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The guilty plea of a co-accused is a form of hearsay.<ref>
The guilty plea of a co-accused is a form of hearsay.<ref>
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This form of hearsay is "rarely" admissible.<Ref>
This form of hearsay is "rarely" admissible.<Ref>

Revision as of 20:14, 2 May 2021

Introduction

Hearsay evidence is any statement, either written or oral, which was made out of court, but is presented in court to prove the truth of that statement.[1] It is a type of evidence that is generally considered inadmissible.[2]

The hearsay rule has stated as:[3]

Written or oral statements, or communicative conduct made by persons otherwise than in testimony at the proceeding in which it is offered, are inadmissible, if such statements or conduct are tendered either as proof of their truth or as proof of assertions implicit therein.

N/A

The definition has been addressed in several cases.[4]

Any out-of-court statement that is adduced simply to prove the statement was made is not hearsay. The statement is admissible as long as it is relevant.[5]

Allowing in hearsay can compromise trial fairness and the truth seeking process.[6]

  1. Subramanian v Public Prosecutor [1956] 1 W.L.R. 965 (P.C.) (UK) at 970 and adopted in Canada first in R v Abbey, 1982 CanLII 25 (SCC), per Dickson J
    R v Evans, 1993 CanLII 86 (SCC), [1993] 3 SCR 653; [1993] SCJ No 115, per Sopinka J, at para 16 ("An out-of-court statement which is for the truth of its contents is hearsay.")
  2. Christie , [1914] A.C. 545 (UK), at p. 548
    R v Bradshaw, 2017 SCC 35 (CanLII), per Karakatsanis J, at para 20 ("Hearsay is an out-of-court statement tendered for the truth of its contents. ") and 21
    R v Khelawon, 2006 SCC 57 (CanLII), per Charron J, at paras 2 and 3
  3. Sopinka, Lederman and Bryant, The Law of Evidence in Canada, Butterworths, 2d ed. ss.6.2
  4. Evans, supra
    R v Smith, 1992 CanLII 79 (SCC), per Lamer CJ
    R v Hawkins, 1996 CanLII 154 (SCC), per Lamer CJ and Iacobucci J, at 153
  5. Evans, supra, at p. 102-103
  6. Bradshaw, supra, at para 20

Reasons for Exclusion

Hearsay statements are difficult to assess for trustworthiness.[1]

Courts generally do not allow such evidence as it is generally said to be untrustworthy for several reasons:[2]

  1. The admission of such evidence lends itself to the perpetration of fraud. This is in part due to the lack of oath on the part of the source.[3]
  2. Hearsay evidence results in a decision based upon secondary and, therefore, weaker evidence, rather than the best evidence available. Related to this, there is no opportunity to cross-examine or otherwise test the evidence of the source.[4]
  3. There is no opportunity to observe the demeanour of the declarant, thus making it harder to assess the quality of the evidence.[5]
  4. The introduction of such evidence will lengthen trials.

These concerns include the inability to investigate "declarant’s perception, memory, narration, or sincerity".[6]

These are known as the hearsay dangers.[7]

Additional concerns were also identified:[8]

  1. "the declarant may have misperceived the facts to which the hearsay statement relates";
  2. "even if correctly perceived, the relevant facts may have been wrongly remembered; "
  3. "the declarant may have narrated the relevant facts in an unintentionally misleading manner; and"
  4. "the declarant may have knowingly made a false assertion. The opportunity to fully probe these potential sources of error arises only if the declarant is present in court and subject to cross-examination."

Of these dangers, the lack of contemporaneous cross-examination is the most essential definiting feature.[9]

Allowing hearsay evidence "compromise trial fairness and the trial’s truth-seeking process".[10]

  1. R v Bradshaw, 2017 SCC 35 (CanLII), per Karakatsanis J, at para 20
  2. Sopkina, at 175
  3. Bradshaw, supra, at para 20
  4. R v Abel, 2011 NLTD 173 (CanLII), per Stack J
    R v Khelawon, 2006 SCC 57 (CanLII), per Charron J, at para 38 - no way to examine reliability by cross-examination
  5. Bradshaw, supra, at para 20
  6. Bradshaw, supra, at para 20
    Khelawon, supra, at para 2
    R v Baldree, 2013 SCC 35 (CanLII), per Fish J, at para 32
  7. R v KGB, 1993 CanLII 116 (SCC), 79 CCC (3d) 257, [1993] 1 SCR 740, per Lamer CJ, at pp. 271-72 (CCC)
  8. Baldree, supra, at para 32
  9. Khelawon, supra, at para 38
    Bradshaw, supra, at para 20
    R v KGB, 1993 CanLII 116 (SCC), per Lamer CJ, at p. 764
  10. Bradshaw, supra, at para 20

