A person alleging failure to comply with discovery shall file a motion to compel as soon as practicable. A motion to compel shall include the relevant portion of the discovery response at issue.
A Motion for Discovery may be filed with the Court via E-File, Email, in person, or by US Mail. A Motion for Discovery must be in writing, with a signature, and be served on the other party in ance with the T.R.C.P 501.4.
When a party requests documents or answers to questions from the opposing party in a lawsuit, you must do so in the form of a Motion for Discovery. A Motion for Discovery may be filed with the Court via E-File, Email, in person, or by US Mail.
A party may serve on another party - no later than 30 days before the end of the discovery period -written interrogatories to inquire about any matter within the scope of discovery except matters covered by Rule 195.
The responding party must serve a written response on the requesting party within 30 days after service of the interrogatories, except that a defendant in a suit governed by the Family Code served with a request before the defendant's answer is due need not respond until 50 days after service of the request.
A criminal defendant or his/her lawyer can request discovery from the prosecution by sending them a request/demand for discovery (depending on the idiosyncrasies of the jurisdiction), and, to the extent they don't comply with the request/demand, file a motion with the court to compel discovery.