Federal Rule of Evidence 1007

E360468

Federal Rule of Evidence 1007 is a U.S. evidentiary rule that allows a party to prove the contents of a writing, recording, or photograph through the testimony or written statement of the opposing party without producing the original.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Federal Rule of Evidence 1007 canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (35)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Federal Rule of Evidence
adoptedBy Supreme Court of the United States
surface form: United States Supreme Court
allowsProofOf contents of a photograph
contents of a recording
contents of a writing
appliesIn civil cases
criminal cases
appliesTo photographs
recordings
writings
codifiedIn rules of evidence for the federal courts
surface form: Title 28 of the United States Code Appendix (Federal Rules of Evidence)
concerns admissions of a party opponent
condition statement must be that of the party or the party’s representative
doesNotRequire production of a duplicate
production of the original writing, recording, or photograph
effectiveIn federal trial courts
evidentiaryCategory rule on proof of contents
exceptionTo requirement to produce the original under the best evidence rule
governs use of party admissions to prove contents of writings, recordings, and photographs
interpretationGuidedBy Advisory Committee on Evidence Rules
surface form: Advisory Committee Notes to the Federal Rules of Evidence
jurisdiction U.S. federal courts
surface form: United States federal courts
legalDoctrine best evidence rule
methodOfProof testimony of the party against whom the evidence is offered
testimony of the party’s representative
written statement of the party against whom the evidence is offered
partOf rules of evidence for the federal courts
surface form: Federal Rules of Evidence
primaryFunction to provide an alternative to producing the original document
relatedTo Federal Rule of Evidence 1002
Federal Rule of Evidence 1003
Federal Rule of Evidence 1004
relatesTo proof of contents of writings, recordings, and photographs
requires statement or testimony to be by the opposing party or its representative
sourceOfLaw federal procedural law
standardFormulation “The proponent may prove the content of a writing, recording, or photograph by the testimony, deposition, or written statement of the party against whom the evidence is offered or by that party’s representative.”
usedBy parties seeking to prove contents of documents through admissions

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Federal Rule of Evidence 1008 relatedTo Federal Rule of Evidence 1007