Preparing
Witnesses
By David
H. Berg
(Editor's
Note: Litigation is published by The Journal
of The Section of Litigation, American Bar
Association. This volume was subtitled "Morals
and Manners.")
A
Texas tort lawyer recently won an $8.5 million
verdict for the owner of a deceased stud bull,
felled midstream of an enviable career by cruel
circumstance and an apparently lethal pesticide.
When I inquired of the attorney how he had persuaded
the jury to return such a large award, his answer
seemed particularly germane to the topic of
preparing witnesses. He draped his arm over
my shoulder, kicked the dirt with his pointy-toe
boots, and said, apparently without embarrassment,
"Well, boy, I just humanized the bull."
Little
of what we do as trial lawyers raises profound
moral issues. Voir dire, opening statement,
cross-examination and closing argument seldom
involve unsettling ethical problems, unless
we strive to ferret out philosophy from under
every legal rock -- an exercise better left
to monasteries than to courthouses.
It
is in the privacy of our offices, preparing
parties and witnesses to testify under oath,
that we can affect the integrity of the judicial
system. There we find our raison d'etre: winning,
and the lengths to which we will go to win.
The
problem is perjury. A state court judge cogently
wrote in 1913, "The prevalence of perjury is
a serious menace to the administration of justice,
to prevent which no means have as yet been satisfactorily
devised." It is easy to treat a trial as a blank
slate upon which to write the dialogue, and
in courthouses across the country there are
lawyers known for doing just that.
All
of us swear eternal hostility to perjury, but
it is facile to dismiss the subject without
examining its causes and determining if we contribute
to its occurrence.
Let
me be clear: I do not condone tampering with
testimony or mean to imply that many of our
colleagues do. But I do suggest that, sooner
or later, most of us trim the sail of the testifying
clients a bit too much. It is one thing to say,
"No perjury," and yet another to avoid it always
or to encourage it never. In neither case do
we necessarily suborn the lie. For instance,
who among us has not warned the client, "Before
you tell me your side of the story, let me tell
you what the law is in this area," or, "If you
say that, you'll lose." Or who, wincing at his
client's explanation, has not reminded the client,
"Well, that's not how your boss remembers it,"
or, "Aren't you really telling me... ."
It
is at those moments, draped with the mantle
of the Canons of Ethics and its injunction to
represent the client's position zealously, that
we are on the edge.
By
most standards the law lags 50 years behind
the rest of society. To urge that ours is a
conservative profession understates the case.
The lawyer who exhibits creativity, the basic
right-brain personality, who occasionally sings
his closing argument or claims television caused
his client's criminal behavior, is soon back
to pipefitting, or worse, remains in the profession.
Cross-examination is hardly a science lab, and
one rarely hears a closing argument described
as a breakthrough. But in preparing witnesses
for trial, we are on the cutting edge, where
we are forced to consider questions with profound
implications for all society.
My
conclusion -- based solely on experience --
is that we do not do badly, and not necessarily
because of our sterling moral fiber. Practicalities
help to keep us from pushing too far. In the
first place, you can get, well, caught.
The
criminal law is filled with instances of the
convicted client who is visited at the Federal
Hotel by agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
and asked, did his lawyer do anything wrong,
like trying to get him to lie on the stand?
When turning on the lawyer becomes the fast
track to parole, you should sooner rely on the
kindness of strangers than on the loyalty of
the jailed client. Nor will you be saved by
handling only civil cases. Increasingly there
are instances, especially in actions brought
under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization
Act, where judges ship deposition testimony
to the U.S. Attorney's Office for investigation
of all manner of crime, including perjury.
Another
consideration in not eliciting this sort of
testimony is that it can be exposed. Cross-examination
often leaves false testimony in shards, like
a pane of glass dropped from a third-story window.
Moreover, jurors frequently knock off the lies,
if not from the facts, simply from the feel
of the case. Juries hate liars, and the liar's
side, once exposed, is going to lose.
So
the integrity of trial law rests both on common
sense and on the ethical standards of its practitioners.
