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98 Harv. L. Rev. 1357 (1984-1985)
Evidence Or the Event - On Judicial Proof and the Acceptability of Verdicts, The

handle is hein.journals/hlr98 and id is 1375 raw text is: VOLUME 98

MAY 1985

NUMBER 7

HARVARD LAW REVIEW, I
THE EVIDENCE OR THE EVENT? ON JUDICIAL PROOF
AND THE ACCEPTABILITY OF VERDICTS
Charles Nesson*
Commentators have traditionally viewed rules concerning judicial proof
as animated primarily by the search for truth. In this Article, Professor
Nesson argues that the need to promote public acceptance of verdicts can
better explain many evidentiary rules and other aspects of the trial process.
Central to the judicial function, he contends, is the projection of substantive
legal rules, and the accompanying behavioral messages, that underlie ver-
dicts. In order to assimilate such messages and accept verdicts as the basis
for the imposition of legal sanctions, the public must understand verdicts as
statements about litigated events and not about evidence presented at trial.
Professor Nesson argues that the rules governing the conduct of judge and
jury, and a variety of evidentiary and procedural rules - ranging from the
hearsay rules to the treatment of statistical evidence - help to project
substantive legal rules and behavioral messages by facilitating public accep-
tance of verdicts as statements about events.
Averdict that a defendant is guilty or liable can carry two different
L.C1.reanings and project two different rules. The verdict can artic-
ulate a legal rule: You did the thing enjoined by the law; therefore,
you will pay the penalty. This message encourages each of us to
conform our conduct to the behavioral norms embodied in the sub-
stantive law. Alternatively, the verdict can emphasize a proof rule:
We will convict and punish you only if your violation is proved by
due process of law. This message invites people to act not according
to what they know is lawful, but according to what they think can
be proved against them.' While the legal system requires judges to
heed the proof rule, it encourages citizens to heed the legal rule and
to conduct themselves accordingly. A primary objective of the judicial
process, then, is to project to society the legal rules that underlie
judicial verdicts.2
* Professor of Law, Harvard Law School. My thanks go to Stephen Breyer, Charles Fried,
Eric Green, Morton Horwitz, John Kaplan, Louis Kaplow, Frank Michelman, David Rosenberg,
Benno Schmidt, Jr., Richard Stewart, and John Ziaukas for helpful readings of earlier drafts.
I Professor Dan-Cohen traces the history of the distinction between conduct rules and
decision rules in our legal process in Dan-Cohen, Decision Rules and Conduct Rules: On
Acoustic Separation in Criminal Law, 97 HARV. L. REv. 625, 626-3o (1984). He suggests that
in modern times the distinction first appeared in the work of Jeremy Bentham. See id. at 626
& n.I (excerpting J. BENTHAM, A FRAGMENT ON GOVERNMENT AND AN INTRODUCTION TO
THE PRINCIPLES OF MORALS AND LEGISLATION 430 (W. Harrison ed. 1948)).
2 For the purposes of this Article, I will use the term verdict, unless otherwise indicated,
to refer only to affirmative verdicts - verdicts that the defendant is guilty or liable.

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