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Message: US District Court has an expedited trial program

If there is a trial in the T3 cases, what is the likelihood that it will be an expedited trial? Does it make sense for this type of case?

Court Announces New Expedited Trial Program

July 18, 2011:

The United States District Court for the Northern District of California is pleased to announce the adoption of an expedited trial program. Newly-adopted General Order No. 64 (“Expedited Trial Procedures”) offers parties the option of consenting to a binding one-day trial to occur six months after the parties agree to the process. Its purpose is to offer litigants access to justice in a more efficient and economical fashion. The nuts and bolts of the program include the following:

  • The program is consensual and binding;
  • A case may be tried to a judge or jury;
  • To participate, the parties execute an “Agreement for Expedited Trial and Request for Approval”;
  • Expedited time schedules and rules of procedure begin when the court approves the Agreement;
  • The goal is to try the case in six months;
  • Discovery is limited to ten interrogatories, requests for production and request for admission each and 15 hours of deposition time to be used at the party’s discretion;
  • Experts are limited to one per side absent agreement of the parties or leave of the court;
  • Pretrial motions require leave of court and may not exceed three pages;
  • Neither the terms of the Agreement nor its existence may be revealed to the jury;
  • Juries will consist of six jurors which may be reduced to five should a juror become unable to serve;
  • The judge conducts jury voir dire and sets time limits for openings and closings;
  • Each side is allowed three hours per side for presentation of its case, including cross-examination;
  • Post-trial motions are limited to recovery of costs and attorney’s fees;
  • Grounds for new-trial motions and appeals are limited.

The expedited trial program is the result of a sustained effort by the Committee on Expedited Trials, which was appointed in September 2010 by then-Chief Judge Vaughn R. Walker and chaired by Judge William Alsup. Judge Alsup states: “We expect that there is a demand in some cases for streamlined and expedited trials, with attendant saving in cost and risk, so we are providing this option upon stipulation by all parties. A broad-based committee worked hard to develop a good template.” The Committee is developing a series of continuing legal education programs, including webinars, to inform and train the bar in the use of the expedited trial program.

Read the news release.

http://www.cand.uscourts.gov/news/51

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