It has long been an established rule of courtroom procedure that a party calling a witness is prohibited from testing the credibility of that witness except under certain conditions, and then only in certain ways. The basic premise that one may not impeach one\u27s own witness has, to a greater or lesser extent, been modified by courts and legislatures over the years, but for the most part the decision-making process has remained impervious to the impressive array of judicial theorists who have roundly criticized the rule for not meeting the exigencies of modern practice. In State v. Fronning, the Supreme Court of Nebraska overturned almost eighty years of precedent and abrogated virtually every restriction on the impeachment of one\u27s ow...
Arthur Vanderbilt once stated that the right to a fair trial in both civil and criminal cases is ...
Cooper, a citizen of New Jersey, was sought as a witness by a defendant in a criminal prosecution in...
Within the past few years, a number of important cases have been decided by federal courts involving...
It has long been an established rule of courtroom procedure that a party calling a witness is prohib...
On August 24, 1975, new rules of evidence became effective in Nebraska courts. Known officially as t...
Introduction Rule 601: General Rule of Competency Rule 602: Lack of Personal Knowledge Rule 603: Oat...
The adversary system of adjudication is one of the major cornerstones of the Anglo-American system o...
This article discusses two sections of the Federal and Nebraska Rules: (1) cross-examination of part...
In Wilson v. State, the Supreme Court of Georgia unanimously held that a party may impeach the credi...
The defendant was convicted of the statutory rape of his stepdaughter. Immediately following the all...
Today the courts are almost unanimous in holding that proof of statements made by a witness out of c...
Witness testified before a federal grand jury regarding his participation in acts regarded by the gr...
The rules contained in Article VII, Opinion and Expert Testimony, of the Proposed Nebraska Rules o...
Courts of last resort now seldom reverse a ruling on the competency of witnesses.\u27 Convinced, and...
The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution provides that no person may be compelled in an...
Arthur Vanderbilt once stated that the right to a fair trial in both civil and criminal cases is ...
Cooper, a citizen of New Jersey, was sought as a witness by a defendant in a criminal prosecution in...
Within the past few years, a number of important cases have been decided by federal courts involving...
It has long been an established rule of courtroom procedure that a party calling a witness is prohib...
On August 24, 1975, new rules of evidence became effective in Nebraska courts. Known officially as t...
Introduction Rule 601: General Rule of Competency Rule 602: Lack of Personal Knowledge Rule 603: Oat...
The adversary system of adjudication is one of the major cornerstones of the Anglo-American system o...
This article discusses two sections of the Federal and Nebraska Rules: (1) cross-examination of part...
In Wilson v. State, the Supreme Court of Georgia unanimously held that a party may impeach the credi...
The defendant was convicted of the statutory rape of his stepdaughter. Immediately following the all...
Today the courts are almost unanimous in holding that proof of statements made by a witness out of c...
Witness testified before a federal grand jury regarding his participation in acts regarded by the gr...
The rules contained in Article VII, Opinion and Expert Testimony, of the Proposed Nebraska Rules o...
Courts of last resort now seldom reverse a ruling on the competency of witnesses.\u27 Convinced, and...
The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution provides that no person may be compelled in an...
Arthur Vanderbilt once stated that the right to a fair trial in both civil and criminal cases is ...
Cooper, a citizen of New Jersey, was sought as a witness by a defendant in a criminal prosecution in...
Within the past few years, a number of important cases have been decided by federal courts involving...