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Evidence (law)

 

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Evidence (law)



 
 
The law
LAW

LAW may refer to:* Anti-tank warfare, e.g. the US Army M72 LAW or the British Army LAW 80*Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights ...
 of evidence governs the use of testimony
Testimony

In law and in religion, testimony is a solemn attestation as to the truth of a matter....
 (e.g., oral or written statements, such as an affidavit
Affidavit

An affidavit is a formal Oath, signed by the declarant and witnessed by a taker of oaths, such as a notary public. The name is Medieval Latin for he has declared upon oath....
) and exhibit
Exhibit (Legal)

An exhibit, in a Criminal Law prosecution or a civil trial, is physical evidence or documentary evidence brought before the jury. The artifact or document itself is presented for the jury's inspection....
s (e.g., physical objects) or other documentary material which is admissible (i.e., allowed to be considered by the trier of fact
Trier of fact

A trier of fact is a person who determines Question of facts in a legal proceeding. To determine a fact is to decide, from the evidence, whether something existed or some event occurred....
, such as jury
Jury

A jury is a sworn body of people convened to render a rationalism, impartiality verdict officially submitted to them by a court, or to set a sentence or judgment....
) in a judicial or administrative proceeding
Dispute resolution

Dispute resolution is the process of resolving disputes between party ....
 (e.g., a court
Court

A court is a body, often a government institution, with the authority to adjudication legal disputes and dispense private law, criminal justice, or administrative law justice in accordance with rules of law....
 of law).

l scholars of the Anglo-American tradition, but not only that tradition, have long regarded evidence as being of central importance to the law.

In every jurisdiction based on the English common law tradition, evidence must conform to a number of rules and restrictions to be admissible.






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The law
LAW

LAW may refer to:* Anti-tank warfare, e.g. the US Army M72 LAW or the British Army LAW 80*Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights ...
 of evidence governs the use of testimony
Testimony

In law and in religion, testimony is a solemn attestation as to the truth of a matter....
 (e.g., oral or written statements, such as an affidavit
Affidavit

An affidavit is a formal Oath, signed by the declarant and witnessed by a taker of oaths, such as a notary public. The name is Medieval Latin for he has declared upon oath....
) and exhibit
Exhibit (Legal)

An exhibit, in a Criminal Law prosecution or a civil trial, is physical evidence or documentary evidence brought before the jury. The artifact or document itself is presented for the jury's inspection....
s (e.g., physical objects) or other documentary material which is admissible (i.e., allowed to be considered by the trier of fact
Trier of fact

A trier of fact is a person who determines Question of facts in a legal proceeding. To determine a fact is to decide, from the evidence, whether something existed or some event occurred....
, such as jury
Jury

A jury is a sworn body of people convened to render a rationalism, impartiality verdict officially submitted to them by a court, or to set a sentence or judgment....
) in a judicial or administrative proceeding
Dispute resolution

Dispute resolution is the process of resolving disputes between party ....
 (e.g., a court
Court

A court is a body, often a government institution, with the authority to adjudication legal disputes and dispense private law, criminal justice, or administrative law justice in accordance with rules of law....
 of law).

Relevance and social policy

Legal scholars of the Anglo-American tradition, but not only that tradition, have long regarded evidence as being of central importance to the law.

In every jurisdiction based on the English common law tradition, evidence must conform to a number of rules and restrictions to be admissible. Evidence must be relevant
Relevance (law)

Relevance, in the common law of evidence , is the tendency of a given item of evidence to prove or disprove one of the legal elements of the case, or to have probative value to make one of the elements of the case likelier or not....
 that is, it must directed at proving or disproving a legal element.

However, the relevance of evidence is ordinarily a necessary condition but not a sufficient condition for the admissibility of evidence. For example, relevant evidence may be excluded if it is unfairly prejudicial, confusing, or cumulative. Furthermore, a variety of social policies operate to exclude relevant evidence. Thus, there are limitations on the use of evidence of liability insurance
Liability insurance

Liability insurance is a part of the general insurance system of risk financing. Originally, individuals or companies that faced a common peril, formed a group and created a self-help fund out of which to pay compensation should any member incur loss....
, subsequent remedial measures, settlement offer
Settlement offer

A settlement offer or offer to settle is a term used in a civil action to describe a communication from one party to the other suggesting a settlement - an agreement to end the lawsuit before a judgment is rendered....
s, and plea negotiations, mainly because it is thought that the use of such evidence discourages parties from carrying insurance, fixing hazardous conditions, offering to settle, and pleading guilty to crimes, respectively.

