![]() ![]() (d) the expert has reliably applied the principles and methods to the facts of the case.Īlthough experts were once permitted to testify whenever they might assist the trier of fact, Rule 702 has recently been amended to place tighter reins on such testimony.As of December 2023, experts may only testify "if the proponent demonstrates to the court that it is more likely than not that: (c) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods and (b) the testimony is based on sufficient facts or data (a) the expert's scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will help the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue Under Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, these witnesses may lend their expertise in the form of opinions or other testimony if: To do so, the advocate must know when to use expert testimony, how to qualify an individual as an expert whose views will carry weight with the jury, and how to use the expert to lend an air of credibility and strength to the case as a whole.Īlthough expert testimony has traditionally been used in medical malpractice cases, and many attorneys fail to recognize their value in other contexts, expert testimony is permitted - and quite effective - in many types of cases. ![]() If exercised properly, this power may be harnessed to present powerful testimony at trial and, ultimately, a powerful and winning case. Although the rest of us are limited largely to our personal observations, those who qualify as "experts" shed the limitations of mortal witnesses and are endowed with the power to render opinions and to provide other information far exceeding personal observations. ![]() At bottom, while some small amount of opinion testimony is reluctantly tolerated as a necessity of communication, ordinary persons taking the witness stand must still "stick to the facts" when testifying.Įxpert witnesses are far from ordinary. Lay witnesses have also been permitted to testify regarding such emotional states as anger or upset, speeds of vehicles, whether someone appeared to be in pain, behaved in a drunken manner, had an honest reputation, or to similar opinions within the common experience of common persons and rationally based upon their perceptions.Īlthough the Federal Rules of Evidence have replaced a strict exclusion of lay opinions with the relaxed requirement that lay opinions must ultimately be "helpful" to the trial process, courts exercise considerable discretion in limiting lay testimony to elicit more precise factual accounts. Thus, a layperson may state that she heard a "siren" even though the identification of such a noise truly amounts to an opinion based upon the sound observed. Second, lay witnesses may convey the type of opinion which normal persons form constantly and correctly. Spock of Star Trek fame would testify that "an excess of moisture was emanating from her tear ducts," a lay witness may depart from such uncompromising precision by testifying simply that "she was crying." Such testimony, while involving an opinion inferred from factual observations, is essential to a clear understanding of the witness' testimony. ![]() Accordingly, there are two types of opinions which laypersons are permitted to convey from the witness stand: First, laypersons may testify in the form of what has been described as "lay shorthand" where it would be impossible to communicate the facts without departing from strict factual language. Under Rule 701 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, lay witnesses may testify in the form of opinions or inferences which are "(a) rationally based on the perception of the witness (b) helpful to a clear understanding of the witness' testimony or the determination of a fact in issue and (c) not "based on scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge" that would require the witness to qualify as an expert. Like most evidentiary rules, courts have relaxed this restriction considerably over the years. Throughout most of American legal history, ordinary citizens who dared to take the witness stand needed three things - the capacity to observe, to remember and to relate. For most witnesses, courts want the same thing that Joe Friday wanted on the "Dragnet" television series: "Just the facts, Ma'am!" Fearing that any departure from precise factual observations would usurp the jury's role in evaluating the evidence, courts have traditionally prohibited lay witnesses from offering their opinions on the evidence or departing, even to the slightest degree, from a purely factual recitation of events which the witness personally observed. To understand the law relating to expert witnesses, one must first understand the law relating to witnesses generally and the special treatment afforded those with special expertise. ![]()
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