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22 CRR-NY 202.8-CRR (1) affidavits, affirmations, briefs and memoranda of law in chief shall be limited to 7,000 words each; (2) reply affidavits, affirmations, and memoranda shall be no more than 4,200 words and shall not contain any arguments that do not respond or relate to those made in the memoranda in chief.
Interrogatories are limited to 25 in number, including subparts, unless the court orders otherwise.
Rule 6. Form of Papers. (a) All papers submitted to the Commercial Division shall not be inconsistent with CPLR 2101 and section 202.5(a) of this Part. Papers shall be double-spaced and contain print no smaller than 12 point, or 8½ × 11 inch paper, bearing margins no smaller than one inch.
Except as provided in subdivisions (2), (3) and (4), punishment for a contempt, specified in section seven hundred fifty, may be by fine, not exceeding one thousand dollars, or by imprisonment, not exceeding thirty days, in the jail of the county where the court is sitting, or both, in the discretion of the court.
Rule 202.70. 11-d - Limitations on Depositions (a) Unless otherwise stipulated to by the parties or ordered by the court: (1) the number of depositions taken by plaintiffs, or by defendants, or by third-party defendants, shall be limited to 10; and (2) depositions shall be limited to 7 hours per deponent.
22 CRR-NY 202.8-CRR (2) reply affidavits, affirmations, and memoranda shall be no more than 4,200 words and shall not contain any arguments that do not respond or relate to those made in the memoranda in chief.
There shall be a response (a reply) to a counterclaim designated as such and to a cross claim (an answer) if the cross claim contains a demand therefor. unrepresented. A copy of the answer must be served upon the plaintiff's attorney or upon an unrepresented plaintiff and upon all other parties.
Rule 11-f establishes that a party may serve a notice or subpoena on any legal or commercial entity. 10 While, as noted above, a party is not required to identify which matters the deponent will be asked about, if the party chooses to do so, the party must describe the matters with "reasonable particularity."
The New York Rules of Civil Procedure limit what information can be obtained through discovery in cases. Only relevant information that is not privileged can be discovered in New York civil cases. Relevant information includes anything that can help prove a fact or inference in a case.