The question of how the relevance or irrelevance of evidence is to be determined has been the subject of a vast amount of discussion in the last 100-200 years. There is now a consensus among legal scholars and judges in the U.S. that the relevance or irrelevance of evidence cannot be determined by syllogistic reasoning if-then logic alone. There is also general agreement that assessment of relevance or irrelevance involves or requires judgments about probabilities or uncertainties. Beyond that, there is little agreement. Many legal scholars and judges agree that ordinary reasoning, or common sense reasoning, plays an important role. There is less agreement about whether or not judgments of relevance or irrelevance are defensible only if the reasoning that supports such judgments is made fully explicit. However, most trial judges would reject any such requirement and would say that some judgments can and must rest in part on unarticulated and unarticulable hunches and intuitions. However, there is general (though implicit) agreement that the relevance of at least some types of expert evidence particularly evidence from the hard sciences requires particularly rigorous, or in any event more arcane reasoning than is usually needed or expected. There is a general agreement that judgments of relevance are largely within the discretion of the trial court although relevance rulings that lead to the exclusion of evidence are more likely to be reversed on appeal than are relevance rulings that lead to the admission of evidence.

Under the Federal Rules of Evidence
Federal Rules of Evidence

The Federal Rules of Evidence govern the admission of facts by which parties in the federal courts of the United States may prove their cases. They were the product of protracted academic, legislative, and judicial examination before they were formally promulgated in 1975....
 (FRE) Rule 401: "Relevant evidence" means evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.

Federal Rule 403 allows relevant evidence to be excluded if its probative
Probative

Probative is a term used in law to signify "tending to prove." Probative evidence "seeks the truth". Generally in law, evidence that is not probative , or doesn't prove anything, is inadmissible and may be stricken from the record "if objected to by opposing counsel." A balancing test may come in to the picture if the value of the evidence n...
 value is substantially outweighed by danger of unfair prejudice, confusing or misleading the jury or waste of the court's time. California Evidence Code section 352 also allows for exclusion to avoid "substantial danger of undue prejudice." For example, evidence that the victim of a car accident was apparently a "liar, cheater, womanizer, and a man of low morals" was unduly prejudicial and irrelevant to whether he had a valid product liability
Product liability

Product liability is the area of law in which manufacturers, distributors, suppliers, retailers, and others who make products available to the public are held responsible for the injuries those products cause....
 claim against the manufacturer of the tires on his van (which had rolled over resulting in severe brain damage).

Presence or absence of a jury

The United States of America has a very complicated system of evidentiary rules; for example, John Wigmore's celebrated treatise on it filled ten volumes. James Bradley Thayer
James Bradley Thayer

James Bradley Thayer United States legal writer and educationist.Born at Haverhill, Massachusetts, he graduated at Harvard College in 1852, and at the Harvard Law School in 1856, in which year he was admitted to the bar of Suffolk County, Massachusetts and began to practice in Boston....
 reported in 1898 that even English lawyers were surprised by the complexity of American evidence law, such as its reliance on exceptions to preserve evidentiary objections for appeal.

Some legal experts, notably Stanford legal historian Lawrence Friedman, have argued that the complexity of American evidence law arises from two factors: (1) the right of American defendants to have findings of fact made by a jury in practically all criminal cases as well as many civil cases; and (2) the widespread consensus that tight limitations on the admissibility of evidence are necessary to prevent a jury of untrained laypersons from being swayed by irrelevant distractions. In Professor Friedman's words: "A trained judge would not need all these rules; and indeed, the law of evidence in systems that lack a jury is short, sweet, and clear."

However, some respected observers disagree with the commonplace thesis that the institution of trial by jury is the main reason for the existence of rules of evidence even in countries such as the United States and Australia; they argue that other variables are at work.

Exclusion of evidence


Unfairness

Under English
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
 and Welsh
Wales

native_name = Cymru|conventional_long_name = Wales|common_name = Wales|image_flag = Flag of Wales 2.svg|national_motto = ...
 law, evidence that would otherwise be admissible at trial may be excluded at the discretion of the trial judge if it would be unfair to the defendant to admit it.

