Tuesday, October 29, 2024

For Monday (Double Session)

Tuesday audio. My apologies for not noticing your outfit choices today.

We will spend all of class working through Introduction to Hearsay; prep the full section.

    • What do each of the elements of the hearsay definition mean?

    • What is the difference between a speaker's assertion and a listener's inference? How does that affect whether something falls within the definition of hearsay?

    • What does it mean to be "offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted?" Given the preference for adversary testing as the reason for limiting hearsay, why does drawing the line by whether the statement is offered TMA make sense?

    • Consider: Joe wants to establish that he was in his room, talking on the phone with Chris, at 10 p.m. Two versions; consider whether either or both is offered TMA:

            • Chris testifies that Joe said "I'm sitting in my room in the boardinghouse."

            • Chris testifies that Joe said "I'm sitting here in the dark; the power went out." There was a blackout affecting the street on which the boardinghouse sits.

    • When is a statement not offered TMA, as indicated in the reading? Consider whether the following are TMA: A couple is injured in a car accident; both die. For purposes of probate, the court must determine who died first.

            • To show that wife was alive right after the crash, a witness testifies that he heard the wife say "I'm alive." 

            • To show that wife was alive right after the crash, a witness testifies that he heard the wife say "My husband is dead."

            • To show that husband died first, a witness testifies that he heard the wife say "My husband is dead."

Monday, October 28, 2024

Prelim Exam Sample Answers

After the jump. Note that this is one approach. I grade on analysis not conclusions. So, for example, there may be other permissible 404(b)(2) uses in Question # 3.

For Tuesday

Monday audio.

We continue with Rulings on Evidence. Prep the remaining problems and be ready to work through them, piecing together all the pieces of FRE 103. What is the point of motions in limine?

We should move to the beginning of Hearsay. For tomorrow, prep all the assigned Provisions and the Introductory Note and C&S pp. 25-29 and §§ 5.01-5.03.

    • What is adversary testing of evidence (review notes on witnesses) and what is the problem with hearsay in terms of that?

    • What are the four approaches to hearsay the Committee describes and what are the benefits and drawbacks to each? What approach did the Committee adopt?

    • Note the basic overall structure of the hearsay rules and how the 800 rules fit together.

    • What is hearsay? What is a statement?

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

For Tuesday

Tuesday audio.

Complete and review all of Rulings on Evidence, including the extra statutes. Why make motions in limine (at the outset of litigation)? What are the standards of review and how do they affect the question of whether the district court erred? What is the role of plain error under FRE 103(e)?

I hope to get through this Monday and Tuesday. It is possible we will get to the very beginning of Hearsay late on Tuesday.

Monday, October 21, 2024

For Tuesday

Monday audio.

We continue with Presumptions. Prep Question # 106; for each possibility, think about the role of FRCP 50, who would move and the arguments from each side, and draft the appropriate jury instructions. Imagine the likely element(s) of this claim to recover life-insurance proceeds. In addition, consider the following further events:

    1) Mrs. Young fails to offer evidence of diligent-but-unsuccessful efforts.

    2) Mrs. Young offers evidence that Jerry has been gone for 6 years, she has not received tidings, and she has made diligent efforts.

    3) During trial, the insurance company calls a surprise witness, who takes the stand and identifies himself as Jerry Young.

Prep the remainder of this section, including unenacted FRE 303 on criminal presumptions.

Thursday, October 17, 2024

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

For Monday

Tuesday audio. Prelim Exam due next Tuesday in class.

Prep all of Process, Burdens, and Presumptions. What are presumptions and how do they operate? Why have presumptions--why does the law require the finding of a material fact from certain basic facts? See C&S p. 423 for some common presumptions. Consider how FRCP 50 motions fit into this. What is the purpose of factual presumptions? Work all the possible permutations in Question # 106 (on the death presumption);

Consider the following presumption and how it would work under FRE 301 and FRCP 50: A child born within 300 days of married opposite-sex couple living together as husband and wife shall be presumed to be the product of the marriage.

H sues W for custody and must prove paternity. Consider how the presumption operates on the following:

    1) H offers evidence that they were legally married, living as H&W, and the child was born within 300 days of their living together; W offers no evidence.

    2) H offers evidence that they were living as H&W and the child was born within 300 days, but no evidence they were legally married.

    3) H offers evidence they were legally married but no evidence they were living as H&W.

    4) H offers evidence that they were legally married, living as H&W, and the child was born within 300 days of their living together; W offers evid they were not legally married.

    5) H offers evidence that they were legally married, living as H&W, and the child was born within 300 days of their living together; W offers evidence they were not living as H&W.

