After direct examination concludes, opposing counsel may cross-examine the witness but must confine questions to topics addressed on direct and credibility issues. When cross-examination ventures into new subject matter, the calling attorney objects with "Objection, beyond the scope of direct." The judge determines whether the question reasonably relates to topics covered on direct or concerns witness credibility. If sustained, the cross-examining attorney must either reserve the topic for their own case or request the court's permission to treat the witness as their own for that line of questioning. The court has discretion to allow inquiry beyond the scope of direct in the interest of justice or judicial economy.
Attorney (cross): "Now, Doctor, I'd like to ask you about your treatment of the plaintiff in 2019—" Opposing Counsel: "Objection, beyond the scope. Direct examination only covered the 2022 treatment." Judge: "Sustained. Save it for your case-in-chief, counselor."
Attorney: "Your Honor, this goes to the witness's credibility and bias, which is always within scope."
Judge: "I'll allow limited inquiry on this topic in the interest of judicial economy, but keep it brief."
Students often forget that credibility is always within scope on cross-examination regardless of what was covered on direct. Bias, motive, prior inconsistent statements, and perception issues may always be explored.
United States v. Caudle, 606 F.2d 451 (4th Cir. 1979)
Affirmed that the scope of cross-examination is within the trial court's sound discretion, and that reasonably related subjects may be explored even if not identically matching direct testimony.
United States v. Segal, 534 F.2d 578 (3d Cir. 1976)
Held that while the scope rule limits cross-examination, credibility is always within scope — a cross-examiner may always attack the witness's believability regardless of direct examination topics.
What does "beyond the scope" mean in cross-examination?
Under Rule 611(b), cross-examination is generally limited to the subject matter of direct examination and matters affecting witness credibility. A "beyond the scope" objection challenges questions that venture into new topics not covered on direct. The cross-examiner must wait for their own case or recall the witness.
Can the judge allow questions beyond the scope of direct?
Yes. Rule 611(b) gives judges discretion to allow inquiry into additional matters as if on direct examination. Many judges permit reasonable latitude, particularly when the evidence is relevant and will need to come in eventually. The judge balances efficiency against fairness and the scope limitation's purpose.
Does the beyond-the-scope rule apply to redirect examination?
Yes. Redirect examination is limited to matters raised during cross-examination. New topics introduced on redirect may be objected to as beyond the scope. Similarly, recross is limited to new matters raised on redirect. Each successive examination narrows in scope.
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