Res Gestae
RES GESTAE
[ Latin, Things done.] Secondhand statements considered trustworthy for the purpose of admission as evidence in a lawsuit when repeated by a witness because they were made spontaneously and concurrently with an event.
Res gestae describes a common-law doctrine governing testimony. Under the hearsay rule, a court normally refuses to admit as evidence statements that a witness says he or she heard another person say. The doctrine of res gestae provided an exception to this rule. During the nineteenth century and much of the twentieth century, courts applied the exception by following an assortment of common-law rules. With the introduction of the federal rules of evidence, federal courts abolished res gestae as a common-law doctrine and replaced it with explicit exceptions to the ban on hearsay. To varying degrees, state rules of evidence are modeled on the federal rules. Although the term is now infrequently used, the legacy of res gestae is an integral part of the modern framework of hearsay evidence.
Traditionally, two reasons have made hearsay inadmissible: unfairness and possible inaccuracy. Allowing a witness to repeat hearsay does not provide the accused with an opportunity to question the speaker of the original statement, and the witness may have misunderstood or misinterpreted the statement. Thus, in a trial, counsel can object to a witness's testimony as hearsay. But in the nineteenth century, the borrowing of the concept of res gestae from english law offered an exception to this rule. Res gestae is based on the belief that because certain statements are made naturally, spontaneously, and without deliberation during the course of an event, they carry a high degree of credibility and leave little room for misunderstanding or misinterpretation. The doctrine held that such statements are more trustworthy than other secondhand statements and therefore should be admissible as evidence.
As the common-law rule developed, it acquired a number of tests for determining admissibility. To be admissible, the statements must relate, explain, or characterize an event or transaction. They must be natural statements growing out of the event, as opposed to a narrative of a past, completed affair. Additionally, the statements must be spontaneous, evoked by the event itself, and not the result of premeditation. Finally, the original speaker must have participated in the transaction or witnessed the event in question. Thus, for example, a witness might testify that during a bank robbery, she or he heard another person shout, "That person is robbing the bank!" and the statement could be admitted as an exception to the ban on hearsay.
In practice, cases involving res gestae were usually decided by applying some variation of these tests. In the 1959 case of Carroll v. Guffey, 20 Ill. App. 2d 470, 156 N.E.2d 267, an Illinois appellate court heard the appeal of a defendant who was held liable for injuries sustained by another motorist in a car crash. The trial court had admitted the testimony of the plaintiff concerning unidentified eyewitnesses who allegedly saw the accident, over the objection of defense counsel who argued that the statements were hearsay. The appellate court ruled that the declarations of the eyewitnesses were not res gestae exceptions: they were not made concurrently with the collision, but afterward, and were only a narrative of what the eyewitnesses said had taken place. Thus the appellate court reversed the trial court's decision.
The process of refining the concept began in the 1920s, when the influential lawyer and educator Edmund M. Morgan attacked its pliability and vagueness: "[T]his troublesome expression owes its existence and persistence in our law of evidence to an inclination of judges and lawyers to avoid the toilsome exertion of exact analysis and precise thinking." In an attempt at clarification, Morgan developed seven categories for the exception. In the 1940s the Model Code of Evidence made further refinements, and by the 1970s the Federal Rules of Evidence had included elements of res gestae in Rule 803 as one of its many exceptions to the hearsay rule.
further readings
Moorehead, James Donald. 1995. "Compromising the Hearsay Rule: The Fallacy of Res Gestae Reliability." Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review 29 (November).
Morgan, Edmund M. 1922. "A Suggested Classification of Utterances Admissible as Res Gestae." Yale Law Journal 31.
Prater, Dennis D., and Virginia M. Klemme. 1996. "Res Gestae Raises Its Ugly Head." Journal of the Kansas Bar Association 65 (October).
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Reconstructing the prehistoric burial tumulus of Lofkend in Albania.
Magazine article from: Antiquity; 9/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...Landscape, memory and tumuli One of the most prominent...xxi, 1-27), is the tumulus. Unlike the tell of...magoula of nearby Greece, tumuli are mounds containing...their prominence, burial tumuli are monuments in every...the construction of a tumulus in a landscape transforms...
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Kestrel Energy Announces Mobilization of Drilling Rig To Tumuli-1 Well Location, PPL 213, Papua New Guinea Fold Belt.
PR Newswire; 3/15/1999; 700 words
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Kestrel Energy Announces Drilling Commencement of Tumuli Prospect in Permit PPL 213, Papua New Guinea Fold Belt.
PR Newswire; 4/9/1999; 646 words
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Magazine article from: World Literature Today; 1/1/2000; 700+ words
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Trans-Orient Petroleum Ltd. Announces Tumuli-1 Update.
PR Newswire; 5/17/1999; 584 words
; ...Bulletin Board: TEPUF) advises that the Tumuli-1 well in PPL 213, in the western highlands...venture will now interpret the results of Tumuli-1 and review all exploration possibilities...further exploration, not excluding the Tumuli structure itself. Further information...
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Tumuli Park.
Magazine article from: Calliope; 3/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...tomb mounds dot the area in and around the city of Kyongju. And, located in the city's historic center is Taenung-won ("Tumuli Park"), an area that has about 20 mounded tombs of Silla's kings, queens, princes, and other royal relatives. The finds...
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Ancestral Tumulus.(Poem)
Magazine article from: First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life; 4/1/2006; ; 389 words
; Ancestral Tumulus Daggers, broadswords, halberds, battle-axes, shields, helmets, scabbard parts and buckles, spearheads, manacles, necklaces...
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Kestrel Energy Reports on Tumuli Prospect.
PR Newswire; 5/14/1999; 568 words
; ...KEST), an oil and gas exploration and production company, today announced that Barracuda Limited, the operator on the Tumuli prospect in PPL 213, Papua New Guinea Fold Belt, is attempting to free stuck pipe in the well at a depth of 2,026 meters...
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BOOK REVIEW: Tumulus.
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tumulus
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
tumulus , plural tumuli , in archaeology, a heap of earth or stones placed over a grave. The terms mound , barrow , or cairn are more common in modern usage.
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Tombs
Encyclopedia entry from: Macmillan Encyclopedia of Death and Dying
...ancient Greek and was first employed by Homer to describe a tumulus or mound raised over a body. By transference, tomb has come...landscape was through funerary structures. The barrows and tumuli of the Neolithic period in Europe (c. 4000 – 3000...
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Lubbock, Sir John (Lord Avebury)
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography
...record. Between 1860 and 1864, he traveled to the Somme Valley and the Dordogne Caves, the Swiss lake village sites, and the tumuli, kitchen middens, and museums of Denmark. He went over the ground with the investigators, studied the finds, and read the...
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cairn
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture
cairn. Tumulus of undressed stones, chamfered or solid, and usually of a sepulchral or commemorative character.
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gallery
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture
...also serving as a pedestrian way from street to street. 4. Passage leading to a burial chamber ( gallery-grave ) within a tumulus , the equivalent of the dromos . 5. Tribune over the aisles in a large church above the nave arcade . 6. Scaffold or extra...
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