    6) H offers evidence that they were legally married, living as H&W, and the child was born within 300 days of their living together; W offers evid that H had vasectomy, DNA evidence showing someone else as father, and evidence of an extra-marital affair.

Preliminary Exam

Instructions. Regular type. Large type.

Monday, October 14, 2024

For Tuesday

Monday audio. Prelim Exam drops at 12:30 Tuesday, October 15; due in class on Tuesday, October 22. Instructions here.

We turn to Trial Process, Burdens of Proof, and Presumptions. Prep FRCP 50, FRCrP 29, Problems 103-104, and C&S pp. 5-11 and § 12.1. Again, you may want to review your Civ Pro notes/outline on burden of persuasion and burden of production; we will cover a lot of that territory, but as applied to a trial.

    • What is the burden of persuasion? What are the standards of persuasion and what does each mean?

    • What does it mean to meet and to shift the burden of production? How does the burden of production play out in trial?

Sunday, October 13, 2024

Preliminary Exam Information

Evidence

Preliminary Examination

Professor Howard Wasserman

FIU College of Law

Fall 2024

Format:

This Preliminary Examinationwill be administered over one week. It will be available to see and download beginning at 12:30 p.m. on Tuesday, October 15 from the blog (fiuevidence.blogspot.com). It is due, in hard copy, at the beginning of class on Tuesday, October 22.

The exam consists of five (5) Short-Answer Essays. Four (4) questions are worth twenty (20) points and you may write up to 500 words. One (1) question is worth thirty (30) points and you may write up to 750 words. The exam is worth 110 points towards your final grade.

The first page of your exam answer must be a cover page containing your Blind ID #; begin your answers on the second page. Please staple the pages (no paper clips or binder clips).

Each answer must include the word count for that answer, as described below. Two (2) points will be deducted from any answer not followed by a word count.

 

Please begin each answer on a new page.

 

Once the exam becomes available, you may not discuss it, the questions, the answers, or anything about it—in any oral, written, non-verbal conduct intended as an assertion, or other form—with your classmates, me, any faculty member, your friends, your family, strangers, pets, extra-terrestrials, inanimate objects, or anyone in the known universe. Please respect your classmates, yourself, me, and the legal profession by adhering to this rule.

Tuesday, October 8, 2024

For Monday

Tuesday audio.

For Monday, finish all of Impeachment, covering PIS and Review. We might finish this on Monday but certainly will at the beginning of class on Tuesday.

The Prelim Exam will post at 12:30 p.m. next Tuesday, October 15, due at the beginning of class on Tuesday, October 22.

 

Monday, October 7, 2024

For Tuesday

Monday audio. My hope is that we will finish Impeachment next Tuesday (Oct. 15), in which case the Prelim Exam will be posted that afternoon and due on Oct. 22. We have one class to make-up, which we will do on Monday, November 4.

Prep the remaining sections of Impeachment: Character and PIS.

We will begin with the last step in the 608 process involving Tom, Ira, and Andrew. Spend some time on the structure of the pieces of FRE 608 and how this impeachment operates. Consider ## 75, 76, 78, and 79 together as different paths on the same issue; we will go through it in a slightly different order. Consider who each witness in the problems corresponds to. What must the proponent show to admit a specific instance of conduct under 608(b) and which rule (104(a) or (b)) guides that? What sorts of acts are probative of truthfulness or untruthfulness? What is the inference at work in FRE 609? What is the order for analyzing FRE 609(a), in terms of the elements to consider and when? Work the rule.

What is the difference between contradiction and prior inconsistent statement? Given FRE 613, why might the difference matter? Does FRE 613(b) prohibit extrinsic evidence of a prior inconsistent statement? Consider the collateral/non-collateral line as you work those problems.

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

For Monday

Tuesday audio. Shana Tova to all who celebrate.

Prep the problems for Introduction to Impeachment, then move to Character, Bias. As you go through them, get precise as to which aspect of credibility you are talking about, whether it is collateral or non-collateral, and how to prove it (extrinsic or non-extrinsic or both). Note the overlap and the possible movement between categories.

Quick points of clarification:

1) Non-extrinsic evidence is the target witness' testimony--what the witness says in response to a question asked by the attorney. So if you ask a target witness "isn't it true that you said Y in the past?" and the witness says "yes," that is testimony, and thus non-extrinsic evidence, impeaching by prior inconsistent statement. If you ask a target witness "isn't it true that you have cataracts and were not wearing your glasses?" and the witness says "yes," that is testimony, and thus non-extrinsic evidence, impeaching by perception.

2) The prior inconsistent statement used to impeach is something that the witness said off the stand in the current case. It is not inconsistency within the testimony given in the current case. It is inconsistency with what he says on the stand and what he has said off the stand at some other time.