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COLUMN: Getting to the truth in a trial

A decision of the B.C. Court of Appeal from more than half a century ago sheds light on those questions
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- Paul Hergott

鈥淏old faced lie!鈥 exclaimed my daughter, Cassidy, during a game of One Night Ultimate Werewolf. Lying is a feature of the game, where player identities are secret and clues are gathered before an execution.

Townsfolk struggle to identify and execute at least one werewolf. If not, the werewolves win.

Cassidy and her friends are pathetic liars. Giggling is a common 鈥渢ell鈥. And it鈥檚 a struggle for them to come up with a lie that fits with known facts.

Their ability to identify a lie is also poor, even with the 鈥渢ells鈥. So when a lie directly contradicts a known fact they excitedly pounce on it.

I love that my children, and their friends, are pathetic liars. They鈥檙e clearly not practiced. Though I鈥檇 appreciate a touch more of a skill at identifying the lies of others!

How do judges do it? How does a judge figure out who is telling the truth and who is lying? Do judges benefit from some divine insight into the hearts and minds of the witnesses appearing before them? Is there special training in identifying the 鈥渢ells鈥 of those not being entirely truthful? Will a more practiced liar鈥檚 story carry the day and lead to injustice?

A decision of British Columbia鈥檚 highest court (the British Columbia Court of Appeal) from more than half a century ago sheds light on those questions. Unless you are a practiced liar, you will appreciate the comments of Mr. Justice O鈥橦alloran, in Faryna v. Chorny [1952] 2 D.L.R. 354 (B.C.C.A.), who identifies the problem of assessing 鈥溾he testimony of quick-witted, experienced and confident witnesses, and of those shrewd persons adept in the half-lie and of long and successful experience in combining skillful exaggeration with partial suppression of the truth.鈥

Mr. Justice O鈥橦alloran goes on to identify an even more difficult puzzle, i.e. identifying when a witness has the honest intention to give accurate testimony, but is mistaken. No 鈥渢ell鈥 there! He put it as follows: 鈥淎gain a witness may testify what he sincerely believes to be true, but he may be quite honestly mistaken. For a trial judge to say 鈥業 believe him because I judge him to be telling the truth,鈥 is to come to a conclusion on consideration of only half the problem.鈥

The judge specifically noted a lack of divine insight into the hearts and minds of witnesses.

The solution, when faced with both skillful liars and those mistakenly believing they are telling the truth? Mr. Justice O鈥橦alloran said that you compare the witness鈥檚 version of events against what鈥檚 likely to be true in the context of other known facts. In his much more eloquent words: 鈥淚n short, the real test of the truth of the story of a witness in such a case must be its harmony with the preponderance of the probabilities which a practical and informed person would readily recognize as reasonable in that place and in those conditions.鈥

It鈥檚 not about how good a liar you are. It鈥檚 about how well your story fits with what鈥檚 most likely to be true.

But if that was the only test applied by judges, all you would have to do is weave the best fitting story. A much more recent judgment offers a number of additional factors that trial judges rely on to get to the truth. I will share those factors in my next column.

Paul Hergott is a personal injury lawyer with Hergott Law.


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