Now there's a chilling thought. Isn't the law
practiced by human beings? Didn't Shakespeare
first raise the issue in The Merchant of Venice
when he asked, "Hath not a lawyer eyes? Hath
not a lawyer hands, organs, dimensions, and
incredible overhead?" The point is that the
overall admirable behavior of trial lawyers
can be understood fully only if you consider
that the penalty for getting caught is indictment
and possibly loss of you license.
The
American Bar Association's Canons of Ethics
are clear. Ethical Consideration 7-26 codifies
an answer to what has to be one of the most
difficult moral issues faced by any profession:
The law and Disciplinary Rules prohibit the
use of fraudulent, false, or perjured testimony
or evidence. A lawyer who knowingly participates
in introduction of such testimony or evidence
is subject to discipline. A lawyer should, however,
present any admissible evidence his client desires
to have presented unless he knows, or from facts
within his knowledge should know, that such
testimony or evidence is false, fraudulent,
or perjured.
The
bright light of this Ethical Consideration grows
dim in the office as you stare across your desk
at the client, listening to him pour out what
may be a completely fabricated account of the
facts of the case. This problem is acknowledge
in other, less wholly idealistic sections of
the Canons. For instance, Ethical Consideration
7-6 discusses the perplexing problem of developing
and preserving evidence related to the client's
state of mind and intent. When the lawyer is
not certain about the state of mind, "he should
resolve reasonable doubts in favor of his client."
Here
Are the Questions
The
questions that arise from this rule are endless.
Is judging the client the proper role of the
advocate? What do we do if we disbelieve the
client? And what if we cannot disprove that
which we do not believe? What if the untruth
is unarguably irrelevant? How much of our soul
do we owe the client in resolving that "reasonable
doubt?" Are we to withdraw from representation
based on a hunch? What if the client has already
paid the fee? What if the doubt develops the
day before trial? And what do we do about the
lawyer on the other side whose definition of
reasonable doubt may be far different from our
own; or, what about the lawyer on the other
side who we know will tell his client to lie?
Your
client may get on the stand and start lying.
If he does, the next step is dictated by an
American Bar Association procedure outlined
years ago and recently reaffirmed in a Supreme
Court decision, Nix v. Whiteside 475 U.S. 157,
89 L.Ed.2d 123, 106 S.Ct. 988 (1986). The lawyer
is to go to chambers, explain the dilemma to
the judge, and ask leave to withdraw, which
may or may not be granted. Being forced to sit
there while a client lies or, worse, being incorrect
about whether he is lying are only two of a
parade of infinite horribles that immediately
suggest themselves. There is also the dread
possibility that the client is president of
your most lucrative corporate client. But that
is irrelevant, isn't it?
Only
those who consistently stake out a superior
moral position can resolve the issues easily.
That is why, with little guidance but our own
godly nature, we should all be grateful to my
friend the Texas tort lawyer. Seldom is the
Gordian knot so easily undone, rarely is the
thorny philosophic issue so quickly unraveled
as in his synthesis: Our job is to humanize
the bull.
This
is not to imply that the trial lawyer should
avoid answering these questions because they
are difficult. It is to say, however, that much
of what creates philosophical dilemmas is taken
from the hands of the lawyer who follows the
rules, and not just those found in the Canons
of Ethics. While no one would argue that the
Canons were drafted with the intent to suborn
perjury, they nonetheless grant us wide latitude
in putting together our cases. In essence, they
urge us to leave justice to judges, to represent
our clients vigorously, and to win cases. It
is easy to rationalize questionable trial behavior
if you drag down the Canons at 2am and read
them through the enlightening haze of brown
whisky. The possibility that a trial will reveal
the truth or something that closely resembles
it results, not from a course in professional
responsibility, though that helps, but primarily
from the ethical beliefs of the lawyer and his
willingness to live them out.
There
are lawyers who refuse to woodshed witnesses
at all, who just throw them up there on the
stand and let them tell their story. Their clients
most often are referred to as "appellants."
