Nolo's Deposition Handbook
Getting deposed? Conducting a deposition? Here's the book you need to take the mystery out of the deposition process and answer questions with confidence. You'll even learn the three "golden rules" for answering questions and the trick questions lawyers often use to influence testimony.

A perfect book for law students, lawyers, legal assistants, witnesses, expert witnesses, and anyone who wants to represent themselves in court, Nolo's Deposition Handbook provides all the information you need to sail through the deposition process with confidence. This edition contains updated statutes, cases, and rules -- plus, new material on "electronic discovery" which applies to information stored in computers, including records and emails.
1101145147
Nolo's Deposition Handbook
Getting deposed? Conducting a deposition? Here's the book you need to take the mystery out of the deposition process and answer questions with confidence. You'll even learn the three "golden rules" for answering questions and the trick questions lawyers often use to influence testimony.

A perfect book for law students, lawyers, legal assistants, witnesses, expert witnesses, and anyone who wants to represent themselves in court, Nolo's Deposition Handbook provides all the information you need to sail through the deposition process with confidence. This edition contains updated statutes, cases, and rules -- plus, new material on "electronic discovery" which applies to information stored in computers, including records and emails.
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Nolo's Deposition Handbook

Nolo's Deposition Handbook

Nolo's Deposition Handbook

Nolo's Deposition Handbook

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Overview

Getting deposed? Conducting a deposition? Here's the book you need to take the mystery out of the deposition process and answer questions with confidence. You'll even learn the three "golden rules" for answering questions and the trick questions lawyers often use to influence testimony.

A perfect book for law students, lawyers, legal assistants, witnesses, expert witnesses, and anyone who wants to represent themselves in court, Nolo's Deposition Handbook provides all the information you need to sail through the deposition process with confidence. This edition contains updated statutes, cases, and rules -- plus, new material on "electronic discovery" which applies to information stored in computers, including records and emails.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781413320602
Publisher: NOLO
Publication date: 08/18/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 440
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Paul Bergman is a Professor of Law at the UCLA School of Law and a recipient of a University Distinguished Teaching Award. His recent books include Reel Justice: The Courtroom Goes to the Movies (Andrews&McMeel); Trial Advocacy: Inferences, Arguments, Techniques (with Moore and Binder, West Publishing Co.) and Represent Yourself In Court and The Criminal Law Handbook (both with Berman, Nolo). He has also published numerous articles in law journals and regularly gives presentations on how law and lawyers are portrayed in film. His blog on the criminal justice system can be found at The Rap Sheet: Nolo's Criminal Law Blog.
Albert Moore, a member of the California State Bar since 1978, is a law professor at the UCLA School of Law and the co-author of Trial Advocacy: Inferences, Arguments and Trial Techniques (West Publishing).

Read an Excerpt

Introduction

This chapter offers suggestions to help you prepare for being deposed (having your deposition taken). Although preparation for anyone being deposed is similar, this chapter's suggestions differ somewhat depending on whether you are:

  • a party represented by a lawyer
  • a party representing yourself, or
  • a nonparty witness.

Although you may benefit from reading the entire chapter, if you are pressed for time, concentrate on the section that applies to your situation.

Parties Represented by Attorneys

If you are a plaintiff or defendant who is represented by an attorney, you may use any or all of the preparation methods suggested in the sections below. However, because attorneys sometimes follow idiosyncratic practices when it comes to deposition preparation (and some may even disagree with one or more of the suggestions here), consult with your lawyer before beginning to prepare seriously. Then, together, you and your attorney can work out a joint
strategy. (If you are a nonparty witness who will be represented by an attorney at your deposition, like a party, you too should discuss how to prepare for your deposition with the attorney.)

The following subsections address a few subjects that parties should be familiar with even if they are represented by an attorney. Just as educated consumers often get the best deals, educated clients often get the best level of service from their lawyers.