Evidence of a confession may be excluded because it was obtained by oppression or because the confession was made in consequence of anything said or done to the defendant that would be likely to make the confession unreliable. In these circumstances, it would be open to the trial judge to exclude the evidence of the confession under Section 78(1) of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984
Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984

The Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 is an Act of Parliament which instituted a legislative framework for the powers of police officers in England and Wales to combat crime, as well as providing codes of practice for the exercise of those powers....
 (PACE), or under Section 73 PACE, or under common law, although in practice the confession would be excluded under section 76 PACE.

Other admissible evidence may be excluded, at the discretion of the trial judge under 78 PACE, or at common law, if the judge can be persuaded that having regard to all the circumstances including how the evidence was obtained “admission of the evidence would have such an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the court ought not to admit it."

Authentication

Certain kinds of evidence, such as documentary evidence, are subject to the requirement that the offeror provide the trial judge with a certain amount of evidence (which need not be much and it need not be very strong) suggesting that the offered item of tangible evidence (e.g., a document, a gun) is what the offeror claims it is. The authentication requirement has bite primarily in jury trials. If evidence of authenticity is lacking in a bench trial, the trial judge will simply dismiss the evidence as unpersuasive or irrelevant.

Witnesses

In systems of proof based on the English common law tradition, almost all evidence must be sponsored by a witness
Witness

A witness is someone who has firsthand knowledge about a crime or dramatic event through their senses , and can help certify important considerations to the crime or event....
, who has sworn or solemnly affirmed to tell the truth. The bulk of the law of evidence regulates the types of evidence that may be sought from witnesses and the manner in which the interrogation of witnesses is conducted during direct examination
Direct examination

The Direct Examination or Examination-in-Chief is one stage in the process of adducing evidence from witnesses in a court of law. Direct examination is the questioning of a witness by the party who called him or her, in a trial ....
 and cross-examination
Cross-examination

In law, cross-examination is the interrogation of a witness called by one's opponent. It is preceded by direct examination and may be followed by a Redirect examination ....
 of witnesses. Other types of evidentiary rules specify the standards of persuasion (e.g., proof beyond a reasonable doubt) that a trier of fact such as a jury must apply when it assesses evidence.

Today all persons are presumed to be qualified to serve as witnesses in trials and other legal proceedings, and all persons are also presumed to have a legal obligation to serve as witnesses if their testimony is sought. However, legal rules sometimes exempt people from the obligation to give evidence and legal rules disqualify people from serving as witnesses under some circumstances.

Privilege
Privilege (evidence)

Under common law, privilege is a term describing a number of rules excluding evidence that would be adverse to a fundamental principle or relationship if it were disclosed....
 rules give the holder of the privilege a right to prevent a witness from giving testimony. These privileges are ordinarily (but not always) designed to protect socially valued types of confidential communications. Some of the privileges that are often recognized are the marital secrets privilege
Spousal privilege

The spousal privilege, in the United States of America, comprises two separate privileges, the marital confidences privilege and the spousal testimonial privilege....
, the adverse spousal testimony privilege
Spousal privilege

The spousal privilege, in the United States of America, comprises two separate privileges, the marital confidences privilege and the spousal testimonial privilege....
, the attorney-client privilege
Attorney-client privilege

Attorney-client privilege is a legal concept that protects communications between a client and his or her Lawyer and keeps those communications confidential....
, the doctor-patient privilege, the psychotherapist-patient and counselor-patient privilege, the state secrets privilege
State Secrets Privilege

The State Secrets Privilege is an Evidence created by United States legal precedent. The court is asked to exclude evidence from a legal case based solely on an affidavit submitted by the government stating court proceedings might disclose sensitive information which might endanger national security, and military secrets in particular as in...
 and the clergy-penitent privilege. A variety of additional privileges are recognized in different jurisdictions, but the list of recognized privileges varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction; for example, some jurisdictions recognize a social worker-client privilege and other jurisdictions do not.