It
is axiomatic. Everyone who testifies has to
be woodshedded. It is probably unethical to
fail to prepare a witness, and it is undoubtedly
cruel to subject anyone to cross-examination
without preparation. The unrehearsed witness
can deal a lethal blow to an otherwise winnable
case.
But
sooner or later we all risk putting a client
on the stand without sufficient preparation.
Here I share the rarest of lawyer anecdotes,
a story about a case I lost.
The
trial had seemed unwinnable from the start.
My client, an addicted physician, was accused
of three hand-to-hand sales of cocaine; several
eyewitnesses would testify about the sales.
In defense of myself and the ultimate verdict,
the client was no, er, gem. In addition to his
having shown up in court with a telltale trace
of white powdery substance dangling from his
iridescent nose, proof was offered that he once
had fallen asleep on a patient while taking
the patient's pulse.
We
worked on his testimony for hours and, surprisingly,
he turned out to be a pretty good witness during
the guilt/innocence phase of the trial. The
jury almost deadlocked before finally convicting
him. I had some hope that they would grant him
a probated sentence during the punishment phase
of the bifurcated trial. My only advice, given
his earlier, stellar performance, was to answer
"No," and nothing more, when I asked him if
he had ever been convicted of a felony in this
or any other jurisdiction. That was the way
to establish his eligibility for probation.
Here
is the colloquy that followed:
Q:
Have you ever been convicted of a felony in
this or any other jurisdiction?
A: Mr. Berg, I have never been in trouble in
my life. I have a fairly decent reputation for
truth and veracity, nothing to write home about,
but believe me when I say that I tried to stage
a heart attack, in fact, fervently prayed for
one that moment. The prosecutor was scarcely
able to conceal his ecstacy during cross-examination.
Q: Never been in trouble? Didn't you turn a
14-year-old girl on to cocaine?
A: Sir, that is a lie! She was 16.
Exit
here, stage left, for the Texas Department of
Corrections, to return in five years.
Currently
on appeal, that case haunts me. The client had
come within inches of the only success he could
possibly have enjoyed. Absent my misplaced faith
in his intelligence, he might have gotten probation.
Thus, I drew a lesson. Especially in criminal
cases, always remember that the client got this
far because of his own intelligence. During
trial, rely on your own.
The
first rule, then, is to woodshed in every instance,
rehearsing both direct and cross-examination.
Almost invariably, the properly prepared witness
warms to the task when finally placed under
oath. Direct becomes more concise and vivid;
cross is seldom as bad as anticipated.
There
is an important, if obvious, caveat for this
sort of pretrial preparation. Know when to stop.
Over-rehearsing robs testimony of credibility;
nothing is more devastating than memorized answers
delivered in an emotionless monotone.
Nor
should the lawyer whose client is superb in
the office on Saturday before trial, blubbering
out his remorse over what he has done or outlining
in exquisite detail the ways in which he has
been defrauded, be entirely sanguine that the
same compelling performance will be repeated
in the courtroom. It often happens that the
client clams up or, all too frequently, that
he takes tranquilizers and testifies like a
zombie when he gets on the stand.
There
are other general ground rules, none of which
is etched in stone. Ideally the rehearsal should
take place a few days before deposition or trial.
This creates a more relaxed learning environment
for witnesses, who are generally unfamiliar
with courtroom procedures and justifiably concerned
about how they will perform. As you go over
the case, bear in mind how a judge or jury will
react, and bear down on the ultimate issues.
Most
important: Forget what the client has at stake
and remember that your reputation is on the
line here. Some creep from another law firm
is trying to beat you personally, ruin your
career, and molest your children. More than
any other single factor, what you have going
for the client is your own Swiss-cheese super
ego, your own inestimable opinion of yourself,
and an insatiable desire to win. None of this
hurts the client; it just looks a little odd
in print.
Therefore:
Take command immediately. You know more than
clients do. Caution them that what they say
is frequently less important than how they say
it, and if they lose their temper, they lose,
period. Instruct them that after they are passed
to opposing counsel their tone of voice should
remain the same; it is "Yes, Sir" and "No, Sir"
to both sides.
