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Pretrial Order (Judge Cassady) - Alabama

Pretrial Order (Judge Cassady) Form. This is a Alabama form and can be used in Southern District District Court Federal .
 Fillable pdf Last Modified 6/9/2005
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STANDING ORDER GOVERNING FINAL PRETRIAL CONFERENCE It is ORDERED that the following requirements shall prevail for Fed.R.Civ.P. 16(d) FinalPretrial Conferences set before Magistrate Judge William E. Cassady. 1. Counsel shall confer and shall prepare a single proposed Pretrial Order in the form attached,which must be filed with the Clerk of Court at least five (5) days before the pretrial conference. 2. Counsel shall make a good faith effort to stipulate as to the following: A. Jurisdiction; and B. Propriety of parties, correctness of identity of legal entities, necessity for appointment of guardian ad litem, guardian, administrator, etc., and validity of appointment if already made, and correctness of designation of party as partnership, corporation or individual d/b/a trade name. C. If there is a dispute regarding A. or B. above, counsel shall certify the question to the Court for resolution at the conference. 3. At the conference, counsel shall discuss settlement potential with the Court. Counsel shallconfer and engage in meaningful settlement discussion prior to the pretrial conference, and then beprepared to discuss the status of any settlement negotiations, and whether any method of AlternativeDispute Resolution would be beneficial to resolving the action prior to trial. 4. The proposed Pretrial Order shall contain: A. A brief but comprehensive written statement of the action, in sufficient form that if the Court elects to do so, it can be read to the jury (e.g., This is a Title VII action (a Jones Act action; a negligence action; etc.). The plaintiff claims that _____. The defendant claims that _____.) B. For each claim asserted, a listing of the legal elements of each claim derived from the pattern jury instructions or applicable and controlling case law interpreting the claim.<<<<<<<<<********>>>>>>>>>>>>> 2 C. A statement of the agreed facts specifically related to the claim. 1 D. A statement of the disputed facts specifically related to the claim. E. An estimate of the number of trial days required, and a statement of the number of witnesses reasonably expected to testify on behalf of each party. F. A statement indicating whether the action is a jury or non-jury action. If a jury action, whether the jury trial is applicable to all aspects of the dispute or only to certain issues, which shall be specified. (1) Jury Size. In view of Fed.R.Civ.P. 48, which allows not fewer than six (6) and not more than twelve (12) jurors, the parties shall include a statement of their respective (or collective, if they can agree) positions with regard to the number of jurors they request be selected. If the parties are unable to agree, the Court will cause a jury of eight (8) to be selected. (1) Voir Dire Questions. Proposed voir dire questions and objections thereto shall be included in the Joint Pretrial Order. Each party shall be limited to twenty-five (25) questions. Lawyer voir dire will be permitted using court- approved questions from the lists submitted. (2) Jury Instructions. No later than seven (7) days prior to trial, the parties shall file a jointly prepared set of jury instructions. For any disputed instructions, the parties may file separate instructions designated accordingly (Plaintiffs proposed jury instruction number _____; etc.) G. A list and description of any legal issues or motions (including motions in limine) pending or contemplated. H. A list designating those relevant portions of depositions which any party wishes read at trial. All objections to any such testimony shall be made in writing and submitted with the Joint Pretrial Order. The parties should bring to the Courts attention at the pretrial conference whether any specific rulings by the Court will facilitate the conduct of the trial or ongoing settlement negotiations. 1 It is not necessary for the parties to set forth every possible variation of every factual disputeinvolved in the case for fear that they may waive the presentation of some evidence at trial. The Court isinterested in a concise statement of the facts that are disputed and undisputed, specifically related to thelegal claims that are to be litigated. 2 <<<<<<<<<********>>>>>>>>>>>>> 3 I. A list of the names and addresses of all witnesses who are expected to testify at the trial. Witness lists shall be kept to a reasonable minimum; additional witnesses may be added only for good cause shown and on written motion. (1) Expert Witnesses. With respect to expert witnesses, counsel shall furnish the Court and opposing counsel with a curriculum vitae of such experts. When an expert witness is called to the stand, counsel will read into the record the experts qualifications and inquire of the expert whether the qualifications are correct. If correct, the next question will be relative to the merits of the case. In addition, counsel shall furnish the Court and opposing counsel with a brief statement of the opinion or opinions which counsel expects to elicit from such expert. (2) Objections. Any objections to the designation of a witness or to an experts qualifications shall be submitted with the Joint Pretrial Order. J. A list describing the amount and type of damages. Whenever possible, the parties shall stipulate to the amount and type of damages. If the parties are unable to agree, then the plaintiff shall state with specificity the amount and category of damages (e.g., doctor and hospital bills $____; lost wages $____; pain and suffering $____; etc.). The listing of such damages shall not constitute an agreement as to the recoverability of same unless so stated. K. A list of all exhibits which are to be offered in evidence. Each party shall list on this Courts exhibit form (or on a form substantially similar) and furnish opposing counsel, for copying and inspection, all exhibits which are to be offered in evidence. (1) Objections. Objections to exhibits shall be noted in the Joint Pretrial Order, setting forth the nature of the objection and the authority supporting same. All exhibits to which there is no objection shall be deemed admitted. Except for good cause shown, the Court will not permit the introduction of an exhibit unless it has been listed in the Pretrial Order. (2) Marking Exhibits. Markers obtained from the Clerk shall be attached to all exhibits, and such exhibits delivered to the Clerk immediately prior to the commencement of trial. 5. Counsel are reminded that the action is to be ready for trial at the time of the PretrialConfere
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