Saturday, July 21, 2007

Some Basic Discovery In a Lawsuit

“Discovery” is the process by which the parties obtain information of the issues and facts of the lawsuit from others, usually opposing parties to the lawsuit. The purpose is to prevent “trial by surprise”, where some unknown information is presented by an opposing party for the first time at trial.


In Texas, it is common to be served with interrogatories, a request for disclosure, requests for admission and requests for production when you first get sued for something like a credit card debt or personal injury. (Although these forms of discovery are not limited to lawsuits on credit card debts and personal injury actions.) Sometimes these discovery requests will be served on you at the same time the original petition is served upon you. At other times, these will be served on you after you have been served with the original petition.


Failing to answer discovery requests will result in negative legal consequences. For instance, if a request for admission is not answered, or otherwise responded to, within the proper time period, it will be deemed admitted, automatically, on the day it is due. (See Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 198.2(c).) This could have severely negative consequences for the defendant’s case, if the plaintiff has asked him to admit or deny various elements of the case, and they are deemed admitted. Normally these elements of the “prima facie case” would need to be proven by the plaintiff. It would be a logical tactic for a Plaintiff’s attorney to serve requests for admission on a defendant that he knows is representing his self, in the hopes that the defendant will not understand the legal impact of failing to answer the requests in a timely manner. If the self-represented defendant fails to respond properly to the requests for admission regarding the elements of the plaintiff’s prima facie case, then the defendant may, essentially, lose the case before the trial has even begun. (Lawyers will try to take advantage of a self-represented individual.)


Responses to written discovery must be in writing, signed by the defendant (or his attorney), and, in the case of answers to interrogatories, verified. Responses to the written discovery discussed here is not normally filed with the court. (TRCP 191.4.) Responses will normally need to be served on all parties of record, not just the party that made the requests. If a party is represented by a licensed attorney, then service would be upon his attorney of record. There are several methods of service of written discovery available. Three ways are: certified US mail, fax, and hand-delivery. (TRCP 21a.) So for, instance, a defendant could send his written discovery responses to the fax numbers of the other party’s attorneys. These fax numbers are usually listed below the area where the other party’s attorney signs his name to written discovery requests.


The first type of written discovery request commonly encountered is the request for disclosure, found in Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 194. This is a request for some basic information about the case. For instance, TRCP 194.2(a) asks for “…the correct names of the parties to the lawsuit…” This form of discovery request may be found in the Plaintiff’s original petition (or the Defendant’s original answer). It may also be served as a separate written discovery document on the opposing party. The request will likely be in the form of the following language: “Under the authority of Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 194, defendant requests that plaintiff disclose, within 30 days of the service of this request, the information or material described in Rule 194.2...” If the request is served before the defendant’s original answer is due, then the defendant gets an extra 20 days to respond (50 days total). (See Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 194.3(a).) The format of the written response to the request for disclosure might look something like this in some cases:



{Caption: Will be something like ‘Joe Blow, Plaintiff v. John Smith, Defendant’, along with information about the court that the case is in, and the case number. The caption will normally be the same as the caption found at the top of the written discovery request being responded to, so it is probably a safe bet to copy that and put it at the top of the discovery response.}


DEFENDANTS’ ANSWERS TO PLAINTIFF’S REQUESTS FOR DISCLOSURE


To: Plaintiff, {Name of Plaintiff}, through his attorney of record, {Name, address, telephone, and fax number of plaintiff’s attorney}


Defendant {Name of Defendant} serves these answers to Plaintiff’s requests for disclosure made under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 194.2.


