Discovery Process Part 1: Discovery of Records One party (usually the Defendant) sends a Notice to Produce
Question:
Discovery Process
Part 1: Discovery of Records
One party (usually the Defendant) sends a Notice to Produce to the other party. It requires that the party disclose in an Affidavit of Records all papers/documents that may be relevant to the action. If not mentioned in the affidavit, the document cannot be used at trial.
Part 2: Examinations for Discovery
Both parties, their lawyers, and a court reporter attend. Lawyers are given the opportunity to "cross- examine" the opposite party under oath. A transcript is recorded. Anything said in the transcript can be used against a party later at the trial. (ie. to attack credibility, highlight inconsistencies)
Consider the above concept, please give a real-life example that included the above concept (Do Not explain the concept again)
Auditing a business risk appraoch
ISBN: 978-0324375589
6th Edition
Authors: larry e. rittenberg, bradley j. schwieger, karla m. johnston