Our Grassroots Journey April 2025

By Connie Reguli JD

April 6 2025

Okay I made it to DC. Up at 4. Nashville. Atlanta. One hour to get a coffeee at the airport. Second leg of flight sat by the baby. I always chose the baby. After all I am a grandma. Her daddy is a lobbyist. That was convenient. Got a grumpy flight attendant who told me he did not have time for me. I was rescued by the man across the aisle. I try to stay invisible when I fly. I don’t want to be the person that the crew talks about later…”there was that one woman…”. Rescue stranger also has vitiligo so we engaged in a brief exchange while unloading the plane. Reagan in its usual packed noisy chaotically organized frame of mind. Waiting for our Alabama warrior Terri LaPoint before we head across the bridge. Let’s see what this week holds.

MONDAY APRIL 7

It has been a busy and energetic day. We had eight meetings with both Republicans and Democrats.

We have families from Family Forward Project from Alabama Illinois Tennessee Alabama Connecticut Florida Washington Texas and Pennsylvania.

And we need you too. Here are a few of today’s pictures.

We will end the day with dinner and getting by ready for another day.

Tuesday April 9. 2025

We started at Tennessee Tuesday with Sen Marsha Blackburn and Bill Hagerty with a huge crowd.

And rallied later in the day.

Evening was fun as well

Wednesday and Thursday April 9 and 10

Time has moved so fast that I forgot to upload the adventure in Wednesday night.

Here are a few examples f the highlights over the last two days

Congressman Mark Messmer – Indiana

Friday April 11 2025

Winding down with a few weeping and casual time at the Anatole Hotel.

And DONE for the week.

Adopted and DEAD…

Shared from Facebook

By DA Russell Johnson

Brother and Sister Laid to Rest in Graveside Service on Sunday – Brothers, family and friends and others attend with many people to thanks for their role in the service.

On Sunday afternoon, two sweet children – a boy and a girl – were laid to rest in a graveside service attended by their two surviving brothers. These children, the two that are deceased and the two that are surviving, are part of at least five children who were adopted by an evil woman and her husband for the financial benefit they received from the State for adopting them.

The two surviving brothers are now, thankfully, in the care of a wonderful, loving, and caring adoptive mother. The mother’s family members and their friends give the two brothers love that their deceased brother and sister certainly never received.

Early in their lives five children were allowed by the State to be placed ‘in the care’ of a Mr. and Mrs. Gray where the children were forced to endure horrendous circumstances of starvation and torturous confinement.

The two children who were laid to rest Sunday, obviously did not survive these conditions.

Thankfully, during Covid, an alert Roane County Sheriff’s Office deputy was able to recognize a child in need and discovered the house where he and his brother were being confined in makeshift ‘cages’ in the basement. An older sister lived upstairs. As a result of this discovery and further investigation, two bodies were discovered, one buried in the barn behind this house in Roane County and then one in a backyard behind a house in Knox County.

The three surviving children were ‘saved’, and the road to their ‘recovery’ began.

Long story shortened, the biggest hurdle was overcome in May 2024 with the final conviction of both Grays, the ‘adoptive parents’, on life without parole sentences in Roane Couty and additional life sentences in Knox County on top of the Roane County Life Without Parole sentences. The revelations of the shortfalls in the system of adoption, state ‘assistance’ for adopting, and parental responsibility for accountability and reporting, all came into sharp focus as a result of this prosecution and received attention and scrutiny in the state legislation which brought about changes in the law and the system with the Department of Children’s Services.

What is hopefully the final chapter was the closure that was brought about at the graveside on Sunday with the peaceful service that laid to rest two souls that never had peace here on Earth.

