Supported by
the Luxembourg National Research Fund
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Rule 89. Relevance
(1) Relevant evidence is admissible.
(2) The court, whether of its own motion or on application by a party, shall exclude evidence that is irrelevant. Relevance is determined by the court by reference to the matters alleged in the parties' pleadings.
Art. 157(1): With regard to allegations or evidence that a party has presented after the time for doing so, whether intentionally or through gross negligence, if the court finds that such allegations or evidence will delay the conclusion of litigation, it may rule to dismiss them without prejudice, upon petition or sua sponte
(2) The provisions of the preceding paragraph also apply if a party does not give the necessary explanation […].
the word ‘relevant’ means that: any two facts to which it is applied are so related to each other that according to the common course of events one either taken by itself or in connection with other facts proves or renders probable the past, present or future existence or non-existence, of the other.[33]
When by any other means not expressly provided for in the previous sections of this article, certainty about relevant facts could be obtained, the court, at the request of a party, will admit it as evidence, adopting the measures that are necessary in each case.[34]
Pursuant to Rule 1.1 UKCPR:
(1) These Rules are a new procedural code with the overriding objective of enabling the court to deal with cases justly and at proportionate cost.
(2) Dealing with a case justly and at proportionate cost includes, so far as is practicable
(a) ensuring that the parties are on an equal footing and can participate fully in proceedings, and that parties and witnesses can give their best evidence;
(b) saving expense;
(c) dealing with the case in ways which are proportionate –
(i) to the amount of money involved;
(ii) to the importance of the case;
(iii) to the complexity of the issues; and
(iv) to the financial position of each party;
(d) ensuring that it is dealt with expeditiously and fairly;
(e) allotting to it an appropriate share of the court’s resources, while taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases; and
(f) enforcing compliance with rules, practice directions and orders.
[T]he Parties no longer have any absolute right to insist on the calling of any evidence they choose provided only that it is admissible and arguably relevant. The court may exclude admissible and relevant evidence or cross-examination which is disproportionately expensive or time-consuming, provided that to do so accords with the overriding objective.[36]
[L]ack of relevance can be used to exclude evidence not because it has absolutely no bearing upon the likelihood or unlikelihood of a fact in issue but because the connection is considered to be too remote. Once it is regarded as a matter of degree, competing policy considerations can be taken into account. These include [among others] the desirability of shortening trials (…) None of these matters would be determinative if the evidence in question were of significant probative value.[39]
All people are equal before the law, without any distinction whatsoever. Brazilians and foreigners residing in the country are ensured the inviolability of their right to life, liberty, equality, security, and property, under the following terms: (…) LVI – evidence obtained through unlawful means is unacceptable in proceedings.[46]
(a) Where the means of collecting evidence are criminal acts, the admissibility of the evidence should be unconditionally denied;
(b) Where the means of collecting evidence is an infringement of personal rights, such as an unauthorized recording, the admissibility should be determined ponderating different factors, such as the degree of illegality, the value of the evidence, the type of litigation or the content of the case.[54]
Material inadmissible as evidence. Material obtained by the commission of an infringement of privacy shall not be used as evidence in court without the consent of the injured party, unless the court, for reasons which shall be recorded, permits it to be used or if the infringer, being a party to the proceedings, has a defense or enjoys exemption under this Law.
According to important scholars, a ponderative approach can be reasonably employed in civil cases when the need for justice (and access to the truth) collide with essential guarantees.[67]
As anticipated, procedural legislation is not very clear on this point. Article 378 of the Argentine National Code of Civil Procedure provides that any evidence is admissible, even if it is not enunciated in those rules, unless they affect morality, the parties or third parties’ personal liberty or are forbidden for the case. It is commonly understood that this provision is a legislative ground for non-admitting evidence that violates fundamental rights. However, the direct imperative force of the Constitution general clauses (due process, intimacy, dignity, personal liberty, protection against auto-incrimination, etc) is enough to verify if, in a concrete case, for example, an admission of wrongful action (abusing a child) obtained by an unauthorized access to their cell phone, can be used in civil courts by the child’s parents to ask for preventive measures.
which prohibits the use of a person's assertion, as equivalent to testimony to the fact asserted, unless the assertor is brought to testify in court on the stand, where he may be probed and cross-examined as to the grounds of his assertion and of his qualifications to make it. Therefore, (…) when a specific person, not as yet in court, is reported to have made assertions about a fact, that person must be called to the stand, or his assertion will not be taken as evidence.[69]
(1) the declarant does not make while testifying at the current trial or hearing; and
(2) a party offers in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted in the statement.
