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MBE Evidence - Privileges

Law26 CardsCreated 8 months ago

The Federal Rules of Evidence do not create specific privilege rules. Instead, they rely on federal common law privileges in federal question cases.

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Does the Federal Rules of Evidence have rules on privilege?

No, FRE has adopted federal common law privileges

(FRE 501)

⚠️ Note: In diversity actions, privileges are determined by the state’s substantive law

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Key Terms

Term
Definition

Does the Federal Rules of Evidence have rules on privilege?

No, FRE has adopted federal common law privileges

(FRE 501)

⚠️ Note: In diversity actions, privileges are determined by the state’s sub...

Define

testimonial privilege

Allows a witness to refrain from disclosing certain knowledge

What are the basic testimonial privileges?

Attorney/client

Psychotherapist/client

Spousal

Doctor/patient

Clergy-penitent (some jurisdictions)

What is required for a privilege to apply?

Persons in the conversation are in a protected/privileged relationship;

Communication was intended to be confidential (i.e. outside the prese...

When does the presence of a third party not destroy privilege?

Third party is essential to the conversation (e.g. translator); or

Third party’s presence is unknown to either party

When is a privilege waived?

Privilege is not timely asserted;

Privilege is waived via contract; or

Holder intentionally tells a third party about the communication...

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TermDefinition

Does the Federal Rules of Evidence have rules on privilege?

No, FRE has adopted federal common law privileges

(FRE 501)

⚠️ Note: In diversity actions, privileges are determined by the state’s substantive law

Define

testimonial privilege

Allows a witness to refrain from disclosing certain knowledge

What are the basic testimonial privileges?

Attorney/client

Psychotherapist/client

Spousal

Doctor/patient

Clergy-penitent (some jurisdictions)

What is required for a privilege to apply?

Persons in the conversation are in a protected/privileged relationship;

Communication was intended to be confidential (i.e. outside the presence of a third party);

Holder is asserting the privilege;

Privilege was not waived; and

No exceptions apply

When does the presence of a third party not destroy privilege?

Third party is essential to the conversation (e.g. translator); or

Third party’s presence is unknown to either party

When is a privilege waived?

Privilege is not timely asserted;

Privilege is waived via contract; or

Holder intentionally tells a third party about the communication

What is attorney-client privilege?

Privilege held by the client that protects communications intended to be confidential made for the purpose of seeking professional legal advice or services.

Who does attorney-client privilege apply to?

Client;

Lawyer; and

Anyone employed by the lawyer to assist in the rendition of legal services (e.g. paralegal, secretary, private investigator)

In a corporation, who is protected by attorney-client privilege?

All employees who are either directed to communicate with the attorney or are communicating pursuant to their corporate responsibilities

Under what circumstances does attorney-client privilege not exist?

If:

Communication was sought to faciliate a crime or fraud;

Lawyer’s client is now deceased and disclosure is necessary to effectuate a will;

Communication is necessary for the lawyer to defend him/herself; and

Lawyer had two joint clients who are now adverse to one another

What is the duration of attorney-client privilege?

Until it is waived; survives client’s death

If there has been an inadvertent disclosure of privileged information, what steps must be taken to ensure the privilege is not waived?

Holder of the privilege must:

Have taken reasonable steps to prevent disclosure; and

Promptly took reasonable steps to rectify the error

FRE 502(b)

What is doctor-patient privilege and when does it exist?

State law privilege protecting communications between patients and physicians, recognized by most federal courts.

Exists when communication is:

Intended to be confidential;

Between a doctor and a patient;

Made for the purpose of obtaining treatment or a diagnosis; and

Relevant to the medical treatment or diagnosis

Under what circumstances does doctor-patient privilege not apply?

Personal injury cases where patient’s condition is at issue;

If the examination or communication was made for the purpose of litigation;

If the communication was used to faciliate a crime;

If there is a dispute between the doctor and patient (e.g. malpractice); or

Patient waived the privilege

When does the psychotherapist-patient privilege apply?

If communication was:

Intended to be confidential;

Made to a licensed therapist, psychologist, psychiatrist, or social worker;

During the therapy or course of treatment

What are the two types of spousal privilege?

Spousal testimonial privilege; and

Marital communications privilege

What is the marital communications privilege?

Privilege that can be invoked by either spouse. Protects confidential communications made during a legally valid marriage.

Applies in both civil and criminal cases.

How long does the marital communication privilege last?

Never terminates, can be invoked after divorce for communications made during the marriage

Under what circumstances does the marital communications privilege not apply?

When one spouse destroys confidentiality by disclosing the communications to a third party;

In a proceeding between the two spouses;

In a proceeding in which one spouse is charged with a crime against children or the other spouse;

In a proceeding in which the spouses are co-D’s; and

If communications were used to faciliate a crime

What is spousal testimonial privilege/immunity?

Protects a witness-spouse from having to testify against a defendant-spouse in a criminal trial. Applies to events before and during the marriage.

⚠️ Note: Witness-spouse can testify, but cannot be forced to do so.

Who can assert spousal immunity?

Witness-spouse only. The defendant-spouse cannot prevent the witness-spouse testifying.

When does the spousal immunity terminate?

Upon divorce or annulment

Compare spousal immunity and marital communications privilege

Spousal immunity

Can only be asserted during the marriage (terminates upon divorce or annulment)

Can be asserted by the witness-spouse only

Can apply to communications before marriage

Criminal cases only

Marital communications

Can be asserted at any time, including after divorce or death of a spouse

Can be asserted by either party

Only covers communications during marriage

Civil and criminal cases

What does the Clergy-Penitent privilege protect?

The privilege only applies to communications:

Between penitent and clergyman;

In the clergyman’s role as a spiritual adviser;

Under conditions of confidentiality

Do news organizations have the privilege to protect the identity of their sources?

Not on the federal level, but several states have enacted laws so that journalists are not required to reveal their sources

What is the 5th Amendment privilege and what does it apply to?

Holds that witnesses in criminal and civil trials have right against "self-incrimination," i.e. can refuse to answer questions that would be incriminating