This would not have been possible without the generous, volunteer spirit of so many people, so I would like to publicly thank these folks in this manner:

When we concluded the case convicting the two co-defendants, I immediately turned to some friends for help to do something for the remains of the deceased victims. Without hesitation the three ‘angels’ that are to me, The McGill Sisters, came to help. They are Rene’ McGill Shultz, Rebecca McGill Willis and Amy McGill Millsaps, who follow in the community service tradition of their deceased father, Terry McGill. They operate McGill Click Funerals and Cremations in Loudon, and they own Loudon County Memorial Gardens. They are responsible for volunteering their time, their services, and their money to bring to fruition the wonderful service that was held on Sunday. Three of their associates are: Beth Brakebill who sang and led the attendees in singing, as well as Rev. Brian Courtney who participated in the service and Roberto Catota who assisted with the procession and graveside. Loudon Police Department and Loudon County Sheriff’s Office, TN. both provided the escort from McGill-Click Funeral Home to Loudon County Memorial Gardens.

The McGill sisters also donated the plot in a special “Angels” section of their cemetery and partnered with Matthews International, who provided the casket for both sets of cremains. Both the McGill Sisters and Matthews International covered the cost of the memorial plague. Lee-Heights Monument provided the service of opening and closing of the grave. Simerly Vault Company donated the vault. West End Florist in Loudon donated floral arrangements.

So many people contributed to making this day special by attending, including Dr. Darinka Milusenic, Chief Medical Examiner of the Knox County Regional Forensic Center, and her staff, along with anthropologist Dr. Murry Marks. Their work upon the discovery of the bodies of the two children and their expert analysis was instrumental in providing evidence to prosecute the criminal case.

The Kids First Child Advocacy Center of the 9th Judicial District of Tennessee in Lenoir City provided forensic interviews of the surviving children during the initial investigation, and the CAC Director Chris Evans-Longmire and staff were present at the service.

Charme Allen, District Attorney General – Knoxville, TN was present as well, and her office coordinated with our office with both of us prosecuting the two cases in our respective counties.

Members of our office were present at the service including the prosecution team for this case: Assistant District Attorneys Bob Edwards, Jonathan Edwards, Jason Collver and Kristin Curtis, along with Victim/Witness Coordinator Tami Bailey. ADA Jonathan Edwards spoke on behalf of both the Knox County office and our office about the courage of both boys and their victim impact statements at the sentencing hearing last year.

It was a blessed day for closure. Rest in Peace, children.

  • Russell Johnson, 9th District Attorney General (Loudon, Roane, Morgan & Meigs)

EPILOGUE

by Connie Reguli.

This is not the first time “adoption gone wrong story” in Tennessee. Another family in Knox County adopted children that they buried in the back yard.

The story has one thing right for sure that should be an alarm and call for the complete overhaul of child welfare. They did is for money. Yes the adoptive parents took in five kids and would receive a monthly stipend check every month even after the adoption is final. This money comes from the federal funds which is of course still tax payer money.

Gods rest their souls and help me share this tragedy.

The Systemic Failure of the Family Court Process

By Connie Reguli – Cancelled by the Establishment – Invested in Your Well-being. May 27, 2022.

Connie Reguli (right) woth amazing advocate Lauren from Maine. In Washington DC

I would say I operated different than most attorneys in family law … I cared what happened, I was concerned about children in Courtrooms, I advised my clients on the risk of being too emotional and on being unemotional, and at the end of the day I wanted what was ‘best for the children’. However, it is an oxymoron to speak about the best interests of the child in the adversarial family court realm.

I hear so many people say…my lawyer would not defend me…my lawyer would not put on my evidence…my lawyer did not care…my lawyer did nothing. I am not here to defend lackluster representation, but I am here to say blaming lawyer is not the solution. A recent United States Supreme Court decision, Shinn v Ramirez, the Supreme Court said yes it is the luck of the draw that you had not just one but two crappy attorneys, you cannot do a habeus corpus petition on ineffective assistance of counsel. Done ✅.

However, that is not the end of the story. Attorneys also have to work with the lump of clay called your life that you give them. In the context of family and parent-child relationships depending on the “right” attorney to make it right is an ad hominem argument.

From a lawyers view…people come to us with a mess that evolved out of the imperfections in our clients lives. They end up in the imperfect court system. Which is adversarial by design. It’s a war zone. The biggest weapons, and sometimes the best told lie wins. Lawyers only have so many tools and none of them are meant to resolve anything. Only possible result is win or lose. We can’t undo the clients history so it’s the best spin. And then of course it’s about money. Lawyers have so many expenses and so much risk that the costs are driven up. Part of the court game it wearing out the other side, emotionally or financially. They are paid to “do a job” they are paid to engage in a battlefield.