Among others, they relied on Sec 17(a), Evidence Ordinance [New Version], providing that if the person who made a statement out of court, ‘does not appear in court [even though he was ordered to do so], the court may disqualify the affidavit from serving as evidence’ (emphasis added). The court is not obliged to disqualify the affidavit. It may apply its discretion to admit it and decide separately the weight it is going to give that statement.
Rule 178(c) ICPR, provides that if the person who signed an affidavit, submitted to the court, has refrained from appearing in court for a cross-examination attached to a statement of pleadings will not, as a general rule, be admitted as evidence in favor of the party that submitted that affidavit, unless the court gives its permission, for special reasons, to such admission.
This rule too implies that the court may apply its discretion, even if that discretion should be used sparingly.
The court for family affairs has wider discretion and flexibility to apply the procedure that it considers best to doing justice in any matter that has not been otherwise regulated.
Regarding business, bank and public institutional records of a regularly conducted activity made near the time of the even, recorded in a manner that can be demonstrated to prove the truthfulness of its contents, is admissible though hearsay to prove the matter recorded (Sec 35-39B, Evidence Ordinance [New Version])
Article 1 of the Civil Evidence Act 1995 provides the following:
Admissibility of hearsay evidence.
(1) In civil proceedings evidence shall not be excluded on the ground that it is hearsay.
(2) In this Act—
(a) “hearsay” means a statement made otherwise than by a person while giving oral evidence in the proceedings which is tendered as evidence of the matters stated; and
(b) references to hearsay include hearsay of whatever degree.
The same Act provides some guidance to the court in order to weigh hearsay evidence,[83] among other limits and procedural arrangements left to a large discretion of the court.
ACCP |
Code of Civil Procedure (Argentina) |
ALI |
American Law Institute |
Art |
Article/Articles |
BGH |
Bundesgerichtshof (Federal Court of Justice) (Germany) |
BVerfG |
Bundesverfassungsgericht (Federal Constitutional Court) (Germany) |
cf |
confer (compare) |
ch |
chapter |
CFR |
Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union |
edn |
edition/editions |
ed |
editor/editors |
etc |
et cetera |
eg |
exempli gratia (for example) |
ELI |
European Law Institute |
ERCP |
Model European Rules of Civil Procedure 2020 (ELI / UNIDROIT) Model European Rules of Civil Procedure 2020 (ELI / UNIDROIT) |
EU |
European Union |
EUR |
Euro |
ff |
following |
fn |
footnote (external, ie, in other chapters or in citations) |
GCC |
Civil Code (Germany) |
GCCP |
Code of Civil Procedure (Germany) |
ibid |
ibidem (in the same place) |
ICPR |
Civil Procedure Regulations 2021 (Israel) |
ie |
id est (that is) |
JCCP |
Code of Civil Procedure (Japan) |
n |
footnote (internal, ie, within the same chapter) |
no |
number/numbers |
para |
paragraph/paragraphs |
PTCP |
Principles of Transnational Civil Procedure 2004 (ALI / UNIDROIT) |
Sec |
Section/Sections |
SCCP |
Code of Civil Procedure (Spain) |
supp |
supplement/supplements |
TRCP |
Transnational Civil Procedure |
trans/tr |
translated, translation/translator |
UK |
United Kingdom |
UKCPR |
Civil Procedure Rules 1998 (UK) |
UNIDROIT |
Institut international pour l'unification du droit privé (International Institute for the Unification of Private Law) |
US / USA |
United States of America |
USC |
United States Code |
USD |
United States Dollar |
USFRCP |
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (US) |
USFRE |
Federal Rules of Evidence (US) |
v |
versus |
vol |
volume/volumes |
American Convention on Human Rights.
Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union.
European Convention on Human Rights.
Geneva Convention of 1930.
IBA Rules on the Taking of Evidence.
Model European Rules of Civil Procedure 2020 (ELI / UNIDROIT).
Principles of Transnational Civil Procedure 2004 (ALI / UNIDROIT).
Regulation (EC) No 593/2008 of 17 June 2008 on the law applicable to contractual obligations (Rome I).
Regulation (EC) No 864/2007 of 11 July 2007 on the law applicable to non-contractual obligations (Rome II).
Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation).
Children and Young Persons Act 1933 (UK).
Civil and Commercial Code 2015 (Argentina).
Civil Code (Germany).
Civil Evidence Act 1995 (UK).
Code of Civil Procedure (Japan).
Código Procesal Civil y Comercial de la Nacion (Code of Civil Procedure) (Argentina).
Civil Procedure Regulations 2021 (Israel).
Civil Procedure Rules 1998 (UK).
Family Law Reform Act 1969 (UK).
Federal Constitution (Brazil).