Warn
them that their appearances are vital to the
jury, that they must dress unpretentiously and
leave expensive jewelry at home. Remind them
that their decorum will be monitored by the
judge and jury in the courtroom and during recess
and that a trial must be conducted in a sober
atmosphere if they want to create the right
impression. Tell him to get a haircut or her
to get her hair done, and if you want, dictate
a style. (Buy yourself a David Boies $125 polyester
suit. You heard me: polyester.) Tell them not
to tranquilize, speed up, or otherwise medicate
themselves during trial. Gum chewing, smoking,
and candy sucking are better left to the cafeteria.
If they object on the grounds of superficiality,
invite them to hire a philosopher.
Your
most important instruction to the client is
to listen to each question carefully and answer
only what is asked. There is an old trick designed
to teach the uninitiated how to answer directly.
After cautioning the client to answer only the
question asked, nonchalantly ask if he has a
watch. Ninety percent of the time you will get
the answer, "Sure, it's 3:15." At that point
the gifted practitioner, asserting his superiority,
pounds on the desk and screams, "Listen here,
buddy, I didn't ask for the time of day. I asked
if you have a watch." Usually the client suffers
an immediate epiphany; the answers become progressively
less expansive. Thereafter, each time the client
slips up and begins to talk too much, slam your
hand down on the desk. Once the actual deposition
or trial testimony begins, the client will be
gun-shy, hearing the echo of the irate attorney's
fist as it slams into the desk. It really works.
The
general rule then is to impress on the witness
not to volunteer an extra word to opposing counsel
during cross-examination. I warn my criminal
clients that for each extra word they utter
they can add a year to their sentence, if they
are convicted. The civil plaintiff need only
be told that each extra utterance costs $100,000
out of the verdict.
As
with virtually every other inviolate rule of
trial work, there are exceptions to the minimalist
credo. The first comes when it is absolutely
necessary to explain an answer. The lawyer and
client should establish in advance those areas
that need to be expanded upon, especially when
a simple answer would be misleading or harmful.
However, clients sometimes become so anxious
to explain their position that they forget the
simple preface of "yes" or "no" that allows
for the fuller testimony. Warn them that their
failure to answer the question directly before
the explanation can lead to abomination by the
judge to be responsive, and that if the warning
is repeated, the jury will think the witness
is hiding something.
The
second exception occurs when the door is opened
by opposing counsel. This exception is especially
valuable when key testimony is excluded by a
motion in limine or other adverse ruling. Often
opposing counsel will open the door to the evidence
by careless cross-examination. Once the question
is asked, you have two choices. You may develop
the exposed issue on redirect, or, preferably,
the witness may "spontaneously" get into testimony
you have wanted to bring out all along.
In
1979, I defended a case in which a wife was
accused of shooting and then dismembering her
husband after he had held her hostage for three
days, threatening her life and the lives of
her children. The judge granted the prosecution's
motion in limine and excluded expert psychiatric
testimony about the battered-wife syndrome.
His theory was that the evidence of the beatings
spoke for itself and that no psychiatric testimony
was admissible because we did not rely on insanity
as a defense. The psychiatrist's testimony was
central to our defense because of the particularly
heinous nature of the crime and the accused's
apparent failure to retreat before the shooting,
a prerequisite for a claim of self-defense.
The psychiatrist was prepared to testify that
my client, like all battered women, had developed
a kind of psychological bondage that would not
allow her to leave under any circumstance.
It
was during the defendant's testimony that the
prosecutor blundered. After fighting for hours
to keep the psychiatrist off the stand, he asked
these questions.
Q:
Let's see. You first shot him, the cut his body
into five pieces, put them into the trunk of
your car, and drove him all the way to your
parents' home in California. Is that correct?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: He kept you in your house for three days
and nights prior to this killing?
A: Yes. And he threatened to kill my children.
Q: You have a telephone there, I presume?
A: Yes, of course.
