Grounds For Objection On Direct Exam
Grounds For Objection On Direct Exam
Grounds For Objection On Direct Exam
1. Leading Question
The question suggests the answer to the witness. Leading questions are
permitted if the attorney conducting the examination has received
permission to treat the witness as a hostile witness.
The case is a collection case. The defendant contends that the debt has
been paid. He calls a witness to testify the fact of payment.
The question asked of the witness is not about the issues in the trial.
This will result in questions and answers to go around in circles. Asking
irrelevant and immaterial questions will not only waste time of the courts
but it will also defeat the purpose of arriving at a judgment based on the
testimonial evidence.
3. Counsel is testifying
4. Best Evidence
Used when the evidence being solicited is not the best source of
the information. Usually occurs when a witness is being asked a
question about a document that is available to be entered into evidence.
The document should be entered as proof of its contents.
5. Hearsay
A statement made out of this court offered in court to prove the truth
of the matter asserted. A statement is not hearsay if the words spoken
are relevant, not what the words mean. It is an evidence offered by a
witness in court to prove the truth of a fact, not based on his personal
knowledge, but on the knowledge of such person who is not in the
witness stand. The witness in testifying, asserts that the facts are true by
merely repeating in court what someone else has told him outside the
court.
Thus, if a witness testifies that it was indeed Mr. RR who robbed Mr.
VV because that is what Mr. WW told him the testimony of the witness is
hearsay and objectionable.
6. Improper Characterization
7. Speculation
The witness does not have first-hand knowledge of the fact she is
testifying to. This could be what someone else thought or why someone
did something. It could also include what would have happened had
occurred. Testifying as to what they believe may have happened, or about
another person’s state of mind, are all considered improper evidence. The
only exception in mock trial is that expert witnesses, or those who are
called to the stand because of particular knowledge or experience, are
usually given greater exemption from this objection. It would not be
speculation for a signature authenticator to testify the defendant is guilty
of fraud based on that expert’s analysis and professional opinion.
8. Relevance
The evidence being solicited does not relate to merits of the case or
another admissible purpose such as foundation or permissible character
evidence. - This is not the same as “Irrelevancy” which is neither a real
objection nor a real word.
9. Argumentative
10. Badgering