And clients are ill prepared. They don’t understand the system and judge have no patience for stumbling memories. Cross examination is intended to trip you up so a judge can call you a liar – they will use the judicial vernacular “lacks credibility” but all the same – they call you a liar. And in the world of court – the judge has the final say as to whether or not you are a liar.

I have to get you to turn your heads directly into this perverted and demonic snare.

The best I can I will help you resolve, negotiate, and move past the chaos or unfold the mysteries of litigation. If you rely on a fair and impartial judge who will render a decision on the best interest of your child you are waking blindly in a minefield.

I also intend to train an army of advocates to help.

You can contact me to consult on these issues. God bless.

Click on short form consult request.

Connie Reguli

This is the most important election in the country.

fb.watch/cLvbt4zXxq/

Parent partners and individual advocacy

capacity.childwelfare.gov/pubPDFs/cbc/sample-policies-procedures-cp-00184.pdf

Parent partner program.

👆

Washington State and family first

https://www.invw.org/2021/04/09/washington-lawmakers-look-to-keep-families-together-as-part-of-foster-care-reform/?fbclid=IwAR39dUPauzaXOdfYIAy6cEd2u2yHzt3Kwo0_H4NLOShgcYgxWG5mmX-JhB4

2021 Tennessee proposed legislation – child welfare and families

Published by Connie Reguli for

Family Forward Project and Family Forward Foundation.

See the video description here.

Waiting on Family advocacy bill.

Bills pending as of 2/12/2021 👇

A Time for Nehemiah.

By Connie Reguli. Aug 23 2020

I am moved this Sunday morning to share with you segments of Pastor Johnson’s sermon on the tactics of the devil and the awesome power of Nehemiah.

Read Nehemiah 4 and you will learn of a powerful leader blessed and chosen to strengthen his people in desperate times.

First, you must understand fear. Fear interferes with the building of God’s kingdom. The Bible repeatedly says “fear not” and “fear the Lord” and “fear God”. For if you fail to follow your calling you will NOT receive the blessing. You will live in a state of confusion. Then the warriors in Christ must be gathered wherever they are to take up their shields and do whatever they can do to work on the wall which will shield and protect not just one person but a nation.

Second, you must keep your mind on Christ and know your identity and profess it. To feel the weight of the world of deception and do nothing is a waste of space. You have been promised by the blood of Christ that if two or three of you agree and bring it before God it shall be granted.

Third you must always standard prepared to face the enemy and pray that our leaders are guided by the Holy Spirit to bring redemptive solutions. Much evil is soon to be exposed and it will either drain your spirit or empower you to pick up your shield 🛡 and sword ⚔️ to restore this land. This Nation was created out of an idea 💡 of liberty and freedom. We can only keep our liberty if we are diligent.

Our money says In God We Trust. Our pledge says “one nation under God”. Our first president implored us to seek the will of God and then do it mightily.

In Nehemiah the enemy was disheartened when they realized that building the wall could only have been done with the strength of God Almighty. Now is the time for Nehemiah-leadership in this nation.

Read Nehemiah.

Rules of Juvenile Court.

By Connie Reguli.

Florida 2020

www.flcourts.org/content/download/217911/1973412/Florida-Rules-of-Juvenile-Procedure.pdf

Kentucky – and immunity

By Connie Reguli

Please listen to the legal arguments in this case

It is about a brith mom who had one positive drug test results and three negative test results. The state put the family in a safety plan.

The state dropped the safety plan.

The parents then filed a civil rights complaint for Fourth and Fourteenth procedural and substantive due process rights.

The argument is about qualified immunity.

www.courtlistener.com/mp3/2019/12/06/holly_schulkers_v._elizabeth_kammer_cl.mp3

By Connie Reguli.