ANSWERS TO REQUESTS FOR DISCLOSURE



1. Response to request under Rule 194.2(a): {text of response here.}
2. Response to request under Rule 194.2(b): {text of response here.}
3. Response to request under Rule 194.2(c): {text of response here.}
4. Response to request under Rule 194.2(d): {text of response here.}
5. Response to request under Rule 194.2(e): {text of response here.}
6. Response to request under Rule 194.2(f): {text of response here.}
7. Response to request under Rule 194.2(g): {text of response here.}
8. Response to request under Rule 194.2(h): {text of response here.}
9. Response to request under Rule 194.2(i): {text of response here.}
10. Response to request under Rule 194.2(j): {text of response here.}
11. Response to request under Rule 194.2(k): {text of response here.}
12. Response to request under Rule 194.2(l): {text of response here.}


Respectfully submitted,



{Defendant’s signature (or his attorney’s),
address, telephone, and fax (if any)}



Requests for admissions ask the responding party to either admit or deny a specific fact. When used legitimately, they can simplify the eventual trial by eliminating matters about which there is no controversy. (For instance, if the fact that the sky is blue and not red with green polka dots is important in the trial, a party could ask the opposing party to “Admit that the sky is blue and not red with green polka dots.” Usually, the responding party will then either admit it, deny it, say it can neither admit nor deny it (with a reason why he can’t), refuse to answer due to lack of information (in certain cases), object, or assert a privilege. (TRCP 198.2(b)) The format of a written response to requests for admissions may look something like this in some cases:



{Caption: Will be something like ‘Joe Blow, Plaintiff v. John Smith, Defendant’, along with information about the court that the case is in, and the case number. The caption will normally be the same as the caption found at the top of the written discovery request being responded to, so it is probably a safe bet to copy that and put it at the top of the discovery response.}


DEFENDANT’S ANSWERS TO PLAINTIFF’S FIRST REQUEST FOR ADMISSIONS


To: Plaintiff, {Plaintiff’s name}, by and through his attorney of record, {Name, address, telephone, and fax number of plaintiff’s attorney}


Defendant, {Defendant name}, serves these responses to Plaintiff’s requests for admissions.


RESPONSES TO REQUESTS


REQUEST FOR ADMISSION 1:


“You are the sole authorized user of Mister Card Credit Card, number 3333-5555-6666-4444.”


Response: {Possible responses: “Defendant admits”, or “Defendant denies”}


REQUEST FOR ADMISSION 2:


“Your address is 6666 Elm St. London, England.”


Response: {Possible responses: “Defendant admits”, or “Defendant denies”}


Respectfully submitted,



{Defendant’s Signature (or his attorney),
address, telephone, and fax (if any)}




Interrogatories are written questions served on a party that require him to serve written answers, usually under other (verified). Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 197 institutes this form of written discovery. An interrogatory may inquire whether a party makes a specific legal or factual contention and may ask the responding party to state the legal theories and to describe in general the factual bases for the party’s claims or defenses, but interrogatories may not be used to require the responding party to marshal all of its available proof or the proof the party intends to offer at trial. A response must include the party’s answers to the interrogatories and may include objections and assertions of privilege as required under the rules. A responding party must usually sign the answers under oath. This is known as “verification”, and can be accomplished by taking the responses and answers, along with a verification page, to a notary. The format of a written response to interrogatories may look something like this in some cases (with two commonly asked interrogatories). (A possible sample verification page is also included.):



{Caption: Will be something like ‘Joe Blow, Plaintiff v. John Smith, Defendant’, along with information about the court that the case is in, and the case number. The caption will normally be the same as the caption found at the top of the written discovery request being responded to, so it is probably a safe bet to copy that and put it at the top of the discovery response.}


DEFENDANT’S RESPONSE TO PLAINTIFF’S INTEROGATORIES


To: Plaintiff, {Plaintiff’s name}, by and through his attorney of record, {Name, address, telephone, and fax number of plaintiff’s attorney}


Defendant serves these responses to Plaintiff’s Interrogatories


ANSWERS AND OBJECTIONS TO INTERROGATORIES:


INTERROGATORY 1:


Identify each person answering these interrogatories, supplying information, or assisting in any way with the preparation of the answers to these interrogatories. For each person named, provide the person's address and telephone number.


