Legal Question in Civil Litigation in California
When an objection to a Production of Records is submitted, does the court have to have a conformed copy, before the defendant's are served their copies? If not, what is the time lag allowance?
Asked on 2/02/12, 2:48 pm
1 Answer from Attorneys
Jeannette Darrow
Jeannette C.C. Darrow, Attorney at Law
Your question is a bit unclear. If you are a party and you are talking about objecting to certain written Requests for Production of Records (not a subpoena for records), those objections are not filed with the court at all. They are just served on the opposing party (or the opposing party's attorney if it has one).
If you are talking about an objection to a Subpoena for Production of Records, the procedure is different and would depend on whether you are a party or non-party.
Answered on 2/02/12, 3:13 pm