SCHULKERS v. KAMMER

Kimberly Jenci Hawthorne , D. Brent Irvin , Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services Office of Legal Services, Frankfort, KY, Ellen M. Houston , Michael Joseph Enzweiler , Dressman Benzinger LaVelle P.S.C., Crestview Hills, KY, for Defendants.

https://www.leagle.com/decision/infdco20190211a69

BAM 💥 2.7million kids in care worldwide. Told you so.

By Connie Reguli

pdf.sciencedirectassets.com/271783/1-s2.0-S0145213417X00070/1-s2.0-S0145213416302873/main.pdf

Wrongful removal – Oklahoma – 2018

cases.justia.com/federal/appellate-courts/ca10/16-7079/16-7079-2018-08-27.pdf

By Connie Reguli

In this case a minor child sued for wrongful removal and violation of substantive due Process rights.

One of the most difficult aspects of a civil rights case is overcoming immunity. In this case the social workers and law enforcement officers claimed qualified immunity for violating the child’s (fourth amendment rights) and substantive due process rights of familial integrity when the child was removed from school for a forensic interview and told by the law enforcement officer that they were going to find him a better home.

In this appeal the tenth circuit court said that the case could proceed on violations of fourth amendment violations. However the court dismissed the claims for substantive due process rights stating that it was not “clearly established” that the child had the right of family integrity in this situation, that is, the fact that the officials impugned his father and damaged his relationship with him was not enough.

Note – analysis of substantive due process – the courts consideration of (1) a fundamental liberty interest vs (2) shock the conscious conduct by state actors.

Good analysis of the reasonableness standard in a claim for fourth amendment violations.

Note. The child was not removed from his home and the Interview revealed no disclosures of abuse.

Here are some excerpts:

The court compares fundamental right to the shocks the conscience standard. –

What is conscious shocking conduct?

Court says that they have implicitly used that standard before.

What you must show for violations of the substantive due process violations of family integrity.

By Connie Reguli

DCS Case recordings as evidence – Application of the Business Records exception.

By Connie Reguli

Are DCS records admissible as business records in a court hearing?

I have located five cases in Tennessee directly addressing this question.  

Hearsay is a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.  TRE 801(c). Such a statement is inadmissible unless it is shown to be admissible as provided by the rules of evidence or otherwise by law. TRE 802. TRE 803(6) covers the hearsay exception for records of regularly conducted activity.  The party proffering the records under TRE 803(6) has the burden to establish (and must lay a foundation) that the records are admissible meeting the five elements of admissibility identified below.  

The following cases in Tennessee discuss the admissibility of DCS case recordings.  

State v. B.F., E2004-00338-COA-R3-PT, (Tenn. App. 12/2/2004) – In this termination of parental rights (TPR) case the case worker was allowed to testify regarding facts in the child’s case file about which she had no personal knowledge but which were documented (or she said were documented) on the case file which was not made an exhibit.  The trial court (Sevier County Judge Stokes) allowed the case worker to testify under the business records exception of Tenn. R. Evid (TRE) 803(6). The appellate Court reversed the trial court stating the TRE 803(6) specifically refers to “records” and indicates that a “record” consists of a memorandum, report, record or data compilation, in any form.  It is clear from this language that this exception pertains solely to the admission of information in the form of tangible documentation. The rule provides for the admission of “records.” It does not provide for the admission of testimony of a witness as to his or her memory of what the record stated. The ground for this exception to the hearsay rule is the fact that regularly kept records typically have a high degree of accuracy.  It is not reasonable to assume that a witness testifying from memory exhibits the high degree of accuracy attributed to regularly kept record. This case does not specifically address any other objections as to the source of information in the records. However, the Court relied on Perlberg v. Brencor Asset Management, Inc. 63 S.W. 3d 390 (Tenn. App. 2001) in which the Court found that a letter in the employment record that referred to a letter from a doctor (but did not contain the doctor’s letter) was inadmissible and not a business record.  Therefore, two questions are considered in this case (1) it is clear that testimony alone from a person who claims to have reviewed the business record is NOT admissible under TRE 803(6); (2) it is also clear that a business record that refers to or incorporates outside information is ALSO NOT a admissible under TRE 803(6) as a business record.  

