Notes of Advisory Committee on Rules
An oft-quoted paragraph, McCormick, § 162,
p. 340, describes habit in terms effectively
contrasting it with character:
Character and habit are close akin. Character
is a generalized description of one's disposition,
or of one's disposition in respect to a general
trait, such as honesty, temperance, or peacefulness.
‘Habit,' in modern usage, both lay and psychological,
is more specific. It describes one's regular
response to a repeated specific situation.
If we speak of character for care, we think
of the person's tendency to act prudently
in all the varying situations of life, in
business, family life, in handling automobiles
and in walking across the street. A habit,
on the other hand, is the person's regular
practice of meeting a particular kind of
situation with a specific type of conduct,
such as the habit of going down a particular
stairway two stairs at a time, or of giving
the hand-signal for a left turn, or of alighting
from railway cars while they are moving.
The doing of the habitual acts may become
semi-automatic.
Equivalent behavior on the part of a group
is designated "routine practice of an
organization" in the rule.
Agreement is general that habit evidence
is highly persuasive as proof of conduct
on a particular occasion. Again quoting McCormick
§ 162, p. 341:
Character may be thought of as the sum of
one's habits though doubtless it is more
than this. But unquestionably the uniformity
of one's response to habit is far greater
than the consistency with which one's conduct
conforms to character or disposition. Even
though character comes in only exceptionally
as evidence of an act, surely any sensible
man in investigating whether X did a particular
act would be greatly helped in his inquiry
by evidence as to whether he was in the habit
of doing it.
When disagreement has appeared, its focus
has been upon the question what constitutes
habit, and the reason for this is readily
apparent. The extent to which instances must
be multiplied and consistency of behavior
maintained in order to rise to the status
of habit inevitably gives rise to differences
of opinion. Lewan, Rationale of Habit Evidence,
16 Syracuse L.Rev. 39, 49 (1964). While adequacy
of sampling and uniformity of response are
key factors, precise standards for measuring
their sufficiency for evidence purposes cannot
be formulated.
The rule is consistent with prevailing views.
Much evidence is excluded simply because
of failure to achieve the status of habit.
Thus, evidence of intemperate "habits"
is generally excluded when offered as proof
of drunkenness in accident cases, Annot.,
46 A.L.R. 2d 103, and evidence of other assaults
is inadmissible to prove the instant one
in a civil assault action, Annot., 66 A.L.R.
2d 806. In Levin v. United States, 119 U.S.App.
D.C. 156, 338 F.2d 265 (1964), testimony
as to the religious "habits" of
the accused, offered as tending to prove
that he was at home observing the Sabbath
rather than out obtaining money through larceny
by trick, was held properly excluded:
It seems apparent to us that an individual's
religious practices would not be the type
of activities which would lend themselves
to the characterization of ‘invariable regularity.'
[1 Wigmore 520.] Certainly the very volitional
basis of the activity raises serious questions
as to its invariable nature, and hence its
probative value.
Id. at 272. These rulings are not inconsistent
with the trend towards admitting evidence
of business transactions between one of the
parties and a third person as tending to
prove that he made the same bargain or proposal
in the litigated situation. Slough, Relevancy
Unraveled, 6 Kan. L. Rev. 38-41 (1957). Nor
are they inconsistent with such cases as
Whittemore v. Lockheed Aircraft Corp., 65
Cal. App. 2d 737, 151 P.2d 670 (1944), upholding
the admission of evidence that plaintiff's
intestate had on four other occasions flown
planes from defendant's factory for delivery
to his employer airline, offered to prove
that he was piloting rather than a guest
on a plane which crashed and killed all on
board while en route for delivery.
A considerable body of authority has required
that evidence of the routine practice of
an organization be corroborated as a condition
precedent to its admission in evidence. Slough,
Relevancy Unraveled, 5 Kan.L.Rev. 404, 449
(1957). This requirement is specifically
rejected by the rule on the ground that it
relates to the sufficiency of the evidence
rather than admissibility. A similar position
is taken in New Jersey Rule 49. The rule
also rejects the requirement of the absence
of eyewitnesses, sometimes encountered with
respect to admitting habit evidence to prove
freedom from contributory negligence in wrongful
death cases. For comment critical of the
requirements see Frank, J., in Cereste v.
New York, N.H. & H.R. Co., 231 F.2d 50
(2d Cir. 1956), cert. denied 351 U.S. 951,
10 Vand. L. Rev. 447 (1957); McCormick §
162, p. 342. The omission of the requirement
from the California Evidence Code is said
to have effected its elimination. Comment,
Cal. Ev. Code § 1105.