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (US).
Federal Rules of Evidence (US).
Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil (Code of Civil Procedure) (Spain).
Ley de Organización del Poder Judicial (Judiciary Act) (Spain).
Zivilprozessordnung (Code of Civil Procedure) (Germany).
Zivilprozessordnung (Code of Civil Procedure) (Switzerland).
ASML, Case C-283/05 (CJEU), Judgment 14 December 2006 [ECLI:EU:C:2006:787].
Trade Agency, Case C-619/10 (CJEU), Judgment 6 September 2012 [ECLI:EU:C:2012:531].
Peter Puškár, Case C-73/16 (CJEU), Judgment 27 September 2017 [ECLI:EU:C:2017:725].
Ashcroft v Iqbal (Supreme Court, US) [556 U.S. 662 (2009)].
Bell Atlantic Corp v Twombly (Supreme Court, US) [550 U.S. 544 (2007)].
Case 1316 (Supreme Court, Japan), Judgment 14 April 1966 [Minschu vol. 20, No 4].
Colalillo Domingo v España y Rio de la Plata (Supreme Court, Argentina), Judgment 18 September 1957 [Fallos: 238:550].
Daray (Supreme Court, Argentina), Judgment 22 December 1994 [Fallos: 317:1985].
Daniels v Walker (Court of Appeal, UK) [2000] 1 WLR 1382.
Daubert v Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc [509 U.S. 579 (1993)].
Dolree v Ohio (Supreme Court, United States) [367 U.S. 643 (1961)].
Florentino (Supreme Court, Argentina), Judgment 27 November 1984 [Fallos: 306:1752].
Francomano (Supreme Court, Argentina), Judgment 19 November 1987 [Fallos: 310:2384].
GKR Karate (UK) Ltd v Yorkshire Post Ltd (Court of Appeal, UK) [2000] 1 WLR 2571.
Gordon (Supreme Court, Argentina), Judgment 4 October 1988 [Fallos: 311:2045].
In Old Chief v. United States (Supreme Court, US) [519 U.S. 172 (1997)].
INS v Lopez-Mendoza (Supreme Court, United States) [ 468 U.S. 1032 (1984).
Jones v University of Warwick (Court of Appeal, UK) [2003] EWCA Civ 151.
Kuruma v R (East African Court of Appeal, Kenya) [1955] AC 197.
Luque (Supreme Court, Argentina), Judgment 26 November 2002 [Fallos: 325:3118].
Miranda v Stewart (Supreme Court, United States) [384 U.S. 436 (1966)].
Molle c. Mayocchi (Second Civil and Commercial Court of Appeal, 2nd Chamber, La Plata, Argentina), Judgment 23 February 2021.
Montenegro (Supreme Court, Argentina), Judgment 10 December 1981 [Fallos: 303:1938].
Paulino (Supreme Court, Argentina), Judgment 17 September 2013 [Fallos: P. 528. XLVI].
Peet v Mid-Kent Healthcare Trust (Court of Appeal, UK) [2002] 1 WLR 210.
Ploni v. Plonit (District Court of Haifa, Israel), 24072-09-21, Judgment 20 January 2022.
Plonit v. The District Rabbinical Court Netanyah (Supreme Court, Israel), 6650/04, Judgment 13 May 2006.
Quaranta (Supreme Court, Argentina), Judgment 31 August 2010, [Fallos: 333:1674].
R v Wilson (Court of Appeal, NZ) [1991] 2 NZLR 707.
Ras Al Khaimah Investment Authority v Azima (Court of Appeal, UK) [2021] EWCA Civ 349.
Ruiz (Supreme Court, Argentina), Judgment 17 September 1987 [Fallos: 310:1847].
Andrews N, English Civil Procedure: Fundamentals of the New Civil Justice System (Oxford University Press 2003).
Arazi R, ‘La prueba ilícita. Declaración de menores de catorce años y des testigos eclxuidos en el proceso civil’ (2001) (3) Jurisprudencia Argentina.
Damaska M, El derecho probatorio a la deriva (Marcial Pons 2015).
Ferrer Beltrán J, La valoración racional de la prueba (Marcial Pons 2007).
Haack S, Filosofía del derecho y de la prueba (Marcial Pons 2020).
Hazard G, Stürner R, Taruffo M and Gidi A, ‘ALI/UNIDROIT Principles of Transnational Civil Procedure. Appendix: rules of transnational civil procedure’ (Study LXXVI, UNIDROIT 2005).
Hazard G, Stürner R, Taruffo M and Gidi A, ‘Rules of Transnational Civil Procedure’ (2001) <https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu/faculty_scholarship/1085> accessed 30 June 2023.