State Dep’t of Children’s Services v. Stinson, W2006-00749-COA-R3-PT, (Tenn. App. 2006) (McNairy County – Judge Danny Smith) – In this termination of parental rights case Mother objected to the admissibility of the DCS case recordings asserting that the records contained hearsay, however, she did not object to any specific content within the records.  Therefore, the Court ruled that they were admissible under the business records exception to hearsay TRE 803(6). Since the MOther had not objected to any specific entry in the records, the Court did not make an independent assessment of whether the records contained in admissible hearsay. In this case, there was overwhelming evidence of substance abuse and criminal conduct by the parents and the Court stated that even if the records were inadmissible that there was ample evidence to meet the clear and convincing standard for the TPR.  

State Dep’t of Children’s Servs v. C.M.B., E2006-00841-COA-R3-PT, (Tenn. App. 12/13/2006) (Knox County Judge Timothy Irwin) – In this TPR case, the DCS caseworker read into evidence the records created by a previous DCS case management agent.  Mother’s attorney made a faint-hearted objection, saying we would like to have the direct testimony of the witness rather than referring to something I can’t cross-examine. (This is hardly an appropriate objection.)  The Court overruled the objection saying it fell under the hearsay exception. The Judge allowed the reading of the records and asked several questions about where the people were that made those entries. In particular, Mother argued that the trial Court’s conclusion that “cocaine was found within the reach of the children” came ONLY from the hearsay in the DCS records.  On appeal, Mother’s attorney argued that DCS had to demonstrate that the records were made at or near the time of the incidents reported in the records, and that the records were created by someone with the business duty to record or transmit the records during the court of a regularly conducted business activity. The Court found that the records were hearsay and that DCS failed to lay a proper foundation for the admission of these records.  The Court, however, found that it was harmless error (TRAP 36(b)) considering the record as a whole because even striking the complained of evidence, it did not affect the correctness of the judgement. (Note: The problem is that the “fact” recorded in the judgment becomes the law of the case and may be used against the parents in the future.)  

In re Demitrus M.T., E2009-02349-COA–R3-CV (Tenn. App. 3/14/2011) (Claims Commission) – In this wrongful death case, the case recordings were the subject of a motion in limine to exclude inadmissible hearsay by the plaintiff.  The commissioner admitted the case recordings with limited redaction of content that was hearsay within hearsay. The case recordings include an “event date” and “completed date” which is the date that the entry in the record was made.  In this case there was a lapse of time between the event date and the completed date. The DCS employee that was present to testify (not the one that made the record entries) stated that she did not know why there was a delay in the entry of the record and that there is no requirement for the case recording to be made within a certain time. (which is not true)  She testified that sometimes case workers make handwritten notes and then put them in the system later. The case recordings were treated as admissible under TRE 803(6). The commissioner found that the reports were typical of reports regularly prepared by DCS case workers in the fulfillment of their job responsibilities. And that preparing such reports clearly appear to be a proper exercise and implementation of the powers granted DCS under TCA 37-5-106(1) to attain the purpose for which it was created under TCA 37-5-102.  There was no hearsay exception for hearsay within hearsay that was redacted from the records. The Court examined the elements necessary for a record to be admissible under TRE 803(6): (1) The document must be made at or near the time of the event recorded: (2) The person providing the information in the documents must have first hand knowledge of the recorded events or facts; (3) The person providing the information in the document must be under a business duty to record or transmit the information; (4) The business involved must have a regular practice of making such documents; and (5) The manner in which the information was provided or the document was prepared must not indicate that the document lacks trustworthiness.  Arias v. Duro Standard Prods., 3030 S.W. 3d 256 (Tenn. 2010). The COA examined whether element (1) and (5) had been satisfied. As to element (1) the Court said that the key element is whether the lapse of time between the event and the record of the event interferes with the likely accuracy of the business record. The Court found that the lapse of a few days was acceptable, but the lapse of five weeks was not. The absence of proof that the case worker has some phenomenal memory, or interim notes that captured the events and allowed him to record them later, or some explanation of why the records were accurate despite the lapse of over a month, the State failed to make the required showing that they were made at or near the time of the occurrence.  In this case, the Court also analyzed whether or not the records could be admissible under the public records exception, TRE 803(8) which states, “Unless the source of information or the method or circumstances of preparation indicate lack of trustworthiness, records, reports, statements, or data compilations in any form of public offices of agencies setting forth the activities of the office or agency or matters observed pursuant to a duty imposed by law as to which matters there was a duty to report, excluding however, matters observed by police officers and other law enforcement personnel.” The Court said that the same time lapse in the entry of the record would make the records untrustworthy under the public records exception. The Court, however, made an interesting note stating that the fact that the records were not “open to the public” and had been “produced under a protective order” did not disqualify the case recordings from the public records exception.  