Witness competence
Competence (law)

In American law, competence concerns the mental capacity of an individual to participate in legal proceedings. Defendants that do not possess sufficient "competence" are usually excluded from Crime prosecution, while witnesses found not to possess requisite competence cannot testify....
 rules are legal rules that specify circumstances under which persons are ineligible to serve as witnesses. For example, neither a judge nor a juror is competent to testify in a trial in which they are serving in that capacity; and in jurisdictions with a dead man statute
Dead man statute

A dead man statute is a statute designed to prevent perjury in a civil case by prohibiting a witness who is an interested party from testifying about communications or transactions with a decedent unless there is a waiver....
, a person is deemed not competent to testify as to statements of or transactions with a deceased opposing party.

Hearsay

Hearsay
Hearsay

Not to be confused with heresy.Hearsay literally means information gathered by the first person from a second person concerning some event, condition, or thing of which the first person had no direct experience....
 is one of the largest and most complex areas of the law of evidence in common-law jurisdictions. The default rule is that hearsay evidence is inadmissible. Hearsay is an out of court statement offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted. A party is offering a statement to prove the truth of the matter asserted if the party is trying to prove that the assertion made by the declarant (the maker of the pretrial statement) is true. For example, prior to trial Bob says, "Jane went to the store." If the party offering this statement as evidence at trial is trying to prove that Jane actually went to the store, the statement is being offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted. However, at both common law and under evidence codifications such as the Federal Rules of Evidence
Federal Rules of Evidence

The Federal Rules of Evidence govern the admission of facts by which parties in the federal courts of the United States may prove their cases. They were the product of protracted academic, legislative, and judicial examination before they were formally promulgated in 1975....
, there are dozens of exclusions from and exceptions to the hearsay rule.

Circumstantial evidence

Evidence of an indirect nature which implies the existence of the main fact
Fact

A fact is something said to be true or supposed to have happened, example: Kiira is mean, FACT. An idea becomes a fact after competent people have tested a hypothesis through the scientific method....
 in question but does not in itself prove it. That is, the existence of the main fact is deduced from the indirect or circumstantial evidence by a process of probable reason
Reason

Reason may refer to Mind#Mental faculties that consciously create explanations in order to judge, decide, solve problems, generalize, and give examples, among other activities....
ing. The introduction of a defendant's fingerprint
Fingerprint

A fingerprint is an impression of the friction ridges of all part of the finger. A friction ridge is a raised portion of the epidermis on the palmar or digits or plantar skin, consisting of one or more connected ridge units of friction ridge skin....
s or DNA sample are examples of circumstantial evidence. The fact that a defendant had a motive to commit a crime is circumstantial evidence.

Some people believe that all evidence is circumstantial because some observers think (and some thoughtful judges agree) no evidence ever directly proves a fact.

Evidence that the defendant lied

Lies, on their own, are not sufficient evidence of a crime. However, lies may indicate that the defendant knows he is guilty, and the prosecution may rely on the fact that the defendant has lied alongside other evidence.

Burdens of proof

Different types of proceedings require parties to meet different burdens of proof, the typical examples being beyond a reasonable doubt, clear and convincing evidence, and preponderance of the evidence. Many jurisdictions have burden-shifting provisions, which require that if one party produces evidence tending to prove a certain point, the burden shifts to the other party to produce superior evidence tending to disprove it.

One special category of information in this area includes things of which the court may take judicial notice
Judicial notice

Judicial notice is a rule in the law of evidence that allows a fact to be introduced into evidence if the truth of that fact is so notorious or well known that it cannot be refuted....
. This category covers matters that are so well known that the court may deem them proven without the introduction of any evidence. For example, if a defendant is alleged to have illegally transported goods across a state line by driving them from Boston to Los Angeles
Los Ángeles

Los ?ngeles is the Capital of the Biob?o Province, in the municipality of the same name, in Regions of Chile VIII , in the center-south of Chile....
, the court may take judicial notice of the fact that it is impossible to drive from Boston to Los Angeles without crossing a number of state lines. In a civil case, where the court takes judicial notice of the fact, that fact is deemed conclusively proven. In a criminal case, however, the defense may always submit evidence to rebut a point for which judicial notice has been taken.

