Showing posts with label documents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label documents. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Step seven in how to win a lawsuit: Demands for documents

Every United States court permits full discovery, including complete production of all documents that have any potential bearing on the issues before the court. This means that both parties can be required to turn over all documentary evidence (including digital records and e-mails) regardless of whether the evidence supports or harms the other side’s case. The trick is that you have to ask for it in the right way. If you don’t use exactly the right words to describe what you want, you won’t get what you need. The responding lawyer will justify a decision not to produce a record on the basis that it was not properly identified and therefore not properly requested. The converse problem is asking for more than you really need. In this age of digital records and e-mails, a simple request could generate tens of thousands of pages of records and totally inundate you and your lawyer. Lawyers sometimes gladly produce such large volumes of records just to harass the other side or to bury an important document hoping that it might not get found if it is tucked in the middle of thousands of other documents.