In re Melanie T., 352 S.W.3d 687 (Tenn. App. 2011) (Coffee County Judge Vanessa Jackson) – In this dependent and neglect action, the State offered the case recordings made by a case worker who died before the trial into evidence.  The records were admitted into evidence under the hearsay exception of TRE 803(6) – business records. The COA went through the same analysis of the elements and found that the significant delay between the event date and the completed dated rendered the record inadmissible and they lacked trustworthiness.  DCS argued that the court only relied on the records for a timeline and not for the truth of the matter. The COA found that the substantive and material evidence in the records was testified to by other witnesses. Therefore, although is was an error to admit the records, it was harmless error. 

There is no case on point in DCS case recordings to address the hearsay within hearsay, such as statements DCS workers take from third parties, additions to the case recordings made by third-party contractors who are outside of the agency, references in the records to other outside materials (such as medical, dental, or other reports), opinions of the case worker without supporting facts (such as statements that a parent is uncooperative), or conclusions/concerns that are not supported by facts.  

The business records exception clearly requires the recorder to have first hand knowledge of the information contained in the record.  

Additional case law, i.e., other business records opinions may add to this context. 

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Additional case law in Business Records exception to Hearsay.

Business records

Courts have consistently viewed hearsay evidence with suspicion because of concerns about its trustworthiness. Accordingly, hearsay is not admissible in judicial proceedings unless it fits within one of the recognized exceptions to the hearsay rule. This common-law rule is now embodied in Tenn. R. Evid. 802, which states that hearsay is not admissible except as provided by these rules or otherwise by law.

While the Tennessee Rules of Evidence govern proceedings in the state trial courts, they do not necessarily apply with the same force to other nonjudicial proceedings. Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-5-313(1) (1991) provides: The agency shall admit and give probative effect to evidence admissible in a court, and when necessary to ascertain facts not reasonably susceptible to proof under the rules of court, evidence not admissible thereunder may be admitted if it is of a type commonly relied upon by reasonably prudent men in the conduct of their affairs.This provision applies only to facts not reasonably susceptible to proof under the rules of court and does not permit substituting hearsay for the testimony of otherwise available witnesses.

Tenn. R. Evid. 803(6) embodies the hearsay exception commonly known as the “business records” exception. It replaces the Uniform Business Records as Evidence Act, Tenn. Code Ann. § 24-7-111 (repealed 1991).

Records regularly kept in the regular course of business are viewed as trustworthy and reliable. Thus, the purpose of Tenn. R. Evid. 803(6), like its predecessor, is to enable litigants to introduce and use business records without the expense and inconvenience of calling the numerous witnesses involved in preparation and maintenance of the records.

Tenn. R. Evid. 803(6) does not render all business records admissible. The trial court, or in the case of an administrative hearing the administrative law judge or hearing officer, has the discretion to determine whether a particular record is sufficiently trustworthy to be admissible. In the final analysis, the trustworthiness of a business record depends upon the source of the information contained in the record as well as the time and manner in which the record was prepared.

Documents must satisfy five prerequisites in order to qualify as a record of a regularly conducted activity under Tenn. R. Evid. 803(6). First, the person providing the facts recorded in the document must be acting under a business duty. Second, the person providing the information must have firsthand knowledge of the facts or events. Third, the document must be made at or near the time of the event recorded. Fourth, the document must be one that is regularly made or kept in the normal course of business. Fifth, the document must be introduced through its custodian or some other qualified witness who has knowledge of the manner in which the record was made or prepared.

