FCC 1.729 Revised as of October 1, 2014
Goto Year:2013 |
2015
§ 1.729 Discovery.
(a) Subject to paragraph (i) of this section governing Accelerated
Docket proceedings, a complainant may file with the Commission and
serve on a defendant, concurrently with its complaint, a request for up
to ten written interrogatories. A defendant may file with the
Commission and serve on a complainant, during the period starting with
the service of the complaint and ending with the service of its answer,
a request for up to ten written interrogatories. A complainant may file
with the Commission and serve on a defendant, within three calendar
days of service of the defendant's answer, a request for up to five
written interrogatories. Subparts of any interrogatory will be counted
as separate interrogatories for purposes of compliance with this limit.
Requests for interrogatories filed and served pursuant to this
procedure may be used to seek discovery of any non-privileged matter
that is relevant to the material facts in dispute in the pending
proceeding, provided, however, that requests for interrogatories filed
and served by a complainant after service of the defendant's answer
shall be limited in scope to specific factual allegations made by the
defendant in support of its affirmative defenses. This procedure may
not be employed for the purpose of delay, harassment or obtaining
information that is beyond the scope of permissible inquiry related to
the material facts in dispute in the pending proceeding.
(b) Requests for interrogatories filed and served pursuant to paragraph
(a) of this section shall contain a listing of the interrogatories
requested and an explanation of why the information sought in each
interrogatory is both necessary to the resolution of the dispute and
not available from any other source.
(c) A responding party shall file with the Commission and serve on the
propounding party any opposition and objections to the requests for
interrogatories as follows:
(1) By the defendant, within ten calendar days of service of the
requests for interrogatories served simultaneously with the complaint
and within five calendar days of the requests for interrogatories
served following service of the answer;
(2) By the complainant, within five calendar days of service of the
requests for interrogatories; and
(3) In no event less than three calendar days prior to the initial
status conference as provided for in § 1.733(a).
(d) Commission staff will consider the requests for interrogatories,
properly filed and served pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section,
along with any objections or oppositions thereto, properly filed and
served pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section, at the initial status
conference, as provided for in § 1.733(a)(5), and at that time
determine the interrogatories, if any, to which parties shall respond,
and set the schedule of such response.
(e) The interrogatories ordered to be answered pursuant to paragraph
(d) of this section are to be answered separately and fully in writing
under oath or affirmation by the party served, or if such party is a
public or private corporation or partnership or association, by any
officer or agent who shall furnish such information as is available to
the party. The answers shall be signed by the person making them. The
answers shall be filed with the Commission and served on the
propounding party.
(f) A propounding party asserting that a responding party has provided
an inadequate or insufficient response to Commission-ordered discovery
request may file a motion to compel within ten days of the service of
such response, or as otherwise directed by Commission staff, pursuant
to the requirements of § 1.727.
(g) The Commission may, in its discretion, require parties to provide
documents to the Commission in a scanned or other electronic format
that provides:
(1) Indexing by useful identifying information about the documents; and
(2) Technology that allows staff to annotate the index so as to make
the format an efficient means of reviewing the documents.
(h) The Commission may allow additional discovery, including, but not
limited to, document production, depositions and/or additional
interrogatories. In its discretion, the Commission may modify the
scope, means and scheduling of discovery in light of the needs of a
particular case and the requirements of applicable statutory deadlines.
(i) Discovery in Accelerated Docket proceedings. (1) Each party to an
Accelerated Docket proceeding shall serve, with its initial pleading
and with any reply statements in the pre-status-conference filing (see
§ 1.726(g)(1)), copies of all documents in the possession, custody or
control of the party that are likely to bear significantly on any claim
or defense. For the purpose of this paragraph (i), document also shall
include data compilations and tangible things. A document is likely to
bear significantly on a claim or defense if it:
(i) Appears likely to have an influence on, or affect the outcome of, a
claim or defense;
(ii) Reflects the relevant knowledge of persons who, if their potential
testimony were known, might reasonably be expected to be deposed or
called as a witness by any of the parties;
(iii) Is something that competent counsel would consider reasonably
necessary to prepare, evaluate or try a claim or defense; or
(iv) Would not support the disclosing party's contentions.
(2) In their § 1.733(i)(4) pre-status-conference filings, parties to
Accelerated Docket proceedings may request the production of additional
documents. In their § 1.733(i)(4) filings, parties may also seek leave
to conduct a reasonable number of depositions, including depositions of
expert witnesses, if any. When requesting additional discovery, each
party shall be prepared at the status conference to justify its
requests by identifying the specific issue or issues on which it
expects to obtain evidence from each request.
(3) Interrogatories shall not be routinely granted in Accelerated
Docket proceedings. A party to an Accelerated Docket proceeding that
prefers interrogatories to the other forms of available discovery, for
reasons of convenience or expense, may seek leave in its § 1.733(i)(4)
pre-status-conference filing to propound a limited number of
interrogatories.
(4) Expert Witnesses.
(i) Any complainant in an Accelerated Docket proceeding that intends to
rely on expert testimony for a purpose other than to rebut a
defendant's expert evidence, shall identify its expert witnesses in the
information designation required by § 1.721(a)(10)(i). In its
§ 1.721(a)(10)(i) information designation, such a complainant shall
also provide its expert statement. For purposes of this paragraph
(i)(4), an expert statement shall include a brief statement of the
opinions to be expressed by the expert, the basis and reasons therefor
and any data or other information that the witness considered in
forming her opinions.
(ii) Any defendant in an Accelerated Docket proceeding that intends to
rely on expert testimony shall identify its expert witnesses in the
information designation required by § 1.724(f)(1). Such a defendant
shall provide its expert statement with its § 1.733(i)(4),
pre-status-conference filing.
(iii) Any complainant in an Accelerated Docket proceeding that intends
to rely on previously undisclosed expert testimony to rebut any portion
of the defendant's case shall identify the expert and provide the
appropriate expert statement at the initial status conference.
(iv) Expert witnesses shall be subject to deposition in Accelerated
Docket proceedings under the same rules and limitations applicable to
fact witnesses.
[ 63 FR 1038 , Jan. 7, 1998, as amended at 63 FR 41447 , Aug. 4, 1998]
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