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Civil Litigation & Business Disputes

Discovery: Depositions, Experts & Disputes

Last updated February 2026
5 min read
✓ Verified Feb. 2026

Written discovery (interrogatories, RFPs, and RFAs) happens on paper. The next phase brings people into the room. Depositions, expert reports, and the disputes that arise when the other side doesn't cooperate are where discovery gets expensive, and where cases are often won or lost.

Depositions ("Depos")

What they are: A deposition is live, sworn testimony given outside the courtroom. Typically, in a conference room at a law office. A court reporter records every word. The other side's attorney asks you questions, and you answer under oath, just as you would at trial. Your attorney is present and can object to questions, but in most cases you still have to answer (the objection is preserved for the judge to rule on later).

How they work:

What you need to know:

Deposition Preparation

Your attorney should prepare you before any deposition. Typically, in a session lasting 1 to 2 hours. This is not about rehearsing answers. It's about understanding the process, reviewing key documents, anticipating difficult questions, and practicing the discipline of short, truthful answers. If your attorney doesn't prepare you for a deposition, that's a red flag.

Table of Contents

Subpoenas: Getting Information from Non-Parties

Discovery isn't limited to the parties in the lawsuit. If a third party (someone not involved in the case) has relevant documents or information, either side can issue a subpoena to compel their cooperation:

Non-parties who receive a subpoena must comply or file a motion to quash. Ignoring a subpoena can result in contempt of court.

Independent Medical Examinations ("IMEs")

In cases involving personal injury, the defendant can request (and the court can order) that you submit to a medical examination by a doctor of the defendant's choosing (Pa.R.C.P. 4010). Despite the name "independent," these doctors are typically selected and paid by the defense or their insurance company. You have the right to have your attorney present, and the right to obtain a copy of the doctor's report.

Expert Discovery

In many cases, each side retains expert witnesses; doctors in injury cases, engineers in construction disputes, accountants in business cases, appraisers in real estate matters. Under Pa.R.C.P. 4003.5, you must disclose the identity of your expert witnesses and may be required to produce their reports. Experts can be deposed by the other side. Expert fees are significant ($300–$600+ per hour) and are a major driver of litigation cost.

Discovery Disputes & Sanctions (Pa.R.C.P. 4019)

When one side refuses to cooperate in discovery, the other can file a motion to compel. If the court orders compliance and the party still refuses, the consequences escalate rapidly:

Discovery abuse (hiding documents, giving evasive answers, coaching witnesses) is taken seriously by Pennsylvania courts. But enforcement requires motion practice, which means more time and more attorney fees. This is part of the hidden cost of litigation.

The Cost of Discovery: Why Litigation Is Expensive

Discovery is where most of the money goes in a lawsuit. Here's why:

This is why I always discuss litigation costs honestly at the outset. If your case involves $25,000 in dispute and discovery alone will cost $15,000, you need to know that before you file.

Statutory content on this page was last verified against Pennsylvania statutes (42 Pa.C.S.) and Rules of Civil Procedure: February 2026. If you are reading this significantly after that date, confirm key provisions with current statute text or contact our office.

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Marc R. Lynde, Esq. · 12+ years as a licensed attorney · Cardozo School of Law · Licensed in PA & NY · Full bio →

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