EVIDENCE: SOURCES, OBJECTIVES AND TRIAL CONTEXT

Course: Evidence

Professor: Colleen Smith

Date: Spring 2012

  1. Law of Evidence:
  2. Three types of rules:
  3. Rules of Process
  4. Rules of Admissibility
  5. Rules of Reasoning
  6. Applies anytime facts in disputes: trial, prelim trial, sentencing hearing, Charter app, etc.
  7. Sources of Law of Evidence
  8. Common Law (most of evidence law lies here)
  9. Statutes (not code, but supplements common law)
  10. CEA – governs CC and Fed jurisdiction – incorporates BCEA provisions through s.40
  11. BCEA – governs BC– applies
  12. Aboriginal Law (oral histories admissible in ab law matters)
  13. Constitution
  14. Objectives of Evidence Law
  15. Truth
  16. Fairness
  17. Social & structural values
  1. Basic Principle: All evidence that is relevant to a fact in issue is admissible, unless there is a legal reason for excluding it. (R v. Seaboyer, R v. Watson)
  1. Relevance and Materiality(R v. Collins)

Two elements of relevance:

  1. Factual/Logical Relevance: Evidence is relevant, if as a matter of logic and experience, it tends to prove the proposition for which it is advanced
  2. Legal Relevance (Materiality): Evidence is material if it is directed at a fact in issue in the case
  3. depends on nature of the action:

crim- look at elements of offence

civil- look at pleadings

  1. Grounds for Excluding Relevant Evidence
  2. Potential to distort the fact-finding process (unreliable or prejudicial)
  3. Would unnecessarily prolong trial or confuse issues (eg. Collateral facts)
  4. Undermine an important value other than fact-finding (eg. Fairness, privilege, Charter rights)
  5. Probative value of the evidence outweighed by its prejudicial effect (eg. personal facts invoke sympathies that lead to improper reasoning)
  6. Process
  7. Is the evidence logically relevant?
  8. Is the evidence legally relevant (material)?
  9. Is there a legal reason to exclude the evidence?
  10. Does the prejudicial effect of the evidence outweigh its probative value?
  11. Admissibility vs. Weight
  12. Admissibility – Whether a piece of evidence is included. Q of law decided by the judge.
  13. Weight – The significance attached to admitted evidence. Q for trier of facts.
  1. Trends in Evidence Law
  2. Purposive approach – move from pigeon holes to fundamental principles (eg. hearsay, corroboration & unsavoury witnesses, move from Collins to Grant test)
  3. Development of overarching exclusionary discretion (PV v. PE, similar facts rule)
  4. Increased admissibility – modern jury viewed as intelligent and trustworthy – comes along w giving better jury instructions
  5. Eg. more witnesses deemed competent than in past (spouses, convicts, children)
  6. Flexible approach to best evidence rule
  7. Flexibility as to meaning of “community” in general rep evidence

The Trial Process

  1. Evidence Put Before Trier of Fact Through:
  2. Witnesses
  3. Exhibits
  4. Real evidence (eg. crime site, body or item of clothing “in situ”, videos, docs)
  5. Demonstrative evidence – helps ToF to better understand what happened (eg. sketches of scene, photos of scene after the fact, objects not “in situ,” re-enactments)
  6. Admissions – made by parties about certain facts
  7. Judicial Notice – court may take JN of notorious facts
  8. Elements of Trial
  9. Crown of Plaintiff’s Case in Chief
  10. Opening statement – roadmap for evidence and case
  11. Witnesses
  • Direct examination – no leading questions; Qs must be relevant
  • Cross examination – Qs may be leading or not; clarifying matters; undermining credibility “the best engine for the discovery of truth
  • Re-direct – Crown/P may ask further Qs after cross; chance to address matters that arose in cross which could not be reasonably expected

(dangerous and limited)

  1. Crown/P case closes
  1. Motions for a Directed Verdict –D asks court to rule that Crown/P has not proven case

(see issues of proof)

  1. Defence’s Case in Chief
  2. Same process as Crown/P
  3. Crown/Plaintiff can reopen - discretionary procedure only if something has come up that needs to be addressed and that P couldn’t have anticipated and needs a chance to respond  D then gets another chance to respond to that
  4. Closing Statements
  5. Criminal Trial: If D called evidence, D goes first. Otherwise Crown goes first.
  6. Civil Trial: P closes first, then D.
  7. Closings only done for a jury in Canada
  8. Judge’s Instructions to Jury
  9. Jury deliberations
  10. Verdict
  11. Sentencing
  1. Verdict

