Hearsay Flashcards

1
Q

Hearsay and prop 8

A
  • note: hearsay exempt from Prop 8, and thus must fall under a hearsay exception to be admitted;
  • §352 balancing still required
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Not-for-truth purposes

A
  1. FREv rules apply
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Hearsay exceptions list in CA

A

• CA does not have exemptions, only exceptions

prior statements of a testifying witness, party opponent statements,

Unavailable declarants: prior testimony of unavalable witness, declarations against interest, dying declaration, statement describing infliction or threat of physical abuse, statement of mental or physical state in issue

Reliable testimony exceptions
present sense impressions, excited utterances, present state of mind, medical treatment or diagnosis, past recollection recorded, records of regularly conducted activity, absence of business records public records, absence of public records, ancient documents exception, learned treatise exception, judgment of conviction

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Prior Statements of a Testifying Witness

A
  1. prior inconsistent statements
    i. FREv: not hearsay and admissible for truth if made in under oath subject to cross
    ii. CA: prior inconsistents statements of a witness are always admissible
    a. hearsay, but admissible for truth regardless of if given under oath
    b. there is a broad admissibility exception in CA for prior inconsistent statements of a witness now testifying at trial
    iii. admissible to impeach in both (see impeachment)
  2. prior consistent statements
    i. CA: same analysis, but called hearsay and admissible under an exception in CA
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Party Opponent Statements

A
  1. FREv: not hearsay
  2. CA: is hearsay but is admissible
  3. vicarious admission: the statements of certain other parties
    i. FREv: includes employee statements made within scope of employment while employee
    ii. but in CA: only in respondeat superior cases
    a. employee’s words admissible against employee only when that employee’s negligence is the basis for employer’s liability under respondeat superior
    iii. both allow authorized spokespersons speaking within scope of delegated authority
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Unavailable declarant exceptions – what makes someone unavailable

A

i. FREv: invokes privilege, refuses to testify, cannot remember event in question, dead, or absent and cannot be compelled to appear

ii. CA:
a. refusal to testify is not unavailability, requires refusal to testify out of fear
b. failure of memory is not unavailability, requires total memory loss

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Unavailable declarant exception– prior testimony of unavailable witness

A

i. FREv:
a. testimony made under oath and subject to comparable cross-examination
b. same subject matter as former action
c. in criminal cases– the parties must be the same
d. declarant was cross-examined by predecessor in interest (requires privity) with a similar motive and opportunity to develop the testimony (Federal only)

ii. CA:
a. made under oath
b. same subject matter
c. and either:
i) identity of parties or declarant is a successor in interest, or
ii) in civil cases, a similar motive and opportunity to develop the testimony

iii. summary:
a. in addition to made under oath:
b. FREv:
i) civil: same SM + oath + similar motive and opportunity
ii) criminal: same SM + oath + similar motive and opportunity + identity
c. CA:
i) civil: same SM + oath + (1) similar motive and opportunity, predecessor, identity
ii) criminal: same SM + oath + (1) predecessor or identity

iv. additional CA law: in the civil case in which the hearsay is offered, deposition testimony is admissible for all purposes if the deponent is unavailable or lives > 150 miles from the courthouse
a. otherwise, the prior testimony exception does not apply to that deposition testimony

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Unavailable declarant exception: declaration against interest

A

i. FREv:
a. must be against penal, proprietary or financial interests
b. ∆ must reasonably believe it was against their interest
c. single remark
d. corroborating circumstances indicating reliability required for criminal cases

ii. CA:
a. can also be against social interests (because they make declarant an object of hatred, ridicule, or social disgrace in the community)
b. no corroborating evidence indicating reliability required for criminal cases

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Unavailable witness: dying declaration

A

i. CA: the declarant has to actually die

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Unavailable witness: statement describing infliction or threat of physical abuse

A

i. CA ONLY: no FREv counterpart, but similar to present sense impression

ii. requirements
a. description or explanation of infliction or threat
b. made at or near time of injury or threat, by unavailable declarant
c. in writing, recorded, or made to police or medical professional, under trustworthy circumstances

iii. may be testimonial (if made to police for litigation, and not just to deal with emergency), so watch for Confrontation clause

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Unavailable witness: statement of mental or phsyical state in issue

A

i. CA ONLY: no FREv counterpart
a. similar to state of mind, but requires the state to be in issue

ii. CA only: statement of unavailable declarant’s past physical or mental condition, including statement of intent, admissible to prove that condition if it is in issue
a. no requirement that statement be made for medical purposes

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Reliable testimony exceptions: present sense impressons

A

i. FREv: contemporaneous description or explanation of event or condition

ii. CA is narrower: narrower: contemporaneous explanation of declarant’s conduct
a. can only describe the declarant’s conduct, not anyone else
b. could use statement describing threat or infliction of physical abuse, but watch out for Confrontation issue

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Reliable testimony exceptions: Excited utterances

A

i. same as FREv

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Reliable testimony exceptions:: present state of mind

A

i. same as FREv

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Reliable testimony exceptions: medical treatment or diagnosis

A

i. FREv: statements pertinent to treatment or diagnosis are generally admissible
ii. CA is narrower: statements of past or present physical condition for treatment or diagnosis, but only if declarant is a minor describing an act of child abuse or neglect
iii. CA only: could use unavailable declarant’s’ statement of present mental or physical state in issue (no requirement that statement be made for medical purpose)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Reliable testimony exceptions: past recollection recorded

A

i. same as FREv

17
Q

Reliable testimony exceptions: records of regularly conducted activity

A

i. FREv
a. made at or near time of matters describe
b. by person with knowledge of the facts
c. regular practice of business to make such record
d. court discretion to exclude if untrustworthy

ii. CA: same, but CAC does not refer to opinions or diagnoses in business records, but caselaw allows simple opinions and diagnoses (simple is unclear)

18
Q

Reliable testimony exceptions: absence of business records

A

i. same as FREv

19
Q

Reliable testimony exceptions: public records

A

i. FREv:
a. (administrative) routine recordings of office activity: admissible
b. (factual) observations pursuant to duty to report: inadmissible in criminal cases if made by law enforcement personnel and is ambiguous or adversarial
c. (investigative) findings by public official pursuant to official investigation: inadmissible in criminal cases
d. + trustworthiness clause

ii. CA is broad: admissibility just requires official + timely + trustworthy
a. admissible if made by a public employee, within scope of duties, at or near the time of matters, and circumstances indicate trustworthiness
b. but possible Confrontation clause issue (ex. police reports)

20
Q

Reliable testimony exceptions: absence of public records

A

i. same as FREv

21
Q

Reliable testimony exceptions: ancient documents exception

A

i. requires more than 30 years old

ii. same as FREv

22
Q

Reliable testimony exceptions:learned treatise exception

A

i. CA is narrow: learned treatise is only admissible to show matters of general interest
a. almost never applicable: never need esoteric books to prove facts of general interest

23
Q

Reliable testimony exceptions: judgment of conviction

A

i. FREv: felony convictions are admissible to prove any material facts therein, but only against the accused except for impeachment

ii. CA: only applies in civil cases
a. Prop 8 does not affect hearsay
b. but a certified copy of the judgment may be acceptable under the public records exception