Rule 803
Rule 803(1)
Present Sense Impression
Two aspects:
- substantive component - needs to describe event or condition
- temporal component - needs to be made while or immediately after the defendant perceived it
Rule 803(2)
Excited Utterance
803 and Personal Knowledge
Turner
People v. Cummings
Rule 803(3)
Then-Existing State of Mind
Hillmon Doctrine
Shepard v. United States
Hillmon - Case
Shepard - Case
Hillmon and Conduct of Others
Circumstantial vs. Direct Evidence
3 Ways Courts Have Interpreted the Hillmon Dicta
1- follow Hillmon dicta - it comes in and can be used circumstantially for the actions of others
2- admissible for non-declarant only if there’s other evidence that corroborates the action of the non-declarant
3 - you don’t admit the statement at all to show the conduct of the non-declarant (and if they’re both co-defendants, it gets excluded entirely on the grounds that it’s not admissible against the co-defendant)
- note that in order for the dicta to work in any of these, it needs to be a joint action - the declarant can’t say believes so-and-so going to do x solo
Rule 803(4)
Statement for Medical Diagnosis or Treatment
A statement that is made:
A) is made for - and is reasonably pertinent to - medical diagnosis or treatment; and
B) describes medical history; past or present symptoms or sensations; their inception; or their general cause
Medical Diagnosis and Fault
Medical Diagnosis - Determination of “Reasonably Pertinent”
Ward
Rule 803(5)
Recorded Recollection
A record that:
A) is on a matter the witness once knew but now cannot recall well enough to testify fully and accurately;
B) was made or adopted by the witness when the matter was fresh in the witness’s memory; and
C) accurately reflects the witness’s knowledge
If admitted, the record may be read into evidence, but may be received as an exhibit only if offered by an adverse party
What happens with the recorded recollection at trial?
Rule 612
Present Recollection Refreshed
Rule 612 vs. Rule 803(5)
Rule 803(6)
Business records
1- record of a business activity
2- regularly maintained (making a record = a regular practice of the business)
3- made promptly (at or near time)
4- based on knowledge
5- supported by in-court testimony or affidavit/certification
6- appears trustworthy (presumed to appear trustworthy unless your opponent proves otherwise)
Business Records - Rationale