ISSUES OF PROOF

  1. Burden and Standard of Proof
  2. Burden –Who has the obligation to satisfy the ToF on the factual matter at issue?
  3. Standard – degree to which party must convince ToF in order to discharge the burden
  1. Evidentiary and Persuasive Burdens
  2. The persuasive burden of proof is on the party who, in law, is required to establish the relevant facts to proceed  final test of evidence

a.Civil - must establish cause of action on balance of probabilities

b.Crim - must establish guilt beyond reasonable doubt

  1. The evidentiary burden is on the party whose duty it is to raise the issue.

a.A party under an evidentiary burden must adduce or point to some relevant evidence capable of supporting a decision in the party’s favour on an issue before that issue can go to the ToF  threshold test of evidence

b.This burden is not necessarily on the same party as the persuasive burden.

Burden and Degree of Proof in CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS

  1. Proof Beyond a Reasonable Doubt

a.Golden thread in English criminal law is presumption of innocence and requirement of proof BRD – high standard to avoid wrongful conviction

b.Charter s.11(d): Any person charged with an offence has the right...to be presumed innocent until proven guilty according to law in a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal

c.BRD does not require absolute certainty. Must be a real doubt based on evidence and reason, not an imaginary doubt (R v. Lifchus)

  1. Proof BRD and Jury Charges
  2. The onus upon the Crown to prove the guilt of the accused BRD is inextricably linked to the presumption of innocence. If the jury charge is lacking in this respect, the trial must be lacking in fairness. Must have proper instruction of the jury for the trial to be fair. (Lifchus)
  3. Judge should tell jury(R v. Lifchus):
  • BRD intertwined with the presumption of innocence
  • burden rests on the prosecution throughout the trial and never shifts to the accused
  • a reasonable doubt is not a doubt based on sympathy or prejudice
  • rather, it is based upon reason and common sense
  • it is logically connected to the evidence or absence of evidence
  • not a frivolous or imaginary doubt
  • not absolute certainty, but more than probably guilty
  • Judge should not tell jury (R v. Lifchus):
  • “reasonable doubt” an ordinary expression with no special meaning in crim context
  • to apply same standard they apply to important decisions in their own lives
  • equate proof BRD to “a moral certainty”
  • qualify the word “doubt” with adjectives other than “reasonable”, such as “serious”, “substantial”, or “haunting” which may mislead the jury
  • they may convict if they are “sure” that accused is guilty, before providing them with a proper definition as to the meaning of the words BRD
  • reasonable doubt is not a magical incantation
  • Judge must explain that BRD is something above BOP (R v. Starr)
  • Charge must be in “substantial compliance” with Lifchus such that when read as a whole clear that jury could not have been under any misapprehension as to the correct burden and standard of proof (R v. Starr)

NB: “Crim G” gives model instructions for judges on variety of subjects including BRD

  1. Jury charge must make clear that you cannot apply BRD standard in piecemeal fashion (R v. Morin)

– must consider evidence in its totality (eg. D commonly attempts to discredit each piece of Crown’s evidence in impaired driving cases)

  1. Jury Charges where accused testified (W.(D.) charges) (R v. W.(D.))
  2. Judge must tell jury:

a.First, if you believe testimony of accused, you must aquit

b.Second, if you do not believe testimony of accused but are left w reasonable doubt by it, you must acquit

c.Third, even if you are not left in doubt by evidence of Acc, you must ask yourself whether, on the basis of the evidence you do accept, you are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the Acc.

  1. Charge will likely survive appeal scrutiny if made clear that:

a.Jury not simply to choose btw 2 versions of events

b.Jury must consider all evidence when determining reasonable doubt

c.Any reasonable doubt must be resolved in favour of accused

  1. Motion for Directed Verdict
  2. Test for directed verdict of acquittal: Is there some evidence of each of the elements of the crime upon which a properly instructed jury could convict?

a.Evidentiary burden

b.Limited weighing of evidence now allowed by judge

c.If you lose this motion, the case is over. D is essentially saying they will not call evidence, and judge skips to end of case.

