Res Gestae and Dying Declarations: Difference between revisions
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The utterance does not need to be strictly contemporaneous "so long as the stress or pressure created by it is ongoing".<ref>See ''R v Khan'', (1988), 42 CCC (3d) 197, [http://canlii.ca/t/gbs0g 1988 CanLII 7106] (ON CA){{perONCA|Robins JA}} | The utterance does not need to be strictly contemporaneous "so long as the stress or pressure created by it is ongoing".<ref>See ''R v Khan'', (1988), 42 CCC (3d) 197, [http://canlii.ca/t/gbs0g 1988 CanLII 7106] (ON CA){{perONCA|Robins JA}}{{atp|207}}, aff'd on other grounds at SCC </ref> | ||
The judge should apply a "functional" analysis to its consideration of whether the statement is "contemporaneous".<ref> | The judge should apply a "functional" analysis to its consideration of whether the statement is "contemporaneous".<ref> | ||
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''R v Perciballi'', [http://canlii.ca/t/1fbs7 2001 CanLII 13394] (ONCA), 154 CCC (3d) 481{{perONCA|Charron JA}} (2:1) | ''R v Perciballi'', [http://canlii.ca/t/1fbs7 2001 CanLII 13394] (ONCA), 154 CCC (3d) 481{{perONCA|Charron JA}} (2:1){{atps|520 to 521}} (ONCA)</ref> | ||
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Revision as of 22:22, 17 February 2019
General Principles
Spontaneous or excited utterances are a class of exception to the hearsay rule. An utterance falls in this category where the evidence can characterize it as being a spontaneous exclamation made without premeditation or artifice and before the speaker had time to concoct something.[1]
It has been characterized as words that are contemporaneous with some action. Statements are admitted at times as "words brigaded to action".[2]
The circumstantial trustworthiness of a statement arises where the declarant is under "stress or pressure" from the triggering event that reduces the possibility of "concoction or distortion".[3]
Requirements to the exception usually include:[4]
- utterance made soon after underlying offence
- speaker was in state of upset or trauma
- enough probative value to outweigh any prejudice
The res gestae exception to hearsay does not require necessity. Allowing the statement to be admitted even when the declarant testifies.[5]
- Timing of Utterance
The location and timing of the declarant who makes a excited utterance is not determinative.[6]
The utterance does not need to be strictly contemporaneous "so long as the stress or pressure created by it is ongoing".[7]
The judge should apply a "functional" analysis to its consideration of whether the statement is "contemporaneous".[8]
The statement can be considered "contemporaneous" even if made shortly after the declarant flees the scene.[9]
- ↑
See R v Schwartz (1978) NSR (2d) 335, 1978 CanLII 2477 (NS CA), per MacDonald JA, at para 15
R v Magloir, 2003 NSCA 74 (CanLII), per Oland JA
R v Slugoski, 1985 CanLII 631 (BC CA), [1985] BCJ 1835, per Esson JA (2:1)
R v Khan, (1988), 42 CCC (3d) 197, 1988 CanLII 7106 (ON CA), per Robins JA, at p. 207, aff'd on other grounds 1990 CanLII 77 (SCC), [1990] 2 SCR 531, per McLachlin J
R v Head, 2014 MBCA 59 (CanLII), per Mainella JA, at para 29
- ↑ R v Ly, 1996 ABCA 402 (CanLII), (1996), 193 A.R. 149; [1996] AJ No 1089 (C.A.), per McClung JA, at para 3
- ↑
Head, supra, at para 31
- ↑ R v Hamilton, 2011 NSSC 305 (CanLII), per Rosinski J, at para 20
- ↑ Head, supra , at para 33
- ↑
Head, supra, at para 30
- ↑ See R v Khan, (1988), 42 CCC (3d) 197, 1988 CanLII 7106 (ON CA), per Robins JA, at p. 207, aff'd on other grounds at SCC
- ↑
Head, supra, at para 31
- ↑
Head, supra, at para 30
Dying Declaration
Dying declarations are only admissible where the declarant's death is the issue of the case and where the statement speaks to the circumstances of death. [1]
For a dying declaration to be admissible it must satisfy four criteria:[2]
- the deceased had settled, hopeless expectation of almost immediate death;
- the statement was about the circumstances of death;
- The statement would have been admissible if the deceased had been able to testify; And
- the offence involved the homicide of the victim
The statement must have been admissible if the person was alive to give the statement as evidence.[3]
The first criteria is determined on what would be the expectations of a reasonable person.[4] This is often inferred from the extent of the injuries that were present. [5]
An "implied statement" is "any assertion not expressed by language, but rather is revealed through action".[6] Assertions by conduct include pointing.[7]
- ↑ Schwartzenhauer v The King, [1935] SCR 367, 1935 CanLII 18 (SCC)
- ↑
R v Praljak, 2012 ONSC 5262 (CanLII), per Dambrot J
R v Hall, 2011 ONSC 5628 (CanLII), per Archibald J
- ↑ Rex v Buck et al., 1940 CanLII 107 (ON CA), per Robertson CJ
- ↑
R v Buffalo, [2003] AJ No 1738 (QB)(*no CanLII links)
R v Mulligan, (1973) 23 CR (NS) 1 (ONSC) aff'd at (1974) 18 CCC (2d) 270 (ONCA), 1974 CanLII 1662 (ON CA), per Martin JA
- ↑ E.g. R v Nurse, 2014 ONSC 2340 (CanLII), per Coroza J, at para 33 -- victim had an almost severed neck with intestines spilling out
- ↑
Nurse, ibid., at para 37
Paciocco and Stuesser, The Law of Evidence, 6th Ed (Toronto: iRwin Law, 2011), at p. 108
- ↑
Nurse, supra, at para 37
R v Perciballi, 2001 CanLII 13394 (ONCA), 154 CCC (3d) 481, per Charron JA (2:1), at pp. 520 to 521 (ONCA)