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Limitations on Depositions. (2) depositions shall be limited to 7 hours per deponent. (b) Notwithstanding subsection (a)(l) of this Rule, the propriety of and timing for depositions of non-parties shall be subject to any restrictions imposed by applicable law.
Rule 202.70. 11-a - Interrogatories (a) Interrogatories are limited to 25 in number, including subparts, unless another limit is specified in the preliminary conference order.
In New York State Supreme Court, parties are permitted liberal discovery (also known as disclosure) to obtain information relevant to prosecuting or defending an action.
As per Uniform Rule 202.20, interrogatories will be limited to 25, including subparts, unless the court orders otherwise. Additionally, the number of depositions taken by plaintiffs, defendants, or third-party defendants will be limited to 10, and depositions will be limited to seven hours per deponent.
Either party in a case may apply for a subpoena for a witness up to 48 hours before the scheduled trial date.

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In the case of service by email, a specified method can be agreed so that the receipt of court documents may be managed and monitored properly. Service of documents by email is 'opt-in'. Simply because correspondence is sent by email between the parties does not mean a court document may be served by email.
NYC's process service laws outline the following procedure: Serving the summons: The process server may only deliver a copy of the legal documents between 6:00 in the morning and 10:00 in the evening. Process serving is prohibited on religious observance days.
The defendants' position is that the court does not have power to require them to provide any further response than they have already given. Plainly it is right that a defendant cannot be, and should not be, forced to admit facts.
The 8-2 rule: Motions papers must be served at least eight days before the time the motion is noticed to be served. Answering papers must be served two days before the motion is noticed to be served.
A form that is filed in New York state court and served on all parties confirming that the parties have completed necessary discovery proceedings and the case is trial ready (CPLR 3402(a)). It is the paper that gets the case on the court's trial calendar.

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