Business records often contain information provided by others and, accordingly, present multiple hearsay problems. Because Tenn. R. Evid. 803(6) was not intended to shield the contents of business records from the rules of evidence, hearsay statements contained in a business record do not become admissible simply because they have found their way into a business‘s files.

The courts resolve the multiple hearsay problems presented by business records using a two-tier approach. First, they determine whether the primary statement – the record itself – qualifies as a business record or fits within some other exception to the hearsay rule. Second, they determine whether the secondary statement – the one contained in the record – fits within a hearsay exception in its own right. Hearsay statements in business records are admissible only if both the record and the statement contained in the record fit within an exception to the hearsay rule.

Among the due process rights under Tenn. Const. art. I, § 8 and the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution is the right to be afforded an effective opportunity to defend by confronting any adverse witness.

Rayder v. Grunow, 1993 Tenn. App. LEXIS 261, (Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 2, 1993)

See Tenn. R. Evid. 803(6) (2011).

Under Tenn. R. Evid. 902(11) (2011), a business record may be authenticated through an accompanying affidavit, with the following requirements: The original or a duplicate of a domestic record of regularly conducted activity that would be admissible under Tenn. R. Evid. 803(6) (2011) if accompanied by an affidavit of its custodian or other qualified person certifying that the record: (A) was made at or near the time of the occurrence of the matters set forth by, or from information transmitted by, a person with knowledge of and a business duty to record or transmit those matters; (B) was kept in the course of the regularly conducted activity; and (C) was made by the regularly conducted activity as a regular practice. A party intending to offer a record into evidence under this paragraph must provide written notice of that intention to all adverse parties, and must make the record and declaration available for inspection sufficiently in advance of their offer into evidence to provide an adverse party with a fair opportunity to challenge them.

The rationale underlying the business records exception is that records regularly kept in the normal course of business are inherently trustworthy and reliable.

The business records exception is intended to facilitate the use of business records by eliminating the expense and inconvenience of calling numerous witnesses involved in the preparation and maintenance of the records and unduly disrupting the business‘s activities.

An extraordinary report prepared for an irregular purpose, particularly when prepared with litigation in mind, may not be made in the regular course of business and may be inadmissible as a business record under Tenn. R. Evid. 803(6) (2011).

Documents prepared specifically for the subject litigation are properly excluded because of motivational concerns arising from the fact that they were generated for litigation purposes, as opposed to records generated for business purposes.

The routine of modern affairs, mercantile, financial, and industrial, is conducted with so extreme a division of labor that the transactions cannot be proved at first hand without the concurrence of persons, each of whom can contribute no more than a slight part, and that part not dependent on his memory of the event. Records, and records alone, are their adequate repository, and are in practice accepted as accurate upon the faith of the routine itself.

A compilation of business records, compiled for specific litigation, may be admissible as a summary of voluminous writings under Tenn. R. Evid. 1006, so long as the data included in a compilation otherwise satisfies the business records exception.

Tennessee courts have broadly defined the term “qualified witness” as a witness with personal knowledge of a business‘s record-keeping methods and can explain same to the court, and is not required to have personal knowledge of the facts recorded, nor to have been personally involved in preparing the documents or even know who did.

This appeal concerns the collection of credit card debt. The plaintiff, a subsequent purchaser of the debt, filed this collection action against the appellant debtor. On appeal, the appellant debtor argues, inter alia, that the trial court erred in admitting into evidence various documents from a previous owner of the debt, pursuant to the hearsay exception for business records under Tenn. R. Evid. Rule 803(6). We hold that two of the exhibits were not appropriately admitted into evidence under the business records exception. Without those exhibits, we find that the evidence preponderates against the trial court’s judgment in favorof the creditor, and reverse.LVNV Funding, LLC v. Mastaw, 2012 Tenn. App. LEXIS 282, (Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 30, 2012)