Notes of Advisory Committee on Rules
This general ground-clearing eliminates all
grounds of incompetency not specifically
recognized in the succeeding rules of this
Article. Included among the grounds thus
abolished are religious belief, conviction
of crime, and connection with the litigation
as a party or interested person or spouse
of a party or interested person. With the
exception of the so-called Dead Man's Acts,
American jurisdictions generally have ceased
to recognize these grounds.
The Dead Man's Acts are surviving traces
of the common law disqualification of parties
and interested persons. They exist in variety
too great to convey conviction of their wisdom
and effectiveness. These rules contain no
provision of this kind. For the reasoning
underlying the decision not to give effect
to state statutes in diversity cases, see
the Advisory Committee's Note to Rule 501.
No mental or moral qualifications for testifying
as a witness are specified. Standards of
mental capacity have proved elusive in actual
application. A leading commentator observes
that few witnesses are disqualified on that
ground. Weihofen, Testimonial Competence
and Credibility, 34 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 53
(1965). Discretion is regularly exercised
in favor of allowing the testimony. A witness
wholly without capacity is difficult to imagine.
The question is one particularly suited to
the jury as one of weight and credibility,
subject to judicial authority to review the
sufficiency of the evidence. 2 Wigmore §§
501, 509. Standards of moral qualification
in practice consist essentially of evaluating
a person's truthfulness in terms of his own
answers about it. Their principal utility
is in affording an opportunity on voir dire
examination to impress upon the witness his
moral duty. This result may, however, be
accomplished more directly, and without haggling
in terms of legal standards, by the manner
of administering the oath or affirmation
under Rule 603.
Admissibility of religious belief as a ground
of impeachment is treated in Rule 610. Conviction
of crime as a ground of impeachment is the
subject of Rule 609. Marital relationship
is the basis for privilege under Rule 505.
Interest in the outcome of litigation and
mental capacity are, of course, highly relevant
to credibility and require no special treatment
to render them admissible along with other
matters bearing upon the perception, memory,
and narration of witnesses.
Notes of Committee on the Judiciary, House
Report No. 93-650
Rule 601 as submitted to the Congress provided
that "Every person is competent to be
a witness except as otherwise provided in
these rules." One effect of the Rule
as proposed would have been to abolish age,
mental capacity, and other grounds recognized
in some State jurisdictions as making a person
incompetent as a witness. The greatest controversy
centered around the Rule's rendering inapplicable
in the federal courts the so-called Dead
Man's Statutes which exist in some States.
Acknowledging that there is substantial disagreement
as to the merit of Dead Man's Statutes, the
Committee nevertheless believed that where
such statutes have been enacted they represent
State policy which should not be overturned
in the absence of a compelling federal interest.
The Committee therefore amended the Rule
to make competency in civil actions determinable
in accordance with State law with respect
to elements of claims or defenses as to which
State law supplies the rule of decision.
Cf. Courtland v Walston & Co., Inc.,
340 F. Supp. 1076, 1087-1092 (S.D.N.Y. 1972).
Notes of Committee on the Judiciary, Senate
Report No. 93-1277
The amendment to rule 601 parallels the treatment
accorded rule 501 discussed immediately above.
Notes of Conference Committee, House Report
No. 93-1597
Rule 601 deals with competency of witnesses.
Both the House and Senate bills provide that
federal competency law applies in criminal
cases. In civil actions and proceedings,
the House bill provides that state competency
law applies "to an element of a claim
or defense as to which State law supplies
the rule of decision." The Senate bill
provides that "in civil actions and
proceedings arising under 28 U.S.C. § 1332
or 28 U.S.C. § 1335, or between citizens
of different States and removed under 28
U.S.C. § 1441(b) the competency of a witness,
person, government, State or political subdivision
thereof is determined in accordance with
State law, unless with respect to the particular
claim or defense, Federal law supplies the
rule of decision." The wording of the
House and Senate bills differs in the treatment
of civil actions and proceedings. The rule
in the House bill applies to evidence that
relates to "an element of a claim or
defense." If an item of proof tends
to support or defeat a claim or defense,
or an element of a claim or defense, and
if state law supplies the rule of decision
for that claim or defense, then state competency
law applies to that item of proof.
For reasons similar to those underlying its
action on Rule 501, the Conference adopts
the House provision.