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Guidelines For Preparation Of The Joint Case Conference Report Form. This is a Nevada form and can be use in Clark County.
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Tags: Guidelines For Preparation Of The Joint Case Conference Report, Nevada County, Clark
GUIDELINES FOR PREPARATION OF THE CASE CONFERENCE REPORT
1. There can be no formal discovery done prior to the filing
of the Case Conference Report without an Order from the Discovery
Commissioner or Judge.
2. Follow the Case Conference Report form promulgated by the
office of the Discovery Commissioner. Almost all reports should be
joint; if one is not, a red flag is raised, indicating that one or
both parties are not cooperating.
3. The Early Case Conference and the Case Conference Report
are not meant to be mere procedural paperwork stops along the
litigation road of a civil case. The purpose of the rules is to
force counsel to make a reasonable investigation of their cases
prior to filing and to prepare for and participate in an Early Case
Conference after the Answer or Answers have been filed. The rules
require counsel to think about their case at an early stage in the
litigation, get the case settled if possible, and if further
litigation is required, the case will be off to a good start
because of the exchange of large amounts of information at the
Early Case Conference or shortly thereafter. This takes the place
of the traditional course of formal discovery.
4.
In order to demonstrate compliance with the rules the
section of the report dealing with proceedings prior to the filing
of the report must be completed. Stipulations to extend time to
hold the Early Case Conference should be noted or counsel will be
exposed to sanctions for disregarding the time limitations of
N.R.C.P. 16.1.
5. The brief description called for in Part II of the report
requires more than a regurgitation of the allegations of the
initial pleadings. The description, including that of the claims
and defenses, must be specific in that some facts must be stated to
give the Judge and/or Discovery Commissioner insight into the case.
The rules of pleading will no longer tolerate either frivolous
claims or frivolous defenses.
6. In regard to documents provided, identify those documents
produced at the Early Case Conference with as much specificity as
possible, so in the event a problem comes up as to the production
of a document or other item at the time of trial, reference can be
made to the report for a clear determination as to what the parties
produced or were responsible to produce. Such information as dates
and the number of pages of a particular item should prevent any
problems. Numbering the pages of large sets of documents can save
time in report preparation by obviating the need for further
description of the documents. Also, when documents or other items
are to be produced after the conference, please note a cut-off date
for the production of those items. When that is done, it will then
be easy for the requesting party to seek relief from the Discovery
Commissioner for materials not supplied as promised.
If such
documents are not listed in the report and provided to opposing
counsel at the Early Case Conference or as soon thereafter as
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possible, such materials are in danger of being excluded at trial.
7. Section IV of the report only requires completion when one
party refuses production of materials requested by another. The
party refusing must state his reasons; this may often lead to a
discovery dispute which would be handled by the Discovery
Commissioner.
8. In addition to the names and addresses of your witnesses
you must also give a brief description of the subject matter of the
testimony for each one. Once again, specific facts or opinions to
which each witness will testify are required and not simply a
statement that witness Jones will testify as to liability and
witness Smith will testify as to damages. This will help the Court
have a better picture of the contemplated testimony and will help
the parties narrow the issues prior to the time of trial, as well
as demonstrate their preparedness pursuant to the mandate of
N.R.C.P. 16.1.
9. The additional discovery plan should be just that, a plan,
not a statement which says the parties will send out
interrogatories and take the depositions of all witnesses and be
ready in one year. There should be no need for general sets of
interrogatories and broad requests for production.
All early
discovery should be taken care of at the Early Case Conference.
The discovery plan should be tailored to the individual case,
taking into consideration the amount of money at stake, the
complexity of the issues, location and types of witnesses, as well
as the pressing needs of your clients. It is only after thinking
about, and detailing how and when you are going to schedule
discovery, that you will arrive at that workable plan and a
reasonable time frame in which you can complete your discovery.
Your estimate for the time required for discovery will be
meaningful and your case will be placed upon a stacked calendar in
accordance with the contemplated time for discovery.
Always
indicate the estimated time for trial of the matter, in the event
the case should go that far.
10.
Unresolved discovery problems should be set forth in
section VII. These problems can be raised for resolution by the
Discovery Commissioner by simply checking the line on the front of
the Case Conference Report form which requests a dispute resolution
conference. When such a conference is requested, you will receive
a notice to appear from the Commissioner's office. However, if the
parties feel they can work out the problem, they may not wish to
request dispute resolution. If later the problem does not resolve
itself, either side may set a "motion to resolve dispute" before
the Commissioner. All discovery disputes are first heard by the
Discovery Commissioner.
11. The section on stipulations is simply a place to write
down any significant agreements the parties may reach. This is a
place to note how you may have agreed to clean up the pleadings to
conform to Rule 11 or to list material facts which are not in
dispute. It is a place to put agreements on routine matters and
demonstrate you have considered your case and are not playing
discovery "games." This section of the report can be especially
helpful in detailing partial agreements in divorce cases.
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12.
Whereas it is important to discuss settlement and to
indicate the nature of settlement discussions in your Case
Conference Report, refrain from putting in figures as to where the
parties stand. This is not so much a concern where a jury trial
has been demanded, but it would obviously cause problems in the
event the case were to go to trial and the Judge were the trier of
fact. If the Court is ever able to work out arrangements for a
separate settlement Judge or settlement conference by the Discovery
Commissioner or if the parties can agree to anyone else hearing
settlement negotiations, then the nuts and bolts of "how much"
would be perfectly appropriate for a report to that person. Until
then, however, please keep the settlement discussion material
general, yet informative.
13.
Do not forget the Rule requires the parties to
supplement, but need not repeat, the contents of prior reports
after any subsequent case conference.
Also, the parties must
supplement the report with any new information discovered after the
filing of the original report, particularly witnesses and
documents.
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