Notes of Advisory Committee on Rules
Problems of relevancy call for an answer
to the question whether an item of evidence,
when tested by the processes of legal reasoning,
possesses sufficient probative value to justify
receiving it in evidence. Thus, assessment
of the probative value of evidence that a
person purchased a revolver shortly prior
to a fatal shooting with which he is charged
is a matter of analysis and reasoning.
The variety of relevancy problems is coextensive
with the ingenuity of counsel in using circumstantial
evidence as a means of proof. An enormous
number of cases fall in no set pattern, and
this rule is designed as a guide for handling
them. On the other hand, some situations
recur with sufficient frequency to create
patterns susceptible of treatment by specific
rules. Rule 404 and those following it are
of that variety; they also serve as illustrations
of the application of the present rule as
limited by the exclusionary principles of
Rule 403.
Passing mention should be made of so-called
"conditional" relevancy. Morgan,
Basic Problems of Evidence 45-46 (1962).
In this situation, probative value depends
not only upon satisfying the basic requirement
of relevancy as described above but also
upon the existence of some matter of fact.
For example, if evidence of a spoken statement
is relied upon to prove notice, probative
value is lacking unless the person sought
to be charged heard the statement. The problem
is one of fact, and the only rules needed
are for the purpose of determining the respective
functions of judge and jury. See Rules 104(b)
and 901. The discussion which follows in
the present note is concerned with relevancy
generally, not with any particular problem
of conditional relevancy.
Relevancy is not an inherent characteristic
of any item of evidence but exists only as
a relation between an item of evidence and
a matter properly provable in the case. Does
the item of evidence tend to prove the matter
sought to be proved? Whether the relationship
exists depends upon principles evolved by
experience or science, applied logically
to the situation at hand. James, Relevancy,
Probability and the Law, 29 Calif. L.Rev.
689, 696, n.15 (1941), in Selected Writings
on Evidence and Trial 610, 615, n.15 (Fryer
ed. 1957). The rule summarizes this relationship
as a "tendency to make the existence"
of the fact to be proved "more probable
or less probable." Compare Uniform Rule
1(2) which states the crux of relevancy as
"a tendency in reason," thus perhaps
emphasizing unduly the logical process and
ignoring the need to draw upon experience
or science to validate the general principle
upon which relevancy in a particular situation
depends.
The standard of probability under the rule
is "more . . . probable than it would
be without the evidence." Any more stringent
requirement is unworkable and unrealistic.
As McCormick § 152, p. 317, says, "A
brick is not a wall," or, as Falknor,
Extrinsic Policies Affecting Admissibility,
10 Rutgers L.Rev. 574, 576 (1956), quotes
Professor McBaine, "[I]t is not to be
supposed that every witness can make a home
run." Dealing with probability in the
language of the rule has the added virtue
of avoiding confusion between questions of
admissibility and questions of the sufficiency
of the evidence.
The rule uses the phrase "fact that
is of consequence to the determination of
the action" to describe the kind of
fact to which proof may properly be directed.
The language is that of California Evidence
Code § 210; it has the advantage of avoiding
the loosely used and ambiguous word "material."
Tentative Recommendation and a Study Relating
to the Uniform Rules of Evidence (Art. I.
General Provisions), Cal. Law Revision Comm'n,
Rep., Rec. & Studies, 10-11 (1964). The
fact to be proved may be ultimate, intermediate,
or evidentiary; it matters not, so long as
it is of consequence in the determination
of the action. Cf. Uniform Rule 1(2) which
requires that the evidence relate to a "material"
fact.
The fact to which the evidence is directed
need not be in dispute. While situations
will arise which call for the exclusion of
evidence offered to prove a point conceded
by the opponent, the ruling should be made
on the basis of such considerations as waste
of time and undue prejudice (see Rule 403),
rather than under any general requirement
that evidence is admissible only if directed
to matters in dispute. Evidence which is
essentially background in nature can scarcely
be said to involve disputed matter, yet it
is universally offered and admitted as an
aid to understanding. Charts, photographs,
views of real estate, murder weapons, and
many other items of evidence fall in this
category. A rule limiting admissibility to
evidence directed to a controversial point
would invite the exclusion of this helpful
evidence, or at least the raising of endless
questions over its admission. Cf. California
Evidence Code § 210, defining relevant evidence
in terms of tendency to prove a disputed
fact.