| U.S. District Court District of Oregon Local Rules of Civil Practice |
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Effective June 1, 2006
(a) Not Filed With the Court (See LR 5.2)
Unless directed by the , depositions will not be filed with the , instead they will be maintained by counsel and made available to parties in accordance with Fed. R. Civ. P. 30(b). Depositions presented for filing without approval will be returned to the offering party.
(b) Use of Non-Filed Depositions
This rule does not preclude the use of deposition transcripts as exhibits or evidence in support of a motion, or for introduction and use at trial.
(c) Availability of Copies to Non-Parties
With leave of court during the pendency of a civil action, any person may obtain a copy of a deposition not on file provided they:
(1) Serve notice of their request and proposed order on all parties;
(2) Receive approval; and
(3) Pay the cost for a copy of the deposition.
Except for good cause, counsel will not serve a notice of deposition until they have made a good faith effort to confer with all counsel regarding a mutually convenient date, time, and place for the deposition.
Counsel to a deposition will not engage in any conduct that would not otherwise be allowed in the presence of a judge.
There should be no argument in response to an objection or an instruction not to answer.
If a question is pending, it must be answered before a recess is taken unless the question involves a matter of privacy right; privilege; or an area protected by the constitution, statute, or work product.
(a) If the parties have a dispute which may be resolved with assistance from the , or if unreasonable or bad faith deposition techniques are being used, the deposition may be suspended so that a motion may be made immediately and heard by an available judge, or the parties may hold a telephone conference pursuant to LR 16.2(c).
(b) Alternatively, a written motion relating to the deposition may be filed after a transcript is available.
(c) The court may impose costs, including attorney fees, on any person responsible for unreasonable or bad faith deposition techniques or behavior.
Depositions of experts may be taken only pursuant to a written stipulation of the parties, or as scheduled by the court.