107.
Sample Fair Housing Jury InstructionsGeneral
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PLAINTIFF'S PROPOSED JURY INSTRUCTION NO.
Members of the jury, the instructions I gave at the beginning of
the
trial and during the trial remain in effect. I now give you some
additional
instructions.
You must, of course, continue to follow the instructions I gave
you
earlier, as well as those I give you now. You must not single out some
instructions and ignore others, because all are important, This is true
even
though some of those I gave you at the beginning of the trial are not
repeated
here.
The instructions I am about to give you now as well as those I gave
you
earlier are in writing and will be available to you in the jury room. I
emphasize, however, that this does not mean they are more important than my
earlier instructions. Again, all instructions, whenever given and whether
in
writing or not, must be followed.
Plaintiff's Instruction No.
SOURCE: Manual of Model Civil Jury Instructions for the District Courts
of
the Eighth Circuit (1993 Edition) § 3.01
PLAINTIFF'S PROPOSED JURY INSTRUCTION NO.
In deciding what the facts are, you may have to decide what testimony
you
believe and what testimony you do not believe. You may believe all of what
a
witness said, or only part of it, or none of it.
In deciding what testimony to believe, you may consider the
witness'
intelligence, the opportunity the witness had to have seen or heard the
things
testified about, the witness' memory, any motives that witness may have for
testifying a certain way, the manner of the witness while testifying,
whether
that witness said something different at an earlier time, the general
reasonableness of the testimony, and the extent to which the testimony is
consistent with any evidence that you believe.
In deciding whether or not to believe a witness, keep in mind that
people sometimes hear or see things differently and sometimes forget things.
You
need to consider therefore whether a contradiction is an innocent
misrecollection
or lapse of memory or an intentional falsehood, and that may depend on
whether
it has to do with an important fact or only a small detail.
Plaintiff's Instruction No.
SOURCE: Manual of Model Civil Jury Instructions for the District
Courts
of the Eighth Circuit (1993Edition) § 3.03
PLAINTIFF'S PROPOSED JURY INSTRUCTION NO.
In these instructions you are told that your verdict depends on
whether you find certain facts have been proved. The burden of proving a
fact
is upon the party whose claim depends upon that fact. The party who has
the
burden of proving a fact must provide it by the preponderance of the
evidence.
To prove something by the preponderance of the evidence is to prove that it
is
more likely true than not true. It is determined by considering all of the
evidence and deciding which evidence is more believable. If, on any issue
in the
case, the evidence is equally balanced, you cannot find that issue has been
proved.
The preponderance of the evidence is not necessarily determined by
the
greater number of witnesses or exhibits a party has presented.
You may have heard of the term "proof beyond a reasonable doubt."
That
is a stricter standard which applies in criminal cases. It does not apply
in
civil cases such as this. You should, therefore, put it out of your minds.
Plaintiff's Instruction No.
SOURCE: Manual of Model Civil Jury Instructions for the District Courts
of
the Eighth Circuit (1993 Edition) § 3.04
PLAINTIFF'S PROPOSED JURY INSTRUCTION NO.
You have heard testimony from persons described as experts.
Persons who, by knowledge, skill, training, education or experience
have
become expert in some field may state their opinions on matters in that
field and
may also state the reasons for their opinion.
Expert testimony should be considered just like any other
testimony.
You may accept or reject it, and give it as much weight as you think it
deserves,
considering the witnesses education and experience, the soundness of the
reasons
given for the opinion, the acceptability of the methods used, and all other
evidence in the case.
Plaintiff's Instruction No.
SOURCE:
[cited in
Civil Rights Resource Manual 60]
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