Do Not Discuss the Deposition With Your Opponent

Never discuss your deposition with the opposing party or the party's lawyer. Instead, convey every communication and request, even one as simple aschanging the deposition's date or starting time, through your attorney. Especially if your opponent is also represented by a lawyer, contacting the other party personally can be risky. Even a courteous request may be
misinterpreted as an attempt to intimidate the party or evade the rules. And if you end up talking about the case, you may unwittingly provide your adversary with additional evidence to use against you. (To encourage parties to settle disputes, evidence rules generally forbid parties from mentioning settlement negotiations or offers and counteroffers at trial. (See
Federal Rule of Evidence 408.) However, to avoid any misunderstanding about whether a predeposition conversation you had was a settlement discussion, leave the communications to your attorney.)

Meeting Before the Deposition

If you are to testify completely and accurately at your deposition, you'll undoubtedly need to prepare in advance. As a general rule, therefore, expect your attorney to request to meet with you prior to the date of your deposition. Deposition preparation sessions are legitimate and routine: If you're asked at deposition whether you met with your attorney before the deposition to go over your testimony, you can answer "yes" forthrightly. (See "Responding to Common Questions" in Chapter 4 for more on how to answer this question.)

At the predeposition meeting, the attorney will probably explain what will happen at the deposition, review important documents that you may be asked about, and discuss general strategies as to how you should respond to deposition questions. Many attorneys like to conduct a short "mock" (practice) deposition so that you can practice answering the types of
questions you're likely to be asked at the deposition. During the practice session, your attorney's questions will probably focus on the details of important events.

Your attorney may suggest holding the predeposition meeting only a day or two prior to the deposition. This gives the attorney maximum time to review the file and be up to speed on the issues and the kinds of questions you're likely to be asked. However, your peace of mind should also be a relevant factor. If you're feeling anxious about being deposed, you might ask to meet
with your attorney well in advance of the deposition. At this earlier time, the attorney should be able to review the deposition process with you as well as address and hopefully assuage any concerns that are making you anxious.

Responding to Requests for Documents

The Notice of Deposition may ask you to bring various documents along to the deposition. If so, review the notice with your attorney. Your attorney may want to refuse the request (at least in part) on the ground that one or more of the sought-after documents is "privileged" (shielded from disclosure). (See Chapter 7.)

Or, the notice may be so broad or vague that you'll need your lawyer's help to know what to bring. For instance, after reading a notice that asks you to bring "all records and memoranda" pertaining to a particular transaction, you may be unsure as to whether an email message obliquely referring to the transaction should be included. If you neglect to bring a document that the deposing party asks -- and is entitled -- to see, you may have to
return with the documents for additional deposition testimony. By checking with your attorney, you can avoid either unnecessarily prolonging your deposition or unwittingly revealing documents the opposing party shouldn't see.

Reviewing Documents

Regardless of whether a particular document is one that you have been asked to produce at the deposition, it is important that you not read or review any documents in preparation for your deposition until you consult with your attorney. That's because one of the first questions you're likely to be asked at deposition is the following:

Q: Prior to appearing for this deposition, did you review any documents in preparation for the deposition?

If you answer "yes," you will probably then immediately be asked to identify all the documents you looked at. Those documents would include electronically stored information such as email messages and computer files. Your adversary may then demand to see all these documents. Since deposition rules normally require you to turn over to the opposing party for
examination any documents you use to "refresh your recollection" in preparation for a deposition, this demand is usually proper. In fact, in some states you can even be forced to turn over a document that would otherwise be privileged and thus shielded from disclosure! To avoid having to turn over a document that your adversary may not otherwise have known even existed, you should not review documents before talking to your lawyer.

Parties Representing Themselves

If you are representing yourself in a lawsuit, quite possibly the first thing you'll need to
do after receiving a Notice of Deposition is to calm down. Check the time, date, and location of the deposition. Remember that depositions are a common feature of civil litigation; that you have been called for a deposition should be seen as neither unusual nor particularly scary.

However, because what you say at the deposition (and how you say it) can significantly influence whether your opponent decides to go all the way to a trial, as well as the terms of any settlement offer the other party might make, good preparation is essential. The next sections present some suggestions designed to help you present accurate and credible deposition testimony.

Gathering Requested Documents

Review the Notice of Deposition to determine whether you are required to bring specified documents with you to the deposition. Below are issues to consider when deciding how to respond to a document request.

Is the Document Request Proper Under the Discovery Rules?

