCRETION

		NOTE: NO EXTRINSIC evidence allowed (Can only ask abt the act and hope that the witness admits it; if not, you MUST move on);Be careful of intersection w/ BIAS impeachment where extrinsic evidence IS admissible

NY DISTINCTION: A witness may be asked abt ANY prior bad act that is viscous, criminal OR immoral (in the ct's discretion) EVEN IF the act does not relate to truthfulness			NOTE: in the prosecution's cross of a CRIMINAL ∆ who is testifying as OWN witness, the ∆ is entitled to a hearingat which the ct will balance probative value (of bad act) vs. danger of unfair prejudice
19
Q

How does the “contradiction” impeachment method work?

A

Contradiction = when cross examiner tries to get witness to admit (thru “confrontation”) that she made a mistake or lied on a previous direct examination (in same trial) NOTE: Extrinsic evidence is NOT allowed when the fact is COLLATERAL (i.e. it has not significant relevance to the case or the witness’s credibility)

20
Q

What are 2 methods a party can use to rehabilitate an impeached witness? NOTE: NY Distinction

A

A witness may be rehabilitated ONLY AFTER the witness’ credibility has been attacked thru impeachment 2 methods to rehabilitate: 1) Showing witness’s good character for truthfulness When: Rehab only for impeachment suggesting witness is lying (NOT just mistaken) E.g., Bad reputation/opinion, criminal conviction, bad acts w/o conviction

		How: Character witness who can testify (using REPUTATION or OPINION evidence)									NY DISTINCTION: character witness can use REPUATION evidence ONLY

2) Prior CONSISTENT statement to rebut charge of recent fabrication			When: If the witness's trial testimony is charged as a recent fabrication (or the product of improper influence), a PRIOR stmt by the witness that's consistent w/ testimony IS ADMISSABLE to rebut IF the stmt was MADE before the motive to fabricate arose									E.g., if the witness said the same thing PRIOR taking a bribe; this is admissable to show that the stmt was not a lie based on improper influence

		Purpose: a prior consistent stmt that fits w/in this rule is ADMISSABLE to rehabiliate credibility AND as substantive evidence that prior stmt was true (not hearsay!)									NY DISTINCTION: admissable ONLY TO rehab (NOT as substantive evidence)
21
Q

NY ONLY: When is a judge allowed to give an adverse inference instruction based on missing witness?

A

An adverse inference instruction allows a jury to draw an unfavorable inference based on a party’s FAILURE to call a witness who would normally be expected to support the party’s version of events In NY this is allowed IF: the witness in question has MATERIAL KNOWLEDGE to the trial;

		the witness was expected to give testimony FAVORABLE to the party against whom the charge is sought (e.g. the witness is an emp and subject to the person's cntrl); AND

		the witness is AVAILABLE to testify