Hess B and Jauering O, Manual de Derecho procesal civil (Marcial Pons 2011).
Leonard DP, ‘In Defense of the Character Evidence Prohibition: Foundations of the Rule Against Trial by Character’ (1998) 73 Indiana Law Journal.
Marinoni L, Cruz Arenhart S and Mitidiero D, Curso de Processo Civil (Vol. 2, Revista Dos Tribunais 2015).
Miki, Moichi et al., Civil Procedure Law, 4th ed. (2023) [writen in japanese].
Morello A, La prueba. Tendencias modernas (2 edn, Platsene 2001).
Mueller C and Kirkpatrick L, Evidence (5th edn, 2012).
Nieva Fenoll J, La valoración de la prueba (Marcial Pons 2010).
Park R and Friedman R, Evidence (12th edn, 2013).
Passanante L, ‘Illegally obtained evidence in civil litigation: a comparative perspective’ in, La prueba en el proceso. Evidence in the process (XXVI Jornadas Iberoamericanas de Derecho Procesal, Atelier 2018).
Passanante L, La prova illecita nel processo civile (Giappichelli 2017).
Priori Posada G, ‘Reglas de exclusión probatoriay prueba ilícita en Iberoamérica: un reporte desde el derecho fundamental a probar’ in, La prueba en el proceso. Evidence in the process (XXVI Jornadas Iberoamericanas de Derecho Procesal, Atelier 2018).
Tapper C, Cross & Tapper on Evidence (12th edn, Butterworth 2010).
Taruffo M, La prueba (Marcial Pons 2008).
Thayer J, A Preliminary Treatise on Evidence at the Common Law (Little Brown 1989).
Vaki Y, Evidence Law (Nevo, 2020, in Hebrew).
Wigmore J, ‘The History of the Hearsay Rule’ (1904) 17 Harvard Law Review.
Wright C, Miller A and Marcus R, Federal Practice & Procedure (3rd edn, Thomson Reuters 2010).
Leandro J Giannini
[1] We allude to a jury trial ‘setting’ to express that the American procedural system (and especially its evidentiary law) is in many ways structured as if most cases were decided in that way. Although this is not the case in real life, the rules of evidence provide for jury trials and for trials in which the fact decision maker is a professional judge. As Taruffo explains, in the last case, judges act ‘in the shadow’ of the jury. See M Taruffo, La prueba (Marcial Pons 2008) 49.
[2] When presenting the main hypothesis that could explain the remarkable peculiarities of the ‘American way’ on law of evidence, Damaska refer to two main competing theories. The first one, led by Thayer, finds the fundamental reason of that particularism in the jury system. The second theory focuses instead on the way in which the parties develop their strategies in court (adversarial system). See J Thayer, A Preliminary Treatise on Evidence at the Common Law (Little Brown 1989) 266. Damaska considers that both theories are not incompatible and that their explanatory quality probably depends on the concrete aspect of fact finding that we pay attention to. See M Damaska, El derecho probatorio a la deriva (Marcial Pons 2015), 20 (emphasis added): ‘if we pay attention to access to evidence, the competitiveness can justify the adversarial system [theory]. And if we direct it towards some rules of evidence exclusion, the jury system [theory] would be the most appropriate.’
[3] Rule 801, 802 USFRE.
[4] Rule 404(a) USFRE. See for the foundations D P Leonard, ‘In Defense of the Character Evidence Prohibition: Foundations of the Rule Against Trial by Character’ (1998) 73 Indiana Law Journal 1161.
[5] Daubert v Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc [509 U.S. 579 (1993)]. See S Haack, Filosofía del derecho y de la prueba (Marcial Pons 2020), 157-345.
[6] G Hazard, R Stürner, M Taruffo and A Gidi, ‘ALI/UNIDROIT Principles of Transnational Civil Procedure. Appendix: rules of transnational civil procedure’ (Study LXXVI, UNIDROIT 2005). The comment to Rule 25.1 in this Study explains that ‘[t]he basic principle is that any factual information that is rationally useful in reaching judgment on the relevant facts of the case should be admissible as evidence.’ The 2001 version of the TRCP published by the reporters provided a similar solution on this matter. See G Hazard, R Stürner, M Taruffo and A Gidi, ‘Rules of Transnational Civil Procedure’ (2001) 833. <https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu/faculty_scholarship/1085> accessed 30 June 2023.
[7] ‘Offering’ evidence implies identifying the means of proof that are not in the offering-party’s possession, and requiring the court to order its incorporation to the case. For example, parties must ask the court in this initial stage of the proceedings, to: i) appoint official experts, indicating the technical or scientific points that they will have to respond; ii) require information held by the counter party or third parties (ie, corporations, private persons, state agencies, etc.) like documents or registries; iii) personally inspect a place; iv) cite the witnesses to the future hearing (parties must indicate them at the beginning), etc.