  1. Putting a Defence in issue
  2. “air of reality” test (R v. Cinous): could properly instructed jury acting reasonably acquit the accused on basis of the defence?

a.Judge to consider totality of evidence

b.Not aimed at deciding substantive merits of case – no determinations re credibility of witnesses, weighing of evidence, finding facts or making inferences

c.A question of law

  1. Judge must instruct jury of any defence that has air of reality even if D doesn`t raise it (eg. D claiming innocence for 1st degree murder may not want to raise 2nd degree, but would want judge to raise it to jury)
  2. Defences to go to jury discussed at pre-charge conference before closing – btw judge and counsel in open court, but w/o jury
  3. Purpose of test to screen out frivolous defences

Burden and Degree of Proof in CIVIL PROCEEDINGS

  1. Proof on a balance of probabilities
  2. The plaintiff typically bears both the evidentiary and the persuasive burden on all elements of the action.
  3. The plaintiff has to lead evidence capable of supporting the facts that the plaintiff alleges, and the plaintiff must then satisfy the trier of fact on a BOP that the facts alleged are true.
  4. No evidence application (SCCR R 12-5(4) and (5))
  5. R 12-5(4)– D may apply to have action dismissed on ground that P P has not met evidentiary burden
  6. i. Question on the point of law – i.e. no weighing, all is believed.

ii. D may still run their case if they lose the application (R 12-5(5))

  1. Insufficient evidence application (SCCR R 12-5(6) and (7))
  2. R 12-5(6) - D may apply to have action dismissed on ground that P’s evidence insufficient to make the case.
  3. D may only make application after deciding not to call evidence. Effectively skips to the end of the case  if moton denied, D loses.
  4. Summary Judgment(SCCR R 9-6)
  5. Party makes application before trialasking court for summary judgment
  6. If satisfied there is no genuine issue for trial w respect to claim or defence, court may dismiss case or pronounce judgment accordingly

Burdens in CONSTITUTIONAL LITIGATION

In Charter litigation, the applicant bears the burden of establishing, on a BOP, the facts relevant to a claim that a Charter right has been infringed (Oakes)

  1. Warrentless searches and “waived right” reverse BoP  R must show they didn’t
  2. s.1 shifts the burden to the Crown to prove it is a justified breach. This is a “rigorously” applied BOP. Court does not want to likely justify a breach of rights.
  3. s.24(2) – burden on applicant to establish breach and to establish that evidence should be excluded

RELEVANCE, MATERIALITY, AND PROBATIVE VALUE

  1. Steps for Assessing Relevance
  2. What are issues at stake?
  3. What fact is this evidence being offered to prove?
  4. Does the evidence tend to prove or disprove this fact? Legal relevance
  5. Is this fact at issue? Materiality
  6. PV vs. PE? residual Discretion – NB higher standard for excluding Acc evidence
  7. Relevance Generally
  8. Determined at outset of trial but depends on context of other evidencewhat is relevant in a trial is dynamic and ever-changing throughout process. Counsel may make submissions about relevancy.
  9. No minimum threshold for relevance (R v. Watson) – no min PV required
  10. R v.Watson: evidence that deceased always carried a handgun + trafficked marijuana deemed relevant to D’s defence of spontaneous gun battle
  11. R v.Bell: evidence that accused a recreational drug trafficker does not tend to prove that acc would have better access to date rape drugs than other recreational drug users  not relevant
  12. R v. D.(A.): fact that deceased willing to continue relationship w physically abusive X-bf does not tend to prove that she would be willing to commence initimate relations w man who sexually assaulted her best friend  not relevant, and if relevant PE outweighs PV
  13. R v. Rallo: on charge of wife murder, evidence that acc husband was having an affair relevant to motive if affair not too remote in time.
  14. Circumstantial vs. Direct Evidence
  15. Direct = evidence proves/disproves a fact w/o requiring an inference (e.g. I looked at the light and saw it was green)
  16. Only one determination credibility/reliability of witness
  17. Usually eye-witness testimony
  18. Circumstantial = evidence which, if believed, permits one to infer the truth of another fact (e.g., I saw cars moving through the intersection; this infers the light was green)
  19. Two or more determinations  Do you believe and are you willing to infer…?
  20. Assessment depends on credibility/reliability of witness and correctness and strength of inference
  21. proving/disproving credibility, intent always done through circ evidence
  22. Residual Discretion: Probative Value vs. Potential for Prejudice(R v. Seaboyer)
  23. Probative value: usefulness in finding truth
  24. Prejudicial effects in order of importance:
  25. arouse jury prejudice
  26. create a distracting side issue
  27. consume too much time
  28. Unfairly suprise other party
  29. judge always has the ability to exclude evidence on this ground
  30. unclear whether this is aspect of legal relevance or general exclusionary power (R v. Mohan)
  31. Crown/P evidence or D evidence in civil case: exclusion where PE outweighs PV (Sweitzer test adopted in Seaboyer)
  32. Accused evidence: exclusion where PE substantially outweighs probative value
  33. Rationale: presumption of innocence, right to full answer and defence etc.
  34. NB courts particularly concerned about PE of acc character evidence
  35. R v. Hunter: PE found to outweigh PV of overheard, out-of-context statement made by acc to lawyer “I had a gun but did not point it”  statement deemed not relevant
  36. R v. Tuck: fact that deceased smuggled drugs into club in his underwear tends to prove that he smuggled knife into club – potential PE through propensity reasoning that deceased was a violent person can be addressed through jury charge
  37. R v.Abbey: acc membership in street gang tends to prove he had motive to kill deceased  relevant. PV outweighs PE of acc having bad character, both b/c judge can give instructions to jury to limit use of evidence, and b/c PE balanced btw acc and deceased (both in gangs). Fact that gang members have access to guns tends to prove acc had gun on day in Q, but PV is weak and is outweighed by PE.
  38. R v.Arcangoli (the class Marconi problem): evidence of third party S’s criminal record and involvement in previous stabbing tends to show S committed the stabbing rather than accused. No PE where character evidence pertains to 3rd party, but such evidence will not be admitted unless relevant. Flight from scene may support inference of guilt, but need to be cautious with this inference; where flight equally consistent with guilt for two offences, cannot have PV for one of them. Jury must be charged accordingly.
  1. Assessing the Relevance and Probative Value of Circumstantial Evidence (see handout)
  2. Evidence + Premise (generalization) inference = Conclusion
  3. Articulate the generalization
  4. Assess the strength of the generalization using “except when” analysis