Q: And in three days and nights on which you
claim you were tortured and beaten it never
occurred to you to pick up the phone and call
the police?
A: Of course it occurred to me... .
Caveats
for Preparation
Emboldened
by her failure to have capitalized on his first
open-ended question, he then moved closer to
her, shouting and waving a picture of her husband's
body: "You didn't leave because you didn't want
to, did you? You enjoyed every minute of what
you did, didn't you? It was far easier than
getting a divorce, wasn't it?"
He
turned to his seat, not really expecting an
answer. The client simply said, "It's not fair
for me to try to answer this by myself. I know
I was chained to that man, just like the abused
child goes to the parent who beats him. The
only person who can fully explain this answer
is my psychiatrist, and if you really want the
answer to the question, you ought to let him
testify instead of objecting."
The
judge agreed, called the testimony invited,
and let the psychiatrist take the stand. The
jury acquitted in less than two hours. My client
and I had rehearsed the answer the night before;
I had told her to wait for a legitimate opening
and to hope it would come.
There
are countless other caveats about effective
preparation of witnesses. One is that the pretrial
work never ends, even when the trial begins.
For example, parties and those witnesses who
are allowed to sit in the courtroom should profit
from what they hear. During recesses and at
night, go over the main areas of concern in
the light of the testimony elicited. Another
caveat is to make the client aware of what is
going to happen after you announce "ready,"
even to the point of outlining legal arguments
you expect and their significance.
A
friend in Washington, lawyer Liebman, counsels
his clients to anticipate where the attorney
is headed with his questions. This is good advice
so long as the witness does not try to prove
he is smarter than the attorney. He probably
is, but the courtroom is not the forum, especially
if the attorney is prepared. Conversely, the
lawyer who senses that he is not establishing
any momentum on cross because the witness is
anticipating his questions accurately can regain
the advantage simply by skipping around. The
person on the stand must be warned ahead of
time that the interrogation may not be chronological
or even organized and that the apparent confusion
should not be mistaken for ignorance on the
part of the lawyer.
It
is also helpful to reassure clients that you
will protect them from irrelevant or bullying
questions when they take the stand, at least
insofar as the judge will sustain your objections.
These
are the general rules for successfully preparing
witnesses for testimony, whether during deposition
or during trial. All of them are designed to
leave clients and witnesses better prepared
and more relaxed when they finally have to testify.
Your own experience will allow you to modify,
alter, or ignore much of this advice.
One
kind of lawyer -- the public prosecutor -- is
a special case. Ethical Consideration 7-13 provides:
The
responsibility of a public prosecutor differs
from that of the usual advocate; his duty is
to seek justice, not merely to convict... .
With respect to evidence and witnesses, the
prosecutor has responsibilities different from
those of a lawyer in private practice: the prosecutor
should make timely disclosure to the defense
of available evidence, known to him, that tends
to negate the guilt of the accused, mitigate
the degree of the offense, or reduce the punishment.
Further, a prosecutor should not intentionally
avoid pursuit of evidence merely because he
believes it will damage the prosecution's case
or aid the accused.
The
prosecutor carries more power in his briefcase
on a single day than most of us will in a lifetime.
Frequently his role determines the future life
of a fellow human being. Given the extraordinary
support prosecutors currently receive from courts
and juries alike, they should exercise extraordinary
restraint not to yield to the temptation of
convicting at any cost.
The
following exchange occurred during a recent
federal perjury and false swearing case in which
I represented a man accused of lying about his
ownership of an airplane in documents he submitted
to United States Customs authorities and in
testimony before the grand jury. Customs recovered
the plane on a Carolina beach after a forced
landing. It was filled with marijuana. My client
claimed that the plane had been sold by his
corporation on a conditional sales contract
and that, since he had received only the down
payment, he was entitled to return of the plane.
There was no implication that he had been involved
in the drug transaction, only that he had been
opportunistic in trying to get the plane back.