[8] The leading case if this doctrine is Colalillo Domingo v España y Rio de la Plata (Supreme Court, Argentina), Judgment 18 September 1957 [Fallos: 238:550], in which the Supreme Court allowed a party to present his driver’s licence way after the deadline to present evidence (he presented it at the appeal stage, when that kind of evidence is inadmissible) to dismiss the insurance company’s defence based on the necessity of that license to be insured. The Supreme Court considered reasonable that the rules of civil procedure establish time limits to offer and produce evidence. However, those rules should be relaxed in some cases, because ‘the civil process cannot be conducted in strictly formal terms. It is certainly not about the fulfilment of capricious rites, but about the development of procedures aimed at establishing the objective legal truth that is its north.’
[9] Art 147-3 JCCP.
[10] Art 156 JCCP.
[11] According to Art 130 GCCP, the preparatory written pleadings should provide, along with other requirements ‘[t]he designation of the evidence that the party intends to submit as proof of any facts alleged, or by way of rebutting allegations, as well as a declaration regarding the evidence designated by the opponent.’
[12] Art 296 GCCP. See B Hess and O Jauering, Manual de Derecho procesal civil (Marcial Pons 2011) 192-194.
[13] Rule 8(a)(2) USFRCP.
[14] Bell Atlantic Corp v Twombly (Supreme Court, US) [550 U.S. 544 (2007)] and Ashcroft v Iqbal (Supreme Court, US) [556 U.S. 662 (2009)].
[15] Rule 11(b)(3) USFRCP.
[16] Rule 26(a)(1)(a) USFRCP.
[17] Rule 26(a)(2) USFRCP.
[18] Daubert v Merrell (n 5).
[19] Rule 26(a)(3) USFRCP.
[20] Rule 5(d)(1)(a) USFRCP.
[21] Rule 5(d)(1)(a) USFRCP provides that disclosure or discovery responses must not be filed in court unless they are used in the proceeding or the court orders filing. So almost all the discovery activity occurs outside the court's view and is not contained in the court's file. So, this exchange occurs entirely among the parties without direct involvement of the court.
[22] Rule 37(c)(1) USFRCP. This provision was added nearly 30 years ago, and it is often invoked by the parties. It is not invoked by the court, which is largely unconcerned with these matters.
[23] There is significant case law on the application of Rule 37(c)(1) USFRCP, much of it dealing with belated ‘supplementation’ of expert witness reports. See C Wright, A Miller and R Marcus, Federal Practice & Procedure (3rd edn, Thomson Reuters 2010) sec 2289.1.
[24] G Hazard, R Stürner, M Taruffo and A Gidi 2005 (n 6) comment to Rule P-16A.
[25] Taruffo (n 1) 38. The author adds that the relevance standard exists in every procedural system, althoug some of them do not stipulate it expressly (Ibid 38-40).
[26] See Ibid 38-40.
[27] See Ibid 40-41. Distinguishing inclusive (positive) or exclusionary (negative) versions of the relevance standard (also called ‘major’ or ‘minor’ versions of that principle) in comparative law, the author considers the Rule 402 USFRE as an example of the positive variant and the European continental approach as example of negative ones.
[28] Art 360.3, 364 ACCP.
[29] Y Vaki, Evidence Law (Nevo, 2020, in Hebrew) 183ff.
[30] See Art 181.1 JCCP on the court's high degree of discretion in the admission or rejection of evidence involving issues of relevance. Also, Supreme Court (Japan), Judgment April 14, 1966, [Minshu vol. 20, No 4] 649.
[31] C Tapper, Cross & Tapper on Evidence (12th edn, Butterworth 2010) 64.
[32] Lord Steyn in R v A (No. 2) (House of Lords, UK) [2002] 1 AC 45.
[33] Tapper (n 28) 65.
[34] Art 299.3 SCCP.
[35] Rule 1.1 UKCPR.
[36] GKR Karate (UK) Ltd v Yorkshire Post Ltd (Court of Appeal, UK) [2000] 1 WLR 2571.
[37] Cf Rule 35.7 UKCPR. In Peet v. Mid-Kent Healthcare Trust (Court of Appeal, UK) [2002] 1 WLR 210, 215, Lord Woolf stated that ‘[t]he starting point is: unless there is no reason for not having a single expert, there should be only a single expert.’
[38] Daniels v Walker (Court of Appeal, UK) [2000] 1 WLR 1382, 1387.
