Pace Law School Library has a gem of a webpage that is dedicated
to famous and infamous cross-examinations (as well as direct examinations),
which can be found by clicking here. Some of the cross-examinations have been
featured on this blog, including Abraham Lincoln’s cross-examination of Charles
Allen in the Almanac trial and Max Steuer’s cross-examination of a witness that
revealed that the witness had been coached into a memorized story. These
cross-examinations are also discussed in more detail in Cross-Examination Handbook: Persuasion, Strategies and Techniques.
An example of what the Pace Law School webpage has to offer
is the British commentary of Solicitor Anthony Wooding (hence defence rather
than defense and criticised vs. criticized) along with the transcript of the
cross-examination of an expert witness in the 1930 trial of Arthur Rouse by
Queen’s Counsel Sir Norman Birkett. This is the commentary and transcript of
the cross:
“The
following is an extract from a famous cross examination of an expert witness
engineer by Sir Norman Birkett QC of Alfred Arthur Rouse who was
tried for murder in 1930. Sir Norman Birkett was prosecutor and at
the height of his powers. Alfred Rouse was accused of murdering
a passenger in a car by setting light to it. The defence was that it
was an accident. Defence counsel called an expert witness who claimed 'a very
vast experience as regards fires in motor cars' and who asserted that the fire
was caused by the junction in the fuel line becoming loose. The witness gave
his evidence with great confidence. Sir Norman Birkett then began his
cross examination......”
A (Birkett): What is the coefficient of the expansion of brass?
S (The Expert): I beg your pardon?
A: Did you not catch the question?
S: I did not quite hear you
A: What is the coefficient of expansion of brass?
S: I am afraid I cannot answer that question off-hand
A: If you do not know, say so. What is the co-efficient of expansion of brass? What do I mean by the term?
S: You want to know what is the expansion of the metal under heat?
A: I asked you: what is the co-efficient of the expansion of brass? Do you know what it means?
S: Put it that way, probably I do not
A: You are an engineer?
S: I dare say I am
A: Let me understand what you are. You are a doctor?
S: No
A: You are a crime investigator?
S: No
A: You are an amateur detective?
S: No
A: But an engineer?
S: Yes
A; What is the coefficient of the expansion of brass? You do not know?
S: No, not put that way
S (The Expert): I beg your pardon?
A: Did you not catch the question?
S: I did not quite hear you
A: What is the coefficient of expansion of brass?
S: I am afraid I cannot answer that question off-hand
A: If you do not know, say so. What is the co-efficient of expansion of brass? What do I mean by the term?
S: You want to know what is the expansion of the metal under heat?
A: I asked you: what is the co-efficient of the expansion of brass? Do you know what it means?
S: Put it that way, probably I do not
A: You are an engineer?
S: I dare say I am
A: Let me understand what you are. You are a doctor?
S: No
A: You are a crime investigator?
S: No
A: You are an amateur detective?
S: No
A: But an engineer?
S: Yes
A; What is the coefficient of the expansion of brass? You do not know?
S: No, not put that way
“This
is a very powerful cross-examination technique. Although it has some
flaws and is somewhat outmoded (see below) it still held as a classic teaching
tool in law schools. The point is of course that it would have been difficult
to challenge the witness directly on his conclusions without being something on
an expert on car fires too, which Sir Norman was not. So Sir Norman goes
instead for the jugular: the expert status itself. He also tightly controls the
questioning, emphasizes it and directs it in such a way that the witness has
nowhere to go.
“The
cross-examination consists of a series of tightly paced 'closed' questions.
Today
the repetition of the same point to give maximum drive to the same answer might
be criticised as too crude (even as a 'jury technique'). The judge might well
say 'Sir Norman, the witness has answered. let's move on'. Also there was of
course a slight risk - a risk which Sir Norman probably considered but
calculated as negligible having heard perhaps the too self-assured evidence in
chief of the witness - that the expert did actually know the coefficient of
expansion of brass, which would have destroyed the point. Maybe he had an
immediate supplementary question should this have been the case.
“I did
once see (in the Technology Court in Birmingham) an expert witness being
comprehensively demolished on his expert
credentials. Unfortunately for me, he was our witness. It was done
very neatly but in a more subtle way. The other side had done their homework
and found out that our expert chemist (the case
was about the efficacy of a glue which had alleged failed
causing gaps to appear in glazing: the glazing company was my client, the
Defendant was the glue manufacturer) had previously published research and
conclusions which were different from the ones he was now presented. A tough,
truly confident and perhaps better prepared (rehearsed?) witness might have
been able to stick to his guns and say, yes but I later saw that this research
was wrong for xyz reasons and I reached opposite conclusions. But I
think they calculated on the other side that he would be too taken aback by
being reminded of his previous different conclusions that he would stumble. And
he did. The other side's counsel I noted was made a QC soon afterwards.
“Whatever
the pros and cons and indeed theatre of these cross-examination techniques one
must not lose sight of the fact that their success or failure can have life or
death consequences for a case. That was literally the case for poor Alfred
Rouse. The defence expert witness was discredited. Alfred Rouse was found
guilty of murder. His appeal failed and he was hanged
at Bedford prison on 10th March 1931.”
This
sample from the Pace Law School webpage is both enjoyable and educational. The
lessons are timeless:
Don’t do battle on the expert’s
turf; rather, go after the expert’s qualifications, basis for opinions and so
on. Don’t ask open-ended questions;
rather ask short, closed-ended questions.