Elements of Hearsay

Where hearsay potentially arises there are four elements to consider for the rule to be engaged:[1]

  1. a declarant
  2. a recipient
  3. a statement and
  4. a purpose for introducing the statement

The first three are almost always made out, the fourth requirement is usually the source of controversy. Not every out of court statement is hearsay.[2]

The prohibited purpose consists of admission for the purpose of proving the “truth” of its contents. Otherwise, it is admissible evidence. That is, statements that used to show the recipient had notice, knowledge or motive, or was in some way probative, then it is otherwise admissible.[3]

If it is for the “truth of its contents” then it is presumptively inadmissible unless it fits in a traditional categorical exception or under the principled exception.[4] The primary reason for this is that is it not possible to test the reliability of the statement such as by cross-examination.[5]

  1. R v Baldree, 2012 ONCA 138 (CanLII), per Feldman JA (1:1:1), at para 46, appealed to SCC on other grounds
  2. R v Khelawon, 2006 SCC 57 (CanLII), [2006] 2 SCR 787, per Charron J, at para 56
  3. R v Evans, 1993 CanLII 86 (SCC), per Sopinka J, at para 16 ("An out-of-court statement offered simply as proof that the statement was made is not hearsay, and is admissible as long as it has some probative value")
  4. Khelawon, supra, at para 42
  5. R v Sharif, 2009 BCCA 390 (CanLII), per Saunders JA, at para 12

Types of Statements

Statements and utterances are usually verbal but can include conduct that communicates meaning.[1]

  1. R v Nurse, 2019 ONCA 260 (CanLII), , 145 OR (3d) 241, per Trotter JA

Implied Assertions

An implied assertion (also called "implied hearsay") is act or utterance that conveys some information to the recipient in an implied manner. [1] Such conduct can include:[2]

  • nodding the head
  • pointing to someone in accusation
  • pointing at something
  • shrugging shoulders
  • showing something to someone

The trier of fact must determine the meaning of the words that were intended to be conveyed.[3]

Non-assertive conduct however is conduct from which a statement can be inferred based on the declarants belief.[4]

Courts do not make a principled distinction between implied assertions and explicit hearsay.[5]

  1. R v Nurse, 2019 ONCA 260 (CanLII), , 145 OR (3d) 241, per Trotter JA, at para 54
  2. R v Badgerow, 2014 ONCA 272 (CanLII), 311 CCC (3d) 26, per Strathy JA, at para 107
  3. Badgerow, ibid., at para 107
  4. Nurse, supra, at para 54
  5. R v Baldree, 2013 SCC 35 (CanLII), per Fish J

Computer Records

See also: Electronic Documents and Records

The absence of data in a computer system is not generally hearsay. For example, inquiries into the police records regarding a suspect that result in a negative result was found not to be hearsay.[1]

  1. R v Saddleback, 2012 ABQB 670 (CanLII), per Lee J, at paras 45 to 54

Phone Calls or Text Messages

Discovered electroncic communications are routinely admissible despite them consisting of hearsay.[1]

This is in part because text messages are "in essence", electronic conversations where the only practical difference is the "transmission process".[2]

The reliability of communications is generally high. They are often spontaneous and contemporaneous with the events they describe.[3]

The reliability of text messages will increase where there is a greater the nnumber of text messages on a single subject.[4] The lack of full context in longer conversations will generally go to weight.[5] By contrast, reliability may be undermined where the message is lack sufficient context or where the meaning is otherwise unclear.[6] The lack of context must be conisidered when deciding what meaning to make from the conversation.[7]

Drug Purchase Calls

Drug purchase phone calls, usually where the police are on the other end of a call, have a history of litigation to exclude them as hearsay. More often than not they have been admitted as either necessary and reliable or as non-hearsay.[8]

Other Examples

The possession of ID with a person's name is not necessarily hearsay as the probability of possessing a document of that description is probative to ID.[9]

Guilty Pleas of Co-Accused

The guilty plea of a co-accused is a form of hearsay.[10] This form of hearsay is "rarely" admissible.[11]