[39] Tapper (n 31) 65 ff, citing R v Wilson (Court of Appeal, NZ) [1991] 2 NZLR 707, 711.
[40] Rule 403 USFRE.
[41] Ferrer Beltrán considers this principle to be the right way to approach evidence filtering based on its relevance (‘el filtro de relevancia debería tender a la admission en caso de duda sobre la relevancia de la prueba’), although the author makes clear that this ‘pro-admission principle’ should not incite over-inclusion of evidence or information overload. See J Ferrer Beltrán, La valoración racional de la prueba (Marcial Pons 2007) 69, para 15.
[42] For an in-depth overview of the different ways of understanding the term ‘unlawful’ or ‘illicit’ evidence, see L Passanante, La prova illecita nel processo civile (Giappichelli 2017) 63-130 and L Passanante, ‘Illegally obtained evidence in civil litigation: a comparative perspective’ in, La prueba en el proceso. Evidence in the process (XXVI Jornadas Iberoamericanas de Derecho Procesal, Atelier 2018), 175, 176-180. See also J Nieva Fenoll, La valoración de la prueba (Marcial Pons 2010) 189-191, emphazising an important aspect of the distinction refered in the text: the author consideres that in the first case (violation of fundamental rights) there’s a constitutional and, in some cases, epistemic justification for the exclusion of illegally obtained evidence, but not in the second (deviation of other evidencial prohibitions or irregulatities). In similar sense, Ferrer Beltrán (n 41) 77-86. Also, distinguishing the consequences and effectiveness of evidence obtained illegally, when those violations do or do not compromise fundamental rights in Brazil, see L Marinoni, S Cruz Arenhart and D Mitidiero, Curso de Processo Civil (Vol. 2, Revista Dos Tribunais 2015) 316-325.
[43] Dolree v Ohio (Supreme Court, United States) [367 U.S. 643 (1961)].
[44] Miranda v Stewart (Supreme Court, United States) [384 U.S. 436 (1966)].
[45] INS v Lopez-Mendoza (Supreme Court, United States) [468 U.S. 1032 (1984)]. In that case, one of the defendants admitted to his illegal entry into the United States. He unsuccessfully objected to his admission's being offered as evidence at the deportation proceeding, contending that the evidence should have been suppressed as the fruit of an unlawful arrest. The Supreme Court reversed, noting that a deportation proceeding is purely a civil action and developing a cost benefit analysis (balancing test) to dismiss the application on the criminal proceeding’s exclusionary rule, to civil matters like deportation.
[46] Art 5.LVI Federal Constitution (Brazil) of the for an analysis of this constitutional provision, see Marinoni, Cruz Arenhart and Mitidiero (n 42) 319-330.
[47] Marinoni, Cruz Arenhart and Mitidiero (n 42) 322.
[48] Art 11.1 Judiciary Act (Spain).
[49] Art 287 SCCP.
[50] Cf Ras Al Khaimah Investment Authority v Azima (Court of Appeal, UK) [2021] EWCA Civ 349.
[51] Rule 32.1(2) UKCPR.
[52] Kuruma v R (East African Court of Appeal, Kenya) [1955] AC 197. Lord Goodard’s opinion in that case is considered a classic to explain this approach: ‘The test to be implied in considering whether evidence is admissible is whether it is relevant to the matters at issue. If it is, it is admissible and the Court is not concerned with how evidence was obtained.’ See Passanante 2018 (n 39) 187.
[53] See Jones v University of Warwick (Court of Appeal, UK) [2003] EWCA Civ 151: ‘Excluding the evidence is not, moreover, the only weapon in the court's armoury. The court has other steps it can take to discourage conduct of the type of which complaint is made. In particular it can reflect its disapproval in the orders for costs which it makes.’ In that case, the Court ended admitting evidence produced by an agent (investigator for the defendant) who trespassed by entering the claimant’s house, infringing her privacy. But the party responsible for the illegal action was charged with the costs of the hearings dedicated to the issue. See Passanante 2018 (n 42) 187.
[54] See K Miki, Civil Procedure Law (4th edn, 2023) 256. See also Passanante (n 42) 190-191.
[55] A divorce case may be used as an example: Plonit v. The District Rabbinical Court Netanyah, HCJ (Israel Supreme Court sitting as a High Court of Justice) Judgment 13 May 2006, 6650/04, Nevo e-database. During the divorce proceedings of a separated couple in the Rabbinical Court, the husband entered with two friends to the wife’s apartment, without her permission, and took photos of her having intercourse with another man. The Rabbinical Court admitted the photos as evidence over the wife’s objection and held that the husband is entitled to divorce his wife (a decree that does not of by itself dissolve the marriage, since the wife must agree to accept the get, ie, Jewish bill of divorce). The wife petitioned the Supreme Court, sitting as a High Court of Justice and the decision was reversed. The Supreme Court held that the public interest in maintaining the wife’s privacy in her home should prevail in this case and therefore held the photos inadmissible.
