Nebraska Rules of Evidence

The Nebraska Rules of Evidence govern the admissibility of testimony, documents, and other proof in Nebraska state court proceedings. Codified at Nebraska Revised Statutes §§ 27-101 through 27-1103, these rules establish the standards by which judges determine what a factfinder may properly consider. Understanding their structure is essential for anyone engaged with Nebraska's civil, criminal, or appellate process, as evidentiary rulings can determine case outcomes independently of substantive legal merit.



Definition and scope

The Nebraska Rules of Evidence (NRE) constitute a statutory code governing the use of evidence in all proceedings before Nebraska courts, except where a specific rule or statute otherwise provides. Enacted by the Nebraska Legislature and administered through the judicial system, the NRE closely tracks the Federal Rules of Evidence (FRE) in structure — both derive from the Uniform Rules of Evidence model — but diverge in specific provisions, particularly regarding privileges (Article V) and certain hearsay exceptions.

Under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 27-101, the rules apply to civil and criminal proceedings in Nebraska district courts, county courts, and juvenile courts. The Nebraska district courts are the primary trial-level venues where evidentiary disputes arise. County courts, which handle misdemeanors and civil claims under $57,000, operate under the same evidentiary framework per Neb. Rev. Stat. § 24-517.

Scope boundary: The NRE governs proceedings in Nebraska state courts only. Federal courts sitting in Nebraska — including the U.S. District Court for the District of Nebraska — apply the Federal Rules of Evidence under 28 U.S.C. § 2072, not the NRE. Nebraska tribal courts operate under sovereign jurisdictions with independent evidentiary rules; see Nebraska Tribal Courts for that framework. Administrative hearings before state agencies are generally exempt from strict NRE application under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 84-914, which governs the Administrative Procedure Act. The NRE also does not apply to grand jury proceedings, preliminary hearings, or sentencing hearings except where a specific statute directs otherwise.


Core mechanics or structure

The NRE is organized into 11 articles, each addressing a discrete evidentiary function:

Evidentiary objections must be made at the time evidence is offered. Failure to object waives the issue on appeal under Nebraska appellate practice. The Nebraska Court of Appeals and Nebraska Supreme Court review preserved evidentiary objections under an abuse-of-discretion standard.


Causal relationships or drivers

The structure of the NRE reflects three primary policy drivers: reliability, fairness, and judicial efficiency.

Reliability is the principal driver behind hearsay exclusions (§ 27-802) and qualified professionals testimony reliability standard. Hearsay statements are excluded because the declarant is not under oath, cross-examination is unavailable, and the factfinder cannot assess demeanor — three conditions that diminish trustworthiness.

Fairness drives privilege rules. Nebraska recognizes 9 distinct privilege categories in Article V. These privileges exist because society assigns value to the protected relationships that outweighs the evidentiary cost of exclusion. The physician-patient privilege (§ 27-504) has been particularly contested in tort litigation governed by Nebraska tort law.

Efficiency underlies judicial notice (Article II) and the best evidence rule (Article X). Requiring formal proof of facts indisputable by reasonable dispute would consume trial time without improving accuracy.

The Nebraska Unicameral Legislature periodically amends the NRE through statutory revision. The Legislature's unicameral structure means amendments pass through a single chamber, which historically allows faster codification of evidentiary reforms compared to bicameral states.


Classification boundaries

Nebraska evidence law separates admissible from inadmissible material along several intersecting axes:

Relevance threshold: Evidence must clear the § 27-401 relevance standard before any other rule applies. Irrelevant evidence is inadmissible per § 27-402 regardless of its other qualities.

Character evidence: Under § 27-404, character evidence to prove conduct is generally inadmissible with 4 specific exceptions: (1) accused's character in criminal cases, (2) victim's character in criminal cases, (3) witness credibility, and (4) specific-purpose exceptions under § 27-404(2) such as proof of motive, intent, plan, identity, or absence of mistake.

Hearsay vs. non-hearsay: Nebraska § 27-801(4) defines two categories of prior statements and party admissions that are excluded from the hearsay definition entirely. These are "not hearsay" rather than "exceptions to hearsay" — a distinction that matters when the opponent seeks to limit use under § 27-105.

Hearsay exceptions: § 27-803 lists 24 exceptions applicable regardless of declarant availability. § 27-804 provides 5 additional exceptions applicable only when the declarant is unavailable. The residual exception at § 27-803(24) requires trustworthiness, materiality, and notice to the adverse party.


Tradeoffs and tensions

Probative value vs. unfair prejudice (§ 27-403): This balancing test is the most frequently contested evidentiary standard in Nebraska trials. Courts in Nebraska criminal procedure contexts — particularly cases involving prior bad acts under § 27-404(2) — must weigh whether the incremental probative value justifies the risk of a decision on an improper basis. The Nebraska Supreme Court has emphasized that § 27-403 is a rule of inclusion, not exclusion: exclusion is the exception requiring clear justification.

Physician-patient privilege vs. truth-seeking: Nebraska's § 27-504 privilege protects confidential communications, but it can be waived when a party places their medical condition at issue. This tension is especially acute in personal injury litigation under Nebraska civil procedure frameworks.

Expert reliability gatekeeping vs. access to evidence: Post-Schafersman, trial judges function as gatekeepers for expert testimony. This standard protects factfinders from unreliable science but can exclude expert opinions that, while not research-based, reflect genuine practitioner knowledge — a tension not fully resolved by the NRE text.