FRCP 26(b)(2) provides that a document request is improper when its "burden or expense ... outweighs its likely benefit, taking into account the needs of the case, the amount in controversy, the parties' resources, the importance of the issues ... and the importance of the proposed discovery in resolving the issues." Typical examples of document requests that may be improper under this rule include:

  • a request that is too vague for you to figure out what you're supposed to bring (for example, "produce all records bearing on important accounts")
  • a request that is so broad that you would have to fill a 16 in order to comply (for example, "produce all employee records for the past ten years"), or
  • a request that seeks hard-to-find documents that you believe have no relevance to the dispute (for example, "produce the last telephone bill you received before installing the new phone system eight years ago").

In all of these situations, FRCP 26(b)(2) probably makes the requests improper. Your initial response should be to contact the deposing party and try to resolve the problem. For instance, if the problem is that the request is too vague, ask the deposing party to specify which
documents you are to produce or to narrow the request to a particular period of time. If you and the deposing party agree on what documents you are to bring, it's best to put your understanding in writing in the form of a letter.

[Sample Letter Confirming Agreement on Document Request] omitted for online sample chapter.

If you cannot resolve the problem informally, you should bring to your deposition only those documents that you can identify as reasonably related to the case and called for by the document request. For example, if you think that the request to produce "all employee records for the past ten years" is too broad and burdensome, you might bring the records for the past two years if that is the period of time that seems reasonably related to the dispute.

When you're asked at the deposition which documents you've brought, you should respond by identifying what you've brought and explaining why you haven't brought every conceivable document. For example, if you were asked to bring "all records pertaining to important accounts," you might say something like,

"I brought the records for the Hatfield and McCoy accounts. Those are the only ones I brought, because they are the only ones that seem related to this case, and I didn't really know what you meant by 'important accounts' because we have over 500 accounts in the office."

If your adversary's lawyer wants additional records, you might try again to reach an agreement at the deposition. If you cannot reach an agreement, your adversary will have to go to court and seek an order requiring you to produce additional documents. At the court hearing, you can justify your response by pointing out the vague wording of the document request and
why additional documents would have no bearing on the case.

Are Requested Documents in Your "Possession or Control"?

When complying with a request for documents, you need gather and bring with you to the deposition only those documents that are in your "possession or control." Your adversary cannot force you to obtain documents that are in the possession of someone who is outside your control. At the same time, it is not legally proper for you to give documents away to other people simply to avoid having to comply with a request in a Notice of Deposition.

Example 1

A Notice of Deposition asks you, the owner or manager of a business, to bring a certain written contract to your deposition. The contract is in the office of your assistant manager in a different city. You would have to bring the contract to the deposition. It may not be in your physical possession, but it is under your control because the assistant manager works for you and your company.


Example 2

Again, a Notice of Deposition asks you to bring a certain written contract to your deposition. After receiving the notice, you remove the contract from a file in your office and give it to a friend or relative. Because you voluntarily gave up possession of the contract after you were given notice to produce it at your deposition, the contract remains in your "possession or control" and you would have to produce it at the deposition. (Lawyers would say you have "constructive possession.")

If you don't produce it, the deposing party will surely ask for its whereabouts. You will
either have to reveal that you gave it away after receiving the notice to produce it or lie about what happened under oath. Assuming that you tell the truth, you'll have to produce the document anyway. If you're discovered to have lied, you severely damage your credibility and expose yourself to criminal prosecution for perjury.

Example 3

Again, a Notice of Deposition asks you to bring a certain written contract to your deposition.
However, the contract was one of a number of documents that you transferred to another company when you sold part of your business. You would not have to produce the contract at your deposition, as it is no longer in your possession or control.


Are Requested Documents Privileged?

You also need not and should not turn over to your adversary any documents that are privileged (shielded from disclosure). Examples of documents that may be privileged include the following:

  • Written communications to or from your lawyer. For example, a letter or email message written by you to a lawyer seeking legal representation or an opinion about the merits of your
    case would be privileged.

  • Written communications between you and your spouse. For example, an email message that you send to your spouse describing some aspect of the case would be privileged.


See Chapter 7 for a fuller explanation of privileges. Other documents that may be privileged include a letter from your doctor discussing your physical condition, a document that contains confidential business information known as a "trade secret" (such as your company's confidential list of prospective customers), or even a document that might implicate you in criminal activity. Whether documents can be withheld as privileged often depends on the information contained in a document and the legal and factual issues involved in the lawsuit.