[56] Einhorn explains the case in the following terms. The former husband hacked his divorcée’s cell phone and found evidence that he sought to use to vacate the couple’s divorce agreement. The Court held that such evidence, which violated the wife’s privacy as well as her basic right under the Basic Law (Human Dignity and Liberty), was inadmissible. The husband acted in bad faith and the court saw no special reasons to justify the admission of evidence obtained in such flagrant violation of privacy.
[57] Ploni v. Plonit, Family Appeal (District Court, Haifa), Judgment 20 January 2022, 24072-09-21, Nevo e-database. In that case, the Court noted that the wife obtained the messages illegally, violating the husband’s right to privacy. Nevertheless, the Court considered that the evidence should be admitted as evidence, since it was central to the dispute.
[58] Passanante (n 42) 185–187.
[59] Case 2 BvR 454/71 (BVerfG, Germany) Decision 31 July 1973, [NJW 1973 891], cited by Passanante (n 42) 185.
[60] Passanante (n 42) 186.
[61] Article 378 of the National Code of Civil Procedure provides that any evidence is admissible, even if it is not enunciated in those rules, unless they affect morality, the parties or third parties’ personal liberty or are forbidden for the case. It is commonly stated that this provision is a legislative ground for non-admitting evidence that violates fundamental rights. However, the direct imperative force of the Constitution general clauses (due process, intimacy, dignity, personal liberty, protection against auto-incrimination, etc) is enough to.
[62] The following principles are recognized in most Iberoamerican countries, whether by explicit legislation (like in Article 157 of the Brazilian Code of Criminal Procedure or in the Colombian criminal and administrative procedural regimes) or by case law doctrine (see G Priori Posada, ‘Reglas de exclusión probatoriay prueba ilícita en Iberoamérica: un reporte desde el derecho fundamental a probar’ in La prueba en el proceso. Evidence in the process (XXVI Jornadas Iberoamericanas de Derecho Procesal, Atelier 2018) 153, 173–174.
[63] See Supreme Court (Argentina), case Montenegro, Judgment 10 December 1981 (Fallos: 303:1938); case Florentino, Judgment 27 November 1984 (Fallos: 306:1752); case Ruiz Judgment 17 September 1987 (Fallos: 310:1847), case Francomano Judgment 19 November 1987 (Fallos: 310:2384); case Daray Judgment 22 December 1994 (Fallos: 317:1985). For example, when the investigation that led to a conviction was based on a judicially ordered telephone intervention adopted without substantiating the grounds for suspicion (Supreme Court (Argentina), case Quaranta, Judgment 31 August 2010, (Fallos: 333:1674).
[64] For example, in a case in which the authorship of a homicide had been proven, in part, through the conclusions of a legally performed autopsy on a corpse found through illegal methods (the defendant had been taken to the place without his attorney present and with signs of having been beaten), the Supreme Court considered that the evidence should have been excluded for application of the principles indicated in (a) and (b) (case Paulino (Supreme Court) Argentina, Judgment 17 September 2013).
[65] Case Gordon (Supreme Court, Argentina), case Judgment 4 October 1988 (Fallos: 311:2045).
[66] Case Luque (Supreme Court, Argentina), case Judgment 26 November 2002 (Fallos: 325:3118). In that situation, the Argentine Supreme Court has followed the opinion of Justice Powell in Stone v. Powell, saying that ‘an erroneous application of the exclusion rule can divert the process of searching for the truth and unjustifiably distort the principle of justice that must prevail in all judicial pronouncements’ (see explicit reference in case Paulino, n 64). The Colombian Constitutional Court has extended the ‘poisonous tree’ metaphor to explain its non-application in cases of ‘independent sources’ or ‘inevitable finding’: ‘This Court also rejects the insinuation that an illicit piece of evidence contaminates the whole body of evidence … The doctrine of the fruits of the poisoned tree cannot be confused with the theory of the contaminated apple in the fruit basket’ (Corte Constitucional, Colombia, SU 159, 6/3/2022, cited by Priori Posada (n 60) 173).
