Page 1 - Marital Privileges
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Marital Privileges



















                                                        CAROLINE  RULE
                                        The author is  a partner with Koselanetz & Find, LLP, New York City.













         Marriage is perplexing, and the marital privileges even more so.   The other privilege is the adverse spousal witness privilege,
         Contradictory views determine when they apply and what they   which applies in criminal proceedings and allows one spouse to
         protect. In many states, statutes, rather than case law, govern,   refuse to testify against the other spouse. This privilege belongs
         but federal law leaves it to the courts, which sometimes results   only to the non-defendant spouse, however. Unless the defendant
         in conflicting decisions among the circuits.            can invoke the confidential marital communications privilege,
            There are two quite different and separate safeguards for   she cannot prevent her spouse from testifying against her if he
         spouses. One is the confidential marital communications privi-  decides to do so. This form of the privilege applies only while the
         lege, which, with some exceptions, allows a spouse to refuse to   marriage exists. And numerous states have repealed the adverse
         testify about, or produce documents evidencing, any confidential   spousal witness privilege entirely.
         communication made during a marriage and allows the other   Paradoxically, in the antiquated common law, the adverse
         spouse to prevent that testimony or document production.  spousal witness privilege belonged only to the defendant, who
           As the U.S. Supreme Court explained in the seminal case   could use it to prevent his spouse from testifying against him.
         Trammel v. United States, 445 U.S. 40 (1980), referencing an   That obverse of current law grew out of two precepts of medieval
         early saccharine view of marriage, this privilege protects “in-  jurisprudence—that a defendant could not testify on his own be-
         formation privately disclosed between husband and wife in the   half and that, because husband and wife were one and the wife
         confidence of the marital relationship—once described by this   had no separate legal existence, the wife was disqualified from
         Court as ‘the best solace of human existence.’” Id. at 51 (quota-  testifying on the husband’s behalf.
         tion omitted).                                            In 1980, in Trammel, the Supreme Court reversed the course
            The confidential marital communications privilege aims to   of this privilege and held that “the existing rule should be modi-
         nurture the marital relationship and foster the ability of spouses   fied so that the witness-spouse alone has a privilege to refuse
         to speak freely with each other, without concern that their pri-  to testify; the witness can be neither compelled to testify nor
         vate communications will come back to haunt them. It survives   foreclosed from testifying.” Id. at 53.
         dissolution of a marriage, continuing to protect communications   Even though courts have described both spousal privileges as
         that were made during the marriage.                     advancing marital harmony, the Court distinguished the adverse



        Published in Litigation, Volume 45, Number 4, Summer 2019. © 2019 by the American Bar Association. Reproduced with permission. All rights reserved. This information or any portion thereof may not   1
        be copied or disseminated in any form or by any means or stored in an electronic database or retrieval system without the express written consent of the American Bar Association.
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