Discovery Flashcards

1
Q

What falls under discovery?

A
  • Depositions
  • Document Production
  • Interrogatories
  • Requests for admission
  • Physical exams
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2
Q

Rule 26 [omnibus motion rule]

A
  • Defines scope, any information relevant to any party’s claim or defense
  • 26(g) requires the attorney to sign each discovery document
  • Imposes equivalent rule 11 sanctions, specifically for discovery
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3
Q

Rule 33 on Interrogatories

A
  • No more than 25
  • Must relate to matters in scope of discovery
  • Must be answered
  • Responses and objections must be SERVED (not filed) within 30 days
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4
Q

Common discovery objections

A
  • Irrelevance under 26(b)(1), not relevant to any claim or defense
  • Not proportional
  • Overly burdensome
  • Attorney-client privilege
  • Material requested is cumulative or available elsewhere. 26(b)(2)(C)(i)
  • Already had opportunity for discovery. 26(b)(2)(C)(ii)
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5
Q

Attorney-Client Privilege (evidentiary rule)

A
  • A communication;
    A) Made between privileged persons;
    B) In confidence
    C) For purpose of obtaining or providing legal assistance for the client
  • Protecting communication b/w attorney and client related to legal representation
  • Privilege belongs to client, not attorney
  • Absolute unless waived

Does not apply to public places where things could be overheard

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6
Q

Rationale for attorney-client privilege

A
  • Attorney should know everything about client
  • Client should trust attorney
  • Client should have incentive to be honest w/ lawyer
  • Established whenever legal discussion/advice is given, including initial consultations before hiring attorney
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7
Q

Rule 26(b)(3) Work Product

A
  • Material prepared in anticipation of litigation by party or its representatives are not subject to discover
  • Rationale:
    a) parties must thoroughly prepare for a case
    b) should not skew notes out of fear of disclosure
    c) opposing party has other discovery means

EXCEPTION; Disclosable if:
- Party seeking has “substantial need” AND
- Cannot obtain info by other means
- Mental impressions, conclusions, opinions, or theories are never disclosed

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8
Q

Expert Testimony

A
  • Experts explain scientific, technical, and statistical data
  • Give merit to claims of client
  • Intimidate other side, experts are expensive
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9
Q

Motions to Compel, Rule 37(a)

A
  • Must be accompanied by certification of parties’ meeting’

Reasoning:
- Effective way to resolve disputes
- Reduces burden on courts

  • 26(g)(1) signature required
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10
Q

Sanctions for failure to obey court order, Rule 37(b)

A
  • By failing to cooperate you generate an expense (motion to compel) and must reimburse opponent
  • Court can strike portions of pleadings, exclude evidence, decide issues against bad faith party
  • Adverse inference instruction
  • Dismiss complaint or declare default judgment
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11
Q

Attorney’s duty of preservation

A
  • Once you can anticipate litigation, instruct clients to place litigation hold
  • Oversee compliance
  • Communicate with key players directly
  • Instruct employees to produce electronic copies of relevant files
  • Backup media to be identified and stored securely
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12
Q

Discovery

A
  • Learning or discovering facts related to lawsuit
  • Motions for summary judgment are based on facts found in discovery

MTD/Answer Stage –> DISCOVERY –> Verdict

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