ANSWER: {Place Answer/Objection/Response to Plaintiff’s Interrogatory Number 1 here.}


INTERROGATORY 2:


Please state your full name, date of birth, driver's license number, social security number, all names used by you in the last ten (10) years, name of spouse, if any, present residential address and all previous addresses within the last ten (10) years, including dates resided at each, and residential telephone numbers.


ANSWER: {Place Answer/Objection/Response to Plaintiff’s Interrogatory Number 2 here.}



Respectfully submitted,



{Defendant’s Signature (or his attorney),
address, telephone, and fax (if any)}


VERIFICATION PAGE


STATE OF TEXAS


COUNTY OF {county where verification occurs}


On this day {name of party responding to interrogatories –defendant in this instance-} appeared before me, the undersigned notary public, and after I administered an oath to him, and upon his oath, he said he read the “DEFENDANT’S RESPONSE TO PLAINTIFF’S INTEROGATORIES” and the facts in it are within his personal knowledge, and are true and correct


{Signature of Defendant}


SWORN TO and SUBSCRIBED before me by {Name of Defendant} on the _____ day of ____________, 200__.


{Signature of Notary}


Notary Public in and for the State of Texas


My commission Expires: ___________



Requests for production are a means of obtaining documents from another party to the case. Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 196 institutes requests for production. A party responding to requests for production will either comply with the document requests, object, or state reasons why he is not or cannot. The format of a written response to requests for production (with a common request for production included) may look something like this in some cases:



{Caption: Will be something like ‘Joe Blow, Plaintiff v. John Smith, Defendant’, along with information about the court that the case is in, and the case number. The caption will normally be the same as the caption found at the top of the written discovery request being responded to, so it is probably a safe bet to copy that and put it at the top of the discovery response.}


DEFENDANT’S RESPONSES TO PLAINTIFF’S FIRST REQUEST FOR PRODUCTION


To: Plaintiff, {Plaintiff’s name}, by and through his attorney of record, {Name, address, telephone, and fax number of plaintiff’s attorney}


Defendant serves these responses to Plaintiff’s requests for admissions.


RESPONSES TO REQUESTS


REQUEST FOR PRODUCTION NO. 1:


True, correct, and legible copies of any and all correspondence, communications, letters, notes of oral communications, and all other documents or writings sent to or received from, or exchanged by and between you and Plaintiff concerning the subject matter of this lawsuit.


RESPONSE: {Possible responses: “After a diligent search, no items have been identified that are responsive to the request”, or, “See attached documents”}


Respectfully submitted,


{Defendant’s signature (or his attorney’s),
address, telephone, and fax (if any)}



A note about post-judgment discovery: If you loose a lawsuit (or take a default judgment), it is common to be served with discovery requests like interrogatories and requests for production regarding your assets so that the plaintiff can attempt to collect on the judgment against you. Answering all discovery is important because if you don’t, it is possible for the opposing party to get the judge in your case to find you in contempt of court. Although debtor’s prison is abolished under the Texas State Constitution, the unscrupulous judgment creditor may try to use post-judgment discovery as a means of getting you put in jail for contempt of court, if you don’t answer the discovery. However, you can avoid this possible negative legal consequence by properly responding to the post-judgment discovery.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