Whenever possible, seek legal advice if you think that a possibly important document you do not want to reveal may be legitimately withheld as privileged. If you decide not to seek advice from a lawyer and are still uncertain as to whether the information in question is privileged, you can address the issue at the deposition itself. Tell your opponent's lawyer on the record (taken down by the court reporter after you've been sworn in) which documents you have not produced because you think they are privileged -- without revealing too much of their contents. You and the lawyer may then be able to work out an acceptable compromise.

Be careful not to reveal privileged
information.
If you voluntarily reveal privileged information, a court might find that you have "waived the privilege" (given up your right to keep the communications confidential). For example, if, in the course of describing a document you withheld because
you think it is privileged, you go into such great detail that you reveal the contents of the document, you might have to hand over that document. Err on the side of less detail. It's better to say "I didn't produce correspondence from my lawyer" than "I didn't produce a letter in which my lawyer told me that he thinks I will make a bad witness and will have trouble proving that I have been injured."


Example

You are suing someone for personal injuries they caused you in an auto accident. You get a Notice of Deposition that requires you to produce "all documents that mention or refer to the injuries you claim you suffered as a result of the accident." (These documents would not be privileged, because when you make a legal claim for personal injuries, you waive [give up] the doctor-patient privilege for written and oral communications between you and your physician relating to those injuries.)

On your computer, you have a copy of a letter you sent to the doctor who is treating you for the injuries caused by the accident. In that letter, you briefly refer to the injuries caused by the accident, and then discuss in detail another personal medical problem completely unrelated to the injuries you sustained in the accident. You have decided not to produce the letter because it contains personal information about a medical condition that has nothing to do with the lawsuit, and you assert the doctor-patient privilege as a basis for withholding the letter. At your deposition, the following exchange takes place:

Q: (Adversary's lawyer): Have you brought with you today all the documents I requested
in the Notice of Deposition?

A: (You): With one exception. I have a copy of all the documents that you asked for
right here. But there is one document that I am not producing because I believe it is privileged.

Q: And what document is that?

A: It's a letter I sent to the doctor who's been treating me for injuries I suffered in the accident.

Q: Why do you think it is privileged?

A: Because it's a letter I sent to my doctor and it's mostly about a personal medical
problem I have that has nothing to do with the auto accident.

Q: You say this letter is mostly about an unrelated personal medical problem. Does the
letter say anything about the injuries you sustained in the accident?

A: Yes, it mentions them just very briefly.

Q: All right, let me suggest how we might proceed. Use my copy machine and make a copy of the portion of the letter that refers to the injuries you claim to have sustained in the accident. You don't have to copy the rest of the letter. Or if you prefer, you can read to me the portion of the letter that refers to your injuries. But before you do either of those, I want to tell you that I am reserving the right to go to court later in the case to ask the judge to order you to produce the entire letter if I think I need to see it. Can you copy the letter and cover up the portion referring to your medical problem that is unrelated to the accident?

A: Yes. I can do that. That sounds fair to me.

By voluntarily indicating to your opponent that you are withholding a document because you believe it is privileged, you demonstrate to the lawyer (and later to a judge, if necessary) that you are not trying to hide relevant documents. If you are up front about your reasons for withholding documents, you can probably work out solutions with the adversary's lawyer.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Your Deposition Companion
Part One: You Are a Deponent
1. An Overview of Deposition Procedures
2. Using Depositions in a Lawsuit
3. Preparing to Give Deposition Testimony
4. Responding to Questions
5. Beginning a Deposition: “The Usual Admonitions”
6. Background Questions
7. Questions You Can Refuse to Answer
8. Expert Witness Deponents
Part Two: Taking and Defending Depositions
9. The Lay of the Discovery Landscape
10. Defending a Deposition
11. Taking a Deposition: Deposing a Hostile Witness
12. Taking a Deposition: Responding to a Defending Attorney’s Roadblocks
13. Taking a Deposition: Deposing a Friendly Witness
14. Visually Recorded Depositions
Glossary
Appendix A: Excerpts From the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP)
Appendix B: State Discovery and Deposition Rules
Appendix C: Sample Forms
Index
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