More funneh: Courtroom antics
Nov. 7th, 2009 11:55 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Yet another bit of paper I can now recycle.
Annals of legal etiquette
wand@ccs.neu.edu (Mitchell Wand)
College of Computer Science, Northeastern University
(chuckle)
Who knows if it's really true? Who cares? Heeeee.
Annals of legal etiquette
wand@ccs.neu.edu (Mitchell Wand)
College of Computer Science, Northeastern University
(chuckle)
My wife received a copy of the following at her law firm. It purports to be true. For those of you who don't know, a "deposition" is a transcript of pre-trial testimony. These transcripts tend to be thick documents.
To: all attorneys
Subject: Depositions and Their Use
A friend sent me the following portion of a transcript, which was confirmed with one of the counsel involved (Ms. Olschner) and subsequently posted on Lexis Counsel Connect. The transcript is from Birmingham, Alabama, although the use of a deposition of a party opponent "for any purpose" is also in the federal rules. We have no word on what had happened immediately prior to this exchange:
The Court: Next witness.
Ms. Olschner: Your Honor, at this time I would like to swat Mr. Buck in the head with his client's deposition.
The Court: You mean read it?
Ms. Olschner: No, sir. I mean to swat him [in] the head with it. Pursuant to Rule 32, I may use the deposition "for any purpose" and that is the purpose for which I want to use it.
The Court: Well, it does say that.
(Pause.)
The Court: There being no objection, you may proceed.
Ms. Olschner: Thank you, Judge Hanes.
(Whereupon Ms. Olschner swatted Mr. Buck in the head with a deposition.)
Mr. Buck: But Judge...
The Court: Next witness.
Mr. Buck: We object.
The Court: Sustained. Next witness.
End transcript.
Who knows if it's really true? Who cares? Heeeee.