and “especially when” analysis + loosely approximate PV

WITNESSES: COMPETENCY AND COMPELLABILITY

  1. General Rule: parties must prove or disprove all facts in issue through the oral (viva voce) evidence of witnesses.
  2. Key Witness Questions:

a.Competent?

b.Compellable?

c.Oath?

d.Privilege?

e.Credible?

  1. Competence, Compellability, Privilege and Credibility
  2. Competence = is witness fit and qualified to testify?
  3. General CL rule: everyone is competent to testify in any case.
  4. Compellability = can witness be forced to testify?
  5. General rule: a competent witness is a compellable witness
  6. Privilege = protects communications made in course of certain relationships (see privilege)
  7. General CL rule: any competent and compellable witness must answer any Qs put to them by court/counsel that are relevant and otherwise admissible
  8. Exception: evidentiary privileges allow a competent and compellable witness not to answer certain Qs
  9. Overlaps with compentence  courts often confuse these
  10. Credibility = reliability of witness’ testimony

COMPETENCE

  1. General
  2. Historically, many witnesses deemed incompetent (eg. spouses, convicted felons) Now more witnesses deemed competent  can test reliability through cross-exam.
  3. people convicted of crimes are now competent witnesses (CEA, s.3)
  4. Spouses of the Accused in Crim Context
  5. At CL spouses always incompetent. Rationale: single legal person, maintain marital harmony, repugnance of state using spouses to prove guilt (Salituro)
  6. Now, s.4 CEA governs:

NB: spouses = legally married (including same sex), not CL

1.Spouse of accused is always competent witness for the defence (s.4(1))

2.The wife or husband of the accused is generally NOT competent for the prosecution (R v. Hawkins), EXCEPT:

3.Spouse of acc is competent and compellable for prosecution w respect to certain sexual offences (s.4(2))

4.Spouse of acc is competent and compellable for prosecution w respect to certain violent offences against victim under 14 (s.4 (4))

5.CL preserved through s.4(5)

  1. Salituro: Irreconcilably separated spouses are competent to testify for prosecution

1.incremental change in CL, promotes s.15 equality

  1. Spouses competent to testify for prosecution where acc has threatened the well being (person, liberty or health) of the spouse or their children. (Schell )
  2. No comment allowed on failure of spouse to testify by judge or prosecution (s.4(6))
  3. R v. Hawkins: during relationship off-period, gf of acc gives statements against acc to PO and at prelim. gf and acc marry before trial and gf recants earlier statements. Crown requests exception to competence rule for sham marriages. Court: if law changed, gets into motivations for marriage + may increase perjury wife not competent/compellable. Different from Salituro, where wife wanted to testify.
  4. Spouse of accused is competent and compellable for defence or Crown for provincial offence (BCEA s.6; R v. Gosselin (adds compellable))
  1. Spouses of Accused in Civil Context
  2. Spouses of accused are competent and compellable witnesses (s.7(1))
  3. Mentally Disabled and Children in Crim Context
  4. Challenged Mental Capacity
  5. CEA 16(1): Where mental capacity of person over 14 challenged, court shall conduct an inquiry to determine whether the person:

1.Understands the nature of an oath or solemn affirmation