Evidentiary rules stemming from other areas of law

Some rules that affect the admissibility of evidence are nonetheless considered to belong to other areas of law. These include the exclusionary rule
Exclusionary rule

The exclusionary rule is a legal principle in the United States, under United States constitutional law, which holds that Evidence collected or analyzed in violation of the Defendant constitutional rights is sometimes Admissible evidence for a criminal prosecution in a Court....
 of criminal procedure
Criminal procedure

'Criminal procedure' refers to the legal process for adjudication claims that someone has violated criminal law....
, which prohibits the admission in a criminal trial of evidence gained by unconstitutional means, and the parol evidence rule
Parol evidence rule

The parol evidence rule is the legal application of a rule of substantive law in contract cases that prevents a party to a written contract from contradicting the terms of the contract by seeking the admission of evidence "extrinsic" to the contract....
 of contract law, which prohibits the admission of extrinsic evidence of the contents of a written contract.

Evidence as an area of study

In countries that follow the civil law system, evidence is normally studied as a branch of procedural law
Procedural law

Procedural law comprises the rule by which a court hears and determines what happens in civil procedure lawsuit or criminal procedure wikt:proceedings....
.

Nevertheless, because of its importance to the practice of law, all American law school
Law school

A law school is an institution specializing in legal education....
s offer a course in evidence, and most require the subject either as a first year class, or as an upper-level class, or as a prerequisite to later courses. Furthermore, evidence is heavily tested on the Multistate Bar Examination
Multistate Bar Examination

The Multistate Bar Examination is a six-hour, two-hundred multiple-choice question examination administered as a part of the bar examination in almost all jurisdictions of the United States....
 ("MBE") - of the 200 multiple choice
Multiple choice

Multiple choice is a form of assessment in which respondents are asked to select one or more choices from a list. The multiple choice format is most frequently used in educational testing, in market research, and in elections-- when a person chooses between multiple candidates, Political party, or policies....
 questions asked in that test, approximately one sixth will be in the area of evidence. The MBE predominantly tests evidence under the Federal Rules of Evidence
Federal Rules of Evidence

The Federal Rules of Evidence govern the admission of facts by which parties in the federal courts of the United States may prove their cases. They were the product of protracted academic, legislative, and judicial examination before they were formally promulgated in 1975....
, giving little attention to matters for which state law is likely to be inconsistent.

See also

  • Burden of proof
    Burden of proof

    The burden of proof is the obligation to shift the assumed conclusion away from an oppositional opinion to one's own position . The burden of proof may only be fulfilled by evidence....
  • Expert witness
    Expert witness

    An expert witness or professional witness is a witness, who by virtue of education, training, skill, or experience, is believed to have knowledge in a particular subject beyond that of the average person, sufficient that others may officially rely upon the witness's specialized opinion about an evidence or fact issue within the scope...
  • Hearsay
    Hearsay

    Not to be confused with heresy.Hearsay literally means information gathered by the first person from a second person concerning some event, condition, or thing of which the first person had no direct experience....
  • Falsified evidence
    Falsified evidence

    Falsified evidence, forged evidence or tainted evidence or misleading by suppressing evidence unfavourable for the police/prosecution, is used to either convict an innocent person, or to guarantee conviction of a guilty person....
  • Ultimate issue
    Ultimate issue (law)

    An ultimate issue in criminal law is a legal issue at stake in the prosecution of a crime for which an expert witness is providing testimony....
  • Spectral evidence
    Spectral evidence

    Spectral evidence was a form of evidence, accepted in court during the Salem Witch Trials, that was based upon dreams and vision . Spectral evidence was admitted at the Salem witch trials by the appointed chief justice, William Stoughton ....
     (testimony about ghosts or apparitions)
  • Evidence under Bayes theorem
    Evidence under Bayes theorem

    Among evidence scholars, the study of evidence in recent decades has become broadly interdisciplinary, incorporating insights from psychology, feminism, economics, and probability theory....
  • Direct Evidence
    Direct evidence

    Direct evidence is testimony/other proof which expressly or straight-forwardly proves the existence of a fact. It is different from circumstantial evidence, which is evidence that, without going directly to prove the existence of a fact, gives rise to a logical inference that such fact does exist....
  • Forensic animation
    Forensic animation

    Forensic animation is a branch of forensic science in which audio-visual recreations of incidents or accidents are created to aid investigators....
  • Adverse inference
    Adverse inference

    Adverse inference is a Law inference, adverse to the concerned party, drawn from silence or absence of requested Evidence . It is part of evidence codes based on common law in various countries....


External links

  • Dead Link