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* Privacy Policy
Discovery
- General Policy and Protective Orders.
The Parties are encouraged to engage in voluntary discovery procedures. In
connection with document requests, interrogatories, depositions or other means
of discovery, the Presiding Officer may make any order which justice requires
to protect a Party or Person from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or
undue burden or expense. Orders may include limitations on the method, time,
place and scope of discovery and provisions for protecting the secrecy of
confidential information or documents.
- Document Request Procedure and Costs.
After a request for an Adjudicatory Proceeding has been filed or an order to
show cause issued, a Party may serve another Party or Agency with a document
request which lists with reasonable specificity items requested for inspection
which are in the possession, custody or control of the Party or Agency
requested to provide them. A Party or Agency served with a document request
shall respond within thirty days or as otherwise determined by the Presiding
Officer. The Presiding Officer may require a Party requesting documents to pay
the Party or Agency responding to a document request the fee per page
determined by the Executive Office for Administration and Finance.
- Depositions: When Permitted
.
After a request for an Adjudicatory Proceeding has been filed or an order to
show cause issued, the Presiding Officer may, upon motion by a Party, order
the taking of the testimony of any Person by deposition before any officer
authorized to administer oaths. The motion shall specify the name and address
of each deponent and the reasons for the deposition. The Presiding Officer
shall allow the motion only upon showing that the parties have agreed to
submit the deposition in lieu of testimony by the witness, or the witness
cannot appear before the Presiding Officer without substantial hardship. The
motion shall only be allowed upon a showing by the moving Party that the
testimony sought is significant, relevant, and not discoverable by alternative
means. Motions for depositions shall be considered and acted upon in
accordance with section 1.01 (7) (a) of these rules.
- Depositions: How Taken, Signing.
Depositions shall be taken orally before an officer having power to administer
oaths. Each deponent shall be duly sworn. In instances where sincere scruple
forbids the taking of an oath, a person may affirm with the same legal effect
as having been sworn. Any Party shall have the right to cross-examine. The
questions asked, the answers given, and any objections shall be recorded. The
Presiding Officer shall rule only on objections accompanied by a reason and
only in regard to the stated reason. Each deponent shall have the option of
reviewing and affirming the deposition transcript and of indicating an
affirmance in whole or in part by signing a statement to that effect on the
title page of the transcript. The deponent may waive the reviewing and
signing, in which case the officer shall state the fact of the waiver in the
officer's certification, and the transcript shall then have the same status
as if signed by the deponent. Subject to appropriate rulings on objections,
the Presiding Officer may receive the deposition in evidence, as if the
testimony contained therein had been given by a witness in the proceeding
-
Recording
by Other than
Stenographic Means. The Presiding Officer may on motion permit the testimony
at a deposition to be recorded by other than stenographic means, in which event
the Presiding Officer's authorization shall designate the manner of recording,
preserving, and filing of the record of the deposition and may include other
provisions to assure that the recorded testimony will be accurately preserved.
- Certification of Transcript
.
A duplicate transcript of the deposition shall be certified by the officer
before whom the deposition was taken. When the deposition is introduced into
evidence, the Party requesting the deposition shall order a duplicate copy of
the transcript and forward a copy to the Presiding Officer.
- Interrogatories.
With the approval of the Agency or Presiding Officer, after a request for an
Adjudicatory Proceeding has been filed or an order to show cause issued, a
Party may serve written interrogatories upon any other Party for the purpose
of discovering relevant information not privileged and not previously supplied
through voluntary discovery. Interrogatories may be served by Hand Delivery,
pre-paid U.S. mail or Electronic Medium. A duplicate of all interrogatories
shall be simultaneously filed with the Presiding Officer. No Party, without
the approval of the Presiding Officer, shall serve more than a total of 30
interrogatories either concurrently or serially including subsidiary or
incidental questions. A Party may not serve any interrogatories less than 45
days before the scheduled hearing, without the approval of the Agency or
Presiding Officer.
- Answers to Interrogatories.
Each interrogatory shall be separately and fully answered under the penalties
of perjury, unless an objection to the interrogatory with supporting reasons
are stated in lieu of an answer. An answer shall be served within 30 days of
receipt of an interrogatory, or within such other time as the Presiding
Officer may specify. A duplicate of all answers to interrogatories shall be
simultaneously filed with the Presiding Officer.
- Motion for Order Compelling Discovery.
A Party may file with the Presiding Officer, subject to 801 CMR 1.01 (7) (a),
a motion to compel discovery if a discovery request is not honored, or only
partially honored, or interrogatories or questions at deposition are not fully
answered. If the motion is granted and the other Party fails without good
cause to obey an order to provide or permit discovery, the Presiding Officer
before whom the action is pending may make orders in regard to the failure as
are just, including one or more of the following:
- An order that designated facts shall be established
adversely to the Party failing to comply with the order; or
- An order refusing to allow the disobedient Party to
support or oppose designated claims or defenses, or prohibiting him or her
from introducing evidence on designated matters.
 
Division
of Administrative Law Appeals 98 North Washington St. 4th Floor,
Boston, MA 02114
Telephone (617) 727-7060 Fax (617) 727-7248
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