Lay opinion testimony is tolerated because, frankly, it is hard to find the line between fact and opinion ("she is tall," "they appeared drunk," "the car was way over the speed limit") and because lay ...
In a personal injury case, temporal proximity between an event and a plaintiff's injury is insufficient evidence, by itself, of causation. But temporal proximity coupled with lay testimony ...
Senior Justice Michele D. Hotten, writing for the majority, said that the Charles County Circuit Court properly allowed a police officer to explain the definition of “lick,” or a robbery, as a ...
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