  1. R v Cater, 2012 NSPC 15 (CanLII), per Derrick J, at para 36
    R v Calnen, 2015 NSSC 319 (CanLII), per Chipman J, at para 27
  2. Cater, supra
    R v TELUS Communications Co, 2013 SCC 16 (CanLII), [2013] 2 SCR 3, per Abella J, at para 5 ("Text messaging is, in essence, an electronic conversation. The only practical difference between text messaging and the traditional voice communications is the transmission process. ...")
  3. R v Burns, 2016 SKCA 67 (CanLII), per Caldwell JA (3:0), at para 27
    Cater, supra, at paras 38 to 40
  4. R v Gerrior, 2014 NSCA 76 (CanLII), per Beveridge JA (3:0), at paras 43 to 48
    R v Bridgman, 2017 ONCA 940 (CanLII), per Fairburn JA (3:0), at paras 55 to 57
  5. R v JR, 2015 ONCJ 837 (CanLII), per Paciocco J, at para 19
  6. R v Foerster, 2017 BCCA 105 (CanLII), per Groberman JA (3:0), at paras 72 to 74
  7. e.g. R v Delorme, 2013 SKQB 199 (CanLII), per Keene J, at para 69 - three text messages n a phone without context
  8. As non-hearsay see R v Lucia, 2010 ONCA 533 (CanLII), per curiam, at para 7
    R v Edwards, 1994 CanLII 1461 (ONCA), per McKinlay JA, at pp. 248-249 (see also para 22) -admissible as non-hearsay
    R v Nguyen, 2003 BCCA 556 (CanLII), 180 CCC (3d) 347 (BCCA), per Mackenzie JA, at para 17
    R v Ly, 1997 CanLII 330 (SCC), per McLachlin J, at paras 1 to 4
    R v Cook, 1978 CanLII 399 , per McIntyre JA, at p. 320
    R v Duncan, 2001 CanLII 11779 (MB PC), per Joyal J - phone-call inadmissible
    R v Bjornson, 2009 BCSC 1779 (CanLII), per Bennett J - admissible
    R v Guan, 2010 YKSC 14 (CanLII), per Veale J - admissible b/c not hearsay
    R v Mironuk-Hurak, 2012 MBQB 290 (CanLII), per Oliphant J - admissible b/c not hearsay
  9. R v Johnstone, 2019 ABQB 965 (CanLII), at para 71
  10. R v Rajmoolie, 2020 ONCA 791 (CanLII)(complete citation pending), per Lauwers JA
  11. Rajmoolie, ibid.

Purpose of Introducing the Statement

Typical non-hearsay uses of out-of-court statements include:

  • officers testifying to their reasonable and probable grounds to perform some duty
  • the fact that the statement was made
  • narrative
  • investigative narrative to counterclaim that the investigation was inadequate.[1]

Where evidence of an out-of-court statement is being used for a non-hearsay purpose (not for the truth of its contents), it will still be limited by relevance, probative value, and may be subject to a limiting instruction to a jury.

Corroborating Statements of Co-Accused

The out-of-court statements of a co-accused will be hearsay and cannot be admitted for the purpose of corroborating a witness.[1]

Exculpatory Statements

Hearsay statements of the accused that are exculpatory are still presumptively inadmissible under the general rule of hearsay.[1]

Conspiracy

See also: Traditional Exceptions to Hearsay

A communication by a co-conspirator in furtherance of a common unlawful design that makes out the conspiracy can be admissible to prove the existence of a prior agreement. [1]

Opinion Evidence

Non-specific hearsay opinion evidence is inadmissible.[1]

  1. R v Ranger, 2003 CanLII 32900 (ONCA), 67 OR (3d) 1, 14 CR (6th) 324 (CA), per Charron JA, at para 65

Others

See also Prior Consistent Statements - a form of hearsay

State of Mind

An out of court statement can be admitted as proof of the speaker's state of mind.[1]

Medical Diagnosis

It is generally not acceptable hearsay to establish a medical diagnosis only by the oral evidence of the patient.[2] A medical diagnosis or opinion may be admissible for the fact that it was said and not for the truth of its contents.[3]

  1. R v Simpson, 1988 CanLII 89 (SCC), [1988] 1 SCR 3, per McIntyre J, at 22
  2. e.g. R v Turmel, 2001 BCPC 430 (CanLII), per Alexander J, at para 13
    Krause v Krause, 1974 CanLII 313 (AB QB), per DC Mcdonald J, at para 6
  3. e.g. Balogun v Pandher, 2019 ABQB 291 (CanLII), per Gill J, at para 18

Topics

Case Digests