MockTrialOnline - Practice Mock Trial Online with AIMockTrialOnline
  • PricingContact Us
Limited Free
Product
Select a CasePricing
Resources
Blog
Company
About UsContact Us
Useful Links
CourtListener (Free Law Project)U.S. Supreme Court
Privacy PolicyTerms of Service
MockTrialOnline on Findly ToolsMockTrialOnline on Twelve Tools
Home/Legal Glossary/Leading Question

Leading Question

/ˈliːdɪŋ ˈkwɛstʃən/
ObjectionsLegal Rule: Federal Rules of Evidence, Rule 611(c)

Definition

A leading question is one that suggests the desired answer within the question itself, typically answerable with a yes or no. Leading questions are generally prohibited on direct examination because the examining attorney should not put words in their own witness's mouth. However, leading questions are permitted and expected on cross-examination, and may be allowed on direct when examining hostile witnesses, adverse parties, or for preliminary background matters.

In the Courtroom

On direct examination, attorneys must ask open-ended questions that allow the witness to provide their own narrative. When an attorney asks a suggestive question like "Isn't it true that..." or "You saw the defendant at the scene, didn't you?" opposing counsel objects with "Objection, leading." The judge may sustain the objection and instruct the attorney to rephrase. On cross-examination, however, leading questions are the primary tool for controlling a witness and testing their testimony. The court has discretion to allow leading questions in other circumstances, such as when a witness is very young, has difficulty communicating, or when addressing undisputed preliminary matters.

Examples

1

Attorney (direct): "The light was red when the defendant entered the intersection, wasn't it?" Opposing Counsel: "Objection, leading." Judge: "Sustained. Rephrase your question, counselor."

2

Attorney (rephrased): "What color was the traffic light when the defendant entered the intersection?"

3

Attorney (cross): "You were drinking that night, weren't you, Mr. Johnson?" — permitted as cross-examination.

Common Mistakes

Students often think all yes/no questions are leading. A question is only leading if it suggests the answer. "Did you go to the store?" is not leading, but "You went to the store, didn't you?" is, because it suggests an affirmative answer.

Landmark Cases

United States v. Durham(1963)

United States v. Durham, 319 F.2d 590 (4th Cir. 1963)

Clarified that the determination of whether a question is impermissibly leading rests in the trial court's discretion and will not be reversed absent clear abuse.

United States v. Shoupe(1977)

United States v. Shoupe, 548 F.2d 636 (6th Cir. 1977)

Held that leading questions may be permitted on direct examination when a witness is hostile, reluctant, or has difficulty communicating, within the trial court's discretion.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes a question "leading"?

A leading question suggests the desired answer within the question itself, typically calling for a "yes" or "no" response. For example, "You were at the store at 9 PM, weren't you?" is leading, while "Where were you at 9 PM?" is not. The key test is whether the question puts words in the witness's mouth.

When are leading questions allowed?

Leading questions are permitted on cross-examination, with hostile or adverse witnesses, for preliminary or background matters, to refresh recollection, and when examining witnesses with communication difficulties. They are generally prohibited on direct examination because the examining party should not suggest answers to their own witness.

How do I object to a leading question effectively?

Simply state "Objection, leading" when the question suggests the answer during direct examination. If the judge sustains the objection, opposing counsel must rephrase using an open-ended question. Save leading objections for substantive questions — objecting to every mildly leading preliminary question can annoy the judge.

Related Terms

Compound Question

Objections

A compound question is a single question that actually contains two or more distinct questions joine...

Argumentative

Objections

An argumentative objection is raised when an attorney's question is not genuinely seeking informatio...

Witness

Courtroom

A witness is any person who testifies under oath in court proceedings, providing factual testimony b...

Beyond the Scope

Objections

A "beyond the scope" objection is raised during cross-examination when the cross-examining attorney ...

Related Articles

Mock Trial Objections: Every Objection Explained

Read more →

Mock Trial Cross-Examination: Complete Guide

Read more →

Mock Trial Direct Examination: Complete Guide

Read more →

Practice This in a Mock Trial

Apply your knowledge of this term in a realistic courtroom simulation

Start a Mock Trial