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Commonly Asked Questions about Legal Objection Forms

Form. During a deposition you can object to the form of a question. This objection is like a referee in a game of football, making sure that the rules are being followed and the game is played fairly. If a question is unclear or improperly worded, the attorney can object to prevent the deponent from answering it.
Overall, when writing an objection, you will want to keep it simple and direct. Tell the court what part of the opposing partys pleading you object to and exactly why you object to it.
This doesnt necessarily mean that the question itself is improper. Rather, an objection to form refers to the way that its being asked. If a question is vague, unclear, confusing, or incorporates multiple questions in one, this may impact your clients ability to provide accurate testimony.
Rather, an objection to form refers to the way that its being asked. If a question is vague, unclear, confusing, or incorporates multiple questions in one, this may impact your clients ability to provide accurate testimony.
Say Objection, and then state your objection clearly and concisely. You can interrupt a witness, if necessary when raising your objection. Make your objection before the opposing side goes on to the next question. The judge may offer the other side the chance to respond to the objection.
An objection is a formal protest by an attorney against evidence, testimony, or a question from the opposition, raised in trials, depositions, and fact-finding hearings. The key difference in trials is that the judge rules on objections, either sustaining (disallowing) or overruling them.
An objection is a formal protest by an attorney against evidence, testimony, or a question from the opposition, raised in trials, depositions, and fact-finding hearings.
The following are examples of form objections: leading question (not applicable to a hostile witness), argumentative questions, compound questions (i.e. asking about two different things in one question), ambiguous questions, assuming facts not yet established (some say not in evidence but trials are where evidence