Evidence Rules in Arbitration vs. Court

Arbitration and litigation operate under fundamentally different frameworks for admitting, weighing, and excluding evidence. This page examines those structural differences, the governing codes and institutional rules that define each framework, common scenarios where the distinctions become decisive, and the boundaries arbitrators use when ruling on evidentiary disputes. Understanding how evidence rules diverge helps parties and counsel prepare appropriately for each forum.

Definition and scope

In federal and state courts, evidence is governed by codified rules — most prominently the Federal Rules of Evidence (FRE), which took effect in 1975 and apply in all United States federal district courts and bankruptcy courts. State courts apply their own evidence codes, most of which follow the FRE's general structure. These rules establish a mandatory gatekeeping function: evidence must clear defined standards of relevance (FRE 401–402), must not be unfairly prejudicial (FRE 403), and must satisfy authentication, hearsay, and foundation requirements before it reaches the trier of fact.

Arbitration operates under a different standard. The Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. §§ 1–16, does not impose specific evidentiary rules on arbitrators. Instead, arbitrators derive their authority to manage evidence from the parties' agreement and the rules of the administering institution. The American Arbitration Association (AAA) Commercial Arbitration Rules, Rule R-34, expressly grant arbitrators the power to determine the admissibility, relevance, materiality, and weight of evidence — without being bound by formal rules of evidence. JAMS Arbitration Rules, Rule 22(d), contains an identical grant. This means the FRE framework is a floor that courts cannot go below, while arbitration is an architect-designed space where the parties and arbitrators build their own structure.

The scope of this page is national (U.S.), covering both domestic and, where noted, international arbitration seated in the United States. Arbitration-vs-litigation provides a broader comparison of the two forums across procedural dimensions beyond evidence.

How it works

In court, the evidentiary process follows a structured sequence enforced by the presiding judge:

  1. Pretrial motions in limine — parties file written motions asking the court to exclude specific categories of evidence before trial begins, based on FRE standards.
  2. Foundation and authentication — each exhibit must be authenticated under FRE 901 before admission; witnesses must qualify under FRE 601–615.
  3. Hearsay screening — out-of-court statements offered for the truth of the matter asserted are excluded under FRE 801–802 unless a recognized exception applies (FRE 803–807 list 23 named exceptions plus a residual).
  4. Expert testimony gatekeeping — under Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals (1993), federal judges act as gatekeepers, applying a reliability and relevance standard before expert opinions reach the jury.
  5. Contemporaneous objections — failure to object at the moment evidence is offered typically waives the issue on appeal.

In arbitration, the same logical stages exist but the rules are compressed and discretionary:

  1. Pre-hearing exchange — institutional rules such as AAA Rule R-22 require document exchange and witness lists, but the scope is defined by the arbitrator, not by court rules.
  2. No formal motion in limine requirement — arbitrators may accept written objections before the hearing but are not obligated to rule pre-hearing.
  3. Relaxed hearsay standard — hearsay is routinely admitted and given whatever weight the arbitrator deems appropriate; no FRE 801 analysis is required.
  4. Expert discretion — arbitrators are not bound by Daubert; they may admit expert testimony without a reliability hearing and discount it in the award.
  5. No automatic waiver rule — because there is no jury to protect from prejudicial exposure, the rationale for strict contemporaneous objections is largely absent.

The discovery-in-arbitration page details how the pre-hearing evidence-gathering phase differs from civil discovery under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

Common scenarios

Documentary evidence in commercial disputes. In a commercial arbitration under AAA Commercial Arbitration Rules, a party may submit internal emails without a business-records foundation under FRE 803(6). The arbitrator admits them and adjusts weight based on context. In federal court, the offering party must establish that the emails were kept in the ordinary course of business through a qualified witness.

Expert witnesses in securities arbitration. FINRA Dispute Resolution Rule 12514 allows arbitrators to limit expert testimony to prevent duplication but does not impose Daubert screening. A securities arbitration panel may hear an expert whose methodology would be excluded in a federal district court applying Daubert. This divergence is especially significant in securities-arbitration cases involving valuation disputes.

Character and prior conduct evidence. FRE 404 bars evidence of prior bad acts to prove conforming conduct, with enumerated exceptions. In employment arbitration, arbitrators may consider prior disciplinary records or performance history under general relevance principles without applying the FRE 404(b) notice-and-purpose framework. The employment-arbitration page addresses how this affects wrongful termination proceedings.

Digital and electronic evidence. Courts apply FRE 901(b)(9) and the emerging case law under Lorraine v. Markel American Insurance Co. (D. Md. 2007) as a framework for authenticating electronic records. Arbitrators apply no equivalent mandatory standard; authentication sufficiency is a matter of arbitral discretion.

Decision boundaries

Arbitrators exercise broad discretion, but that discretion has defined outer limits:

The arbitration-and-due-process page covers the constitutional and statutory parameters that constrain arbitral procedure more broadly, including evidentiary dimensions of the due process analysis.

References

📜 5 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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