Confrontation Clause overlay: In criminal cases, the Sixth Amendment's Confrontation Clause (Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36 (2004)) imposes constitutional constraints on hearsay admissibility independent of NRE Article VIII. Even when a hearsay statement fits a statutory exception, testimonial hearsay may still be excluded if the declarant is unavailable and there was no prior cross-examination.


Common misconceptions

Misconception 1: "Hearsay is always inadmissible."
The NRE lists 24 categorical exceptions under § 27-803 and 5 more under § 27-804. Business records (§ 27-803(6)), public records (§ 27-803(8)), dying declarations (§ 27-804(2)), and excited utterances (§ 27-803(2)) are among the most frequently admitted hearsay categories. The rule against hearsay is better understood as a starting presumption with a structured exception framework.

Misconception 2: "Authentication is just about signatures."
Article IX (§§ 27-901 to 27-903) covers authentication of all writings, recordings, and electronic communications. Digital evidence — including social media posts and text messages — requires authentication under § 27-901(2), which Nebraska courts have addressed increasingly as electronic evidence becomes central to litigation in Nebraska district courts.

Misconception 3: "Judges must apply the rules of evidence at all hearings."
Nebraska Revised Statutes § 84-914 exempts administrative agency hearings from strict evidentiary rules. Similarly, the NRE does not apply to grand jury proceedings, extradition hearings, or preliminary examinations for criminal charges, per § 27-1101(4).

Misconception 4: "Any relevant evidence must be admitted."
§ 27-403 explicitly empowers judges to exclude relevant evidence when its probative value is substantially outweighed by danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of issues, misleading the jury, undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.

Misconception 5: "The same privilege rules apply in federal court."
Federal Rule of Evidence 501 makes federal privilege law applicable in federal diversity cases only to the extent required by state law as to elements of a claim or defense. Nebraska's § 27-504 physician-patient privilege, which is broader than the federal common law baseline, may not protect communications in federal question cases before the U.S. District Court for Nebraska.


Checklist or steps (non-advisory)

The following sequence reflects the analytical framework courts and practitioners use when evaluating the admissibility of a piece of evidence under the NRE. This is a descriptive framework, not procedural instruction.

  1. Confirm jurisdictional applicability — Verify the proceeding is governed by the NRE under § 27-1101; confirm the court is a Nebraska state court, not a federal or administrative tribunal.
  2. Assess relevance — Determine whether the evidence satisfies the § 27-401 threshold: does it make a fact of consequence more or less probable?
  3. Apply § 27-403 balancing — Weigh probative value against the enumerated risks of unfair prejudice, confusion, or waste of time.
  4. Identify evidence type — Classify the evidence: testimony, document, demonstrative, physical object, electronic record, or expert opinion.
  5. Check authentication requirements — For documents and electronic evidence, evaluate whether the foundation under § 27-901 or § 27-902 (self-authenticating documents) is met.
  6. Apply best evidence rule if applicable — For writings or recordings, determine whether the original is required under § 27-1002 or whether a duplicate or secondary evidence exception applies under §§ 27-1003 to 27-1005.
  7. Evaluate hearsay status — Determine whether the statement is offered for the truth of the matter asserted (§ 27-801). If yes, identify whether it qualifies as non-hearsay under § 27-801(4) or falls within a § 27-803, § 27-804, or § 27-805 exception.
  8. Check for constitutional overlay — In criminal cases, assess whether Confrontation Clause requirements under Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36 (2004) restrict admission of testimonial hearsay.
  9. Identify privilege claims — Review whether any Article V privilege applies and whether it has been waived by the privilege-holder.
  10. Make or respond to objection on the record — Ensure the objection is specific and timely to preserve the issue for potential appellate review.

Reference table or matrix

NRE Article Summary: Scope, Key Provisions, and Federal Comparison

Article NRE Sections Subject Key Nebraska Feature FRE Parallel
I §§ 27-101–27-106 General provisions Limited admissibility rule (§ 27-105) FRE 101–106
II §§ 27-201–27-204 Judicial notice Covers adjudicative and legislative facts FRE 201
III §§ 27-301–27-302 Presumptions "Bursting bubble" standard (§ 27-301) FRE 301–302
IV §§ 27-401–27-412 Relevance § 27-403 inclusion-favoring balance FRE 401–415
V §§ 27-501–27-510 Privileges 9 codified privileges; broader than FRE FRE 501–502
VI §§ 27-601–27-615 Witnesses Dead Man's Statute retained (§ 27-602) FRE 601–615
VII §§ 27-701–27-706 Opinions/experts Reliability standard per Schafersman FRE 701–706
VIII §§ 27-801–27-806 Hearsay 24 exceptions (§ 27-803); residual rule FRE 801–807
IX §§ 27-901–27-903 Authentication Self-auth documents (§ 27-902) FRE 901–903
X §§ 27-1001–27-1008 Best evidence Original rule; duplicates acceptable (§ 27-1003) FRE 1001–1008
XI §§ 27-1101–27-1103 Applicability Exempts grand jury, sentencing, APA hearings FRE 1101–1103

Hearsay Exception Availability by Declarant Status

Exception Category Declarant Available? NRE Section FRE Parallel
Present sense impression Either § 27-803(1) FRE 803(1)
Excited utterance Either § 27-803(2) FRE 803(2)
Business records Either § 27-803(6) FRE 803(6)
Public records Either § 27-803(8) FRE 803(8)
Residual exception Either § 27-803(24) FRE 807
Former testimony Unavailable only § 27-804
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