Discovery Objections Cheat Sheet

This page provides a cheat sheet for discovery objections for lawyers.

Elsewhere on this website, we talk about the importance of forcing defendants to provide meaningful answers to interrogatories, requests for the production of documents, and other discovery responses and requests. If we do not hold defendants’ feet to the fire, we toss away a powerful tool to box in defendants for trial — and provide evidence that we are not giving the case the care and attention it deserves.

But this is an adversarial process. Sometimes, you should not give complete answers to an interrogatory because the question is objectionable. Practically, discovery objections also allow you to avoid answering difficult questions.

The onus is on the party receiving the objection to force the issue. Just like you can take advantage of lazy or distracted lawyers by forcing answers to your interrogatories, you can also gain an advantage by not answering arguably objectionable interrogatories. The filing of timely discovery objections defers the requirement to answer the question until the defendant objects to your objections.

You need to be clear in your objections or risk waving them. Federal Rule 33(b)(4) emphasizes that the “grounds for objecting to an interrogatory must be stated with specificity. Any ground not stated in a timely objection is waived unless the court, for good cause, excuses the failure.”

Generally, interrogatories are objectionable if they seek information not within the scope of discovery defined in Maryland Rule 402 or Federal Rule 26(b). These are typically requests that are not relevant, unduly burdensome, broad, vague, or privileged. or protected by the work product doctrine.

List of Sample Objections

interrogatories

Sometimes, it is hard to come up with the exact words of why you want to object or to match the feeling that the request is objectionable with the appropriate law. So here are some sample interrogatory objections, a cheat sheet that might help you determine how to object to interrogatories (that can also be applied to other discovery objections):

What Are The Most Common Objections To Interrogatories?

The most common discovery objection our lawyers see is the objection that the interrogatories are not relevant to the litigation or are too burdensome to answer. Another objection our attorneys see frequently because we asked detailed questions that pin down defendants is that the request calls for a legal conclusion. The legal conclusion objection is rarely a valid objection.

Finally, we also commonly see the objection that we have not properly defined a term in the question. This is one of the silliest objections we see. You have to combat this strategy for answering interrogatories by not providing answers but holding the other party’s feet to the fire to provide reasonable responses.

If I’m Trying To Avoid Objections, Should I Draft My Interrogatories Narrowly?

You should draft contention interrogatories and other interrogatories seeking specific responses narrowly. But a big part of interrogatories is throwing out a big net to capture all the information that is out there that you may not have even considered. It is a bad idea to write interrogatories fearing objections.

You will likely get objections to your interrogatories. Many times, we have gotten objections to the language of interrogatories that were taken verbatim from the Maryland Rules. Again, the key to overcoming these objections to interrogatories is to first press the party to provide meaningful responses. If that fails, you file a motion and seek relief from the court.

What Are General Objections?

General objections are a list of general objections that presumably apply to all responses to the discovery requests. General objections are almost invariably useless. But defense lawyers love them. The modern version of Federal Rule 34 arguably prohibits any general objections.

Interrogatory Object Cases of Interest

Key Maryland Cases