[67] See A Morello, La prueba. Tendencias modernas (2 edn, Platense 2001) 327-332. Arazi sustains that in civil cases the admissibility of illegally obtained evidence should depend on a balancing test, taking into consideration the entity of the disputed rights and the values at stake. See R Arazi, ‘La prueba ilícita. Declaración de menores de catorce años y des testigos eclxuidos en el proceso civil’ (2001) (3) Jurisprudencia Argentina 1063 ff. Priori Posada considers this complex test between the collision of the fundamental right to prove and other fundamental rights that could be affected as a result of the production of evidence, as typical of the Iberoamerican approach to the problem of illicit evidence. See Priori Posada (n 62) 153–154, 167–170).
[68] J Wigmore, ‘The History of the Hearsay Rule’ (1904) 17 Harvard Law Review 437, 458 considers it the ‘most characteristic rule of the Anglo-American law of evidence, – a rule which may be esteemed, next to jury-trial, the greatest contribution of that eminently practical legal system to the world's jurisprudence of procedure (…).’
[69] Ibid 437.
[70] The hearsay rule is mostly important in witness statements, but it includes also non-verbal conducts and written documents (see Taruffo (n 1) 44 and references in n 23).
[71] Wigmore (n 68) 338 indicates that this was the main reason for consolidating the rule in the early 1700’s in England: ‘What is further noticeable is that in these utterances of the early 1700's the reason is clearly put forward why there should be this distinction between statements made out of court and statements made on the stand; the reason is that “the other side hath no opportunity of a cross-examination”.’
[72] Taruffo explains it in these terms: ‘The basic reason for the hearsay rule is to avoid the danger of guiding the jury to make mistakes when evaluating the reliability of the statement.’ See Taruffo (n 1) 43.
[73] The point is made in reverse by Rule 801(d)(1) USFRE, which identifies situations in which the out-of-court statement of the witness is admissible over a hearsay objection. The basic point is that, other than such situations, the out-of-court statement would be excluded as hearsay.
[74] Rule 32(a)(4) USFRCP.
[75] Rule 801(c)(2) USFRE. A leading American Evidence casebook offers an imaginary illustration to make the point. A husband and his second wife were in a plane that crashed. The husband's will left his estate to his second wife, if she survived him, but if she did not to the children from his first marriage. The witness in court was the sheriff who was the first person to reach the downed plane. He immediately saw that the wife was dead. Then he approached the other passenger (the husband), who whispered ‘I'm still alive.’ This statement was offered to prove that the husband was still alive after the wife died. See R Park and R Friedman, Evidence (12th edn, 2013) 203-07. Although it is true that in this imaginary case the statement is offered to prove what the husband said - that he was still alive - the content of the statement was essentially irrelevant to proving that point. Had he said ‘I am dead,’ or merely groaned, that would suffice to show that he was still alive. This would be a non-hearsay use of the statement.
[76] The intricacies of such offers of proof are often quite challenging. In their treatise, Professors Mueller and Kirkpatrick have more than 40 pages of text devoted to such issues. See C Mueller and L Kirkpatrick, Evidence 737-82 (5th edn, 2012).
[77] See Rule 801(d)(1); 801(d)(2), 803; 804 USFRE.
[78] Rule 807 USFRE.
[79] Rule 803(6) USFRE.
[80] Rule 803(8) USFRE.
[81] T Einhorn explains the importance of this second requirement, emphasizing that if the purpose of bringing an out-of-court statement is just to prove that it was made, rather than to prove that it was correct, then it is not considered hearsay. Therefore, for example, in a libel case, if a witness on behalf of the plaintiff confirms that he heard the defendant say that the plaintiff is a thief and a liar, such a statement will be admitted. Likewise, if there is a dispute whether a person could speak French, a witness testifying that he heard him speak French is not hearsay, since the testimony does not seek to prove the truthfulness of whatever that person may have said.
[82] N Andrews, English Civil Procedure: Fundamentals of the New Civil Justice System (Oxford University Press 2003) 727.
[83] Art 4 Civil Evidence Act 1995 (UK).
[84] See for instance, case Molle c. Mayocchi (Second Civil and Commercial Court of Appeal, 2nd Chamber, La Plata, Argentina), Judgment 23 February 2021: ‘Reference witness are those that transmit knowledge related to a fact to which they have accessed through the sensory perception of a third party (the true witness of what happened). The probative effectiveness of the statements of these "hearsay witnesses" (testigos de oídas) is extremely restricted, since they only prove that they have heard a story from someone else's mouth (Art 384 and 456 of the C.P.C.C.).’
[85] Applying this rule, In Old Chief v. United States, 519 U.S. 172 (1997), the Supreme Court reversed a conviction considering that the district court had abused its discretion under Rule 403 by spurning a defendant's offer to concede a prior judgment and admitting the full judgment record over the defendant's objection, when the name or nature of the prior offense raises the risk of a verdict tainted by improper considerations.