The
government's position was explained by its first
witness, a postal inspector. He had testified
on direct examination that my client, the defendant,
had never mentioned in his initial interview
that he had sold the plane on a conditional
sales agreement. The agent concluded that the
defendant had made up the story and supporting
documents after the fact, in order to get his
plane back. That, he explained, was why he and
Customs Agents had taken the case to the assistant
United States Attorney and gotten my client
indicted.
On
cross I asked if the inspector had filed a case
agent report, standard operating procedure,
and he replied that he had. The prosecutor handed
it to me. The typewritten document did not mention
the terms of sale of the airplane, just as the
agents had testified.
Q:
Who prepared this document?
A: A secretary at the agency.
Q: From what source? Did you dictate to her
or what?
A: I don't recall what her source was. Maybe
I dictated it.
Q: What about notes? Did you take notes?
A: Yes, sir, I did. (He then produced a document
from his briefcase, a crumpled handwritten memo
of his first meeting with my client.)
Q: Why didn't you tell me about these notes
when I asked you what your secretary used to
prepare the typewritten document?
A: Because I don't know what she used.
Q: Is there another reason you didn't offer
these notes to me at the first opportunity.
A: No, sir.
Q: You said that if my client had told you about
the conditional sales agreement during that
first meeting in his office you would have never
had him indicted?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Well, tell me, sir, what these last few lines
on the handwritten notes say. (At the point
he read a few numbers, and I drew them on a
chart so that the judge and jury could read.)
A: 250 d.p., with 240 over 12 mos.
It
was immediately apparent that the inspector
had been told about the term of the sale. My
client had been paid $250,000 down, and the
balance of $240,000 was to be paid over 12 months,
exactly as he later reflected in his correspondence
with Customs, the documentation he supplied,
and his testimony before the grand jury.
At
my client's prompting, I reminded the inspector
that during the interview the defendant had
swung around in his chair, totaled some numbers
on the adding machine, and handed him the tape.
I asked if he remembered that my client had
then begged off, saying he was busy but promising
to deliver the necessary documents at a later
date. The inspector remembered nothing of that,
since it was not reflected in the notes; but
he was stuck with the numbers. The case was
over for the government, although the prosecution
plodded on. The not-guilty verdict was a belated
announcement of what happened with the government's
first witness.
Months
later, as I jogged in the park, the cross-examination
got even better. In my fantasy the government
witness admits he had been instructed not to
turn over the notes unless I asked specifically
for them and then, in a fit of remorse, asks
the prosecutor to dismiss the case. The applause
from the spectators grows deafening as I turn,
slowly and with great care, to my client, now
a free man.
Double
Standards
It
was far more difficult to wrest those notes
from the inspector than space allows me to develop.
I cannot prove that the inspector was instructed
to resist tuning them over to me, but I have
my suspicions. While it is well within the rules
for a defense lawyer to instruct his client
not to offer anything to opposing counsel unless
he asks for it, it is not acceptable for a prosecutor
to tell that to a state's witness. This double
standard is acceptable only if we agree with
the Canons and their obvious mandate. Prosecutors
enjoy a huge advantage of manpower and money
over their less powerful opposition. The implications
of their conduct are overwhelming and far more
important than the outcome of a civil suit.
Alone
in their offices, prosecutors must make the
most difficult decisions of all, not only when
they may have to compromise their will to win,
but when they must decide in favor of a defendant
they may hate.
Kingman
Brewster, while president of Yale, remarked
that the best minds of each generation go into
the law. He did not say what happened to us
next and probably with good reason. We soon
discover that this nation reserves a special
loathing for its lawyers. While we should acknowledge
the frailties of our profession that lead us
to low regard, we should not do so with unrelenting
self-abuse. In reality we probably mirror what
society wants us to be. Clients do not choose
their attorneys because of a reputation for
fair play and Christian benevolence. They expect
us to do the gunslinger's work, preferably by
ambush. They generally give little thought to
means; they want us to win. Given these imperatives,
the fragile structure of the adversary system
is tested each time we put a witness on the
stand. That is why the hard choices about the
conduct of a case are left to the lawyers. And
that is how it should be.
Copyright
1987 American Bar Association. All rights reserved.
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