The Original Answer

    Some people who are sued will normally respond by filing an “original answer”. Let’s look at how this is usually handled if someone is sued in a Texas state court. First, the person being sued will usually be served with a citation and a copy of the plaintiff’s original petition. (This is known as “the process”.) The purpose of service of citation is to give the defendant an opportunity to appear in court and defend against the lawsuit. Process may be served by a Sheriff’s Deputy or Constable. It also may be served by a private process server. (See Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 103) Assuming that the Defendant doesn’t attempt some sort of pre-Answer filing, such as a special appearance to challenge personal jurisdiction, or other tactic, then he will probably file an “original answer”. By filing the original answer, the defendant enters an appearance before the court, denies the allegations in the plaintiff’s petition, identifies his defenses, and avoids a default judgment. In state district and county courts in Texas, the defendant normally must file his written answer by 10:00am on the first Monday after the expiration of 20 days from the date the defendant was served with the citation. (See Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 99(b).)
   Among other things, the answer should contain what is known as a “general denial”, which is a statement that defendant “generally denies all the allegations in the plaintiff’s petition.” An effect of filing a general denial is to put at issue everything in the plaintiff’s petition that is not required to be denied under oath or specially denied.
   In some cases in Texas, a general denial may not be sufficient to put all of the plaintiff’s allegations at issue, because some matters must be specifically pleaded and verified by affidavit based on personal knowledge. A general denial also does not include various affirmative defenses that may be available to the defendant in some cases. Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 93 contains a list of defenses, pleas, and other matters that must usually be verified by affidavit. Some matters that may need to be specifically pleaded and verified by affidavit include: An attack on the legal capacity of either the plaintiff to sue or the defendant to be sued; a denial of partnership alleged in a pleading for any party to the suit; a denial that a party is incorporated as alleged; or an allegation that a contract is usurious. (See TRCP 93 for other subjects.)
   If a defendant wants to rely on an affirmative defense, he must also specifically plead it. A general denial will not be sufficient to raise this. (See TRCP 94.) Some affirmative defenses include: Accord and satisfaction; arbitration and award; assumption of the risk; contributory negligence; discharge in bankruptcy; duress; estoppel; fraud; illegality; release; statute of frauds; statute of limitations; or waiver. (See TRCP 94 for many possible affirmative defenses.)
   A defendant should also consider including a request for disclosure in his original answer. This is a basic form of discovery, which the Plaintiff has probably already asked you to provide in his original petition. This can be accomplished by including the following language in your original answer: “Pursuant to Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 194, you are requested to disclose, within 30 days of the service of this request, the information or material described in Rule…{then include what portions of TRCP 194.2 are relevant to your case.}” TRCP 194 requests for disclosure are for matters like the correct names of the parties to the lawsuit (TRCP 194.2(a)), or the name, address, and telephone number of any potential parties (194.2(b)). (Check the text of the rule for more details.)
   A defendant may also have various legal grievances of his own that he can assert a counterclaim or cross claim on. Consult with Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 97 and 38 for some basic information on this issue.
   A defendant could also consider asking for a jury trial, rather than a bench trial, in his original answer.
   The original answer should also include a conclusion, prayer, and signature of the defendant (if the defendant is representing himself).
   A basic original answer may look something like this, in some cases:


{Caption: Use same caption as contained in Plaintiff's Original Petition. It will be something like: Joe Smith, Plaintiff v. John Adams, Defendant, along with court and case number information.}

DEFENDANT’S ORIGINAL ANSWER, REQUEST FOR DISCLOSURE, & REQUEST FOR JURY TRIAL


Defendant, {name of defendant}, files this original answer to plaintiff’s {name of plaintiff} original petition.


General Denial
Defendant generally denies all the allegations in plaintiff’s original petition.

Demand for Jury
Defendant demands a jury trial on all issues and tenders the fee with this answer.

Request for Disclosure
Under the authority of Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 194, defendant requests that plaintiff disclose, within 30 days of the service of this request, the information or material described in Rule 194.2 (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), (h), and (i).

Prayer
For these reasons, defendant asks for the following relief: a judgment that plaintiff take nothing, that the court assess the costs against plaintiff, and that the court award defendant all other relief, in law and in equity, to which defendant is entitled.
Respectfully submitted,

{Defendant Signature, address, and telephone number}

 

Disclaimer: Nothing on this web site should be construed as legal advice. Individual facts and situations may vary. (If you want legal advise, then hire a lawyer.)