(a) Interrogatories are written questions prepared by a party to an action that are sent to any other party in the action to be answered under oath.
Motion to enforce order and for sanctions.
In civil procedure, an interrogatory is a list of written questions one party sends to another as part of the discovery process. The recipient must answer in writing under oath and ing to the case's schedule.
A party must make disclosures and respond to discovery requests based on the information then known or reasonably available to the party. If a party learns that a disclosure or discovery response is incomplete or incorrect in some important way, the party must timely provide the additional or correct information.
Interrogatories are a form of discovery requiring a party to file written answers to questions submitted to that party.
Discovery is shocking, unplanned, overwhelming, and usually only a portion of the betrayal is revealed and acknowledged. Disclosure is the exact opposite. In disclosure, the cheating partner voluntarily tells the betrayed partner the full scope and details about his behavior.
Interrogatories are written questions sent by one party to another, which the responding party must answer under penalty of perjury. Interrogatories allow the parties to ask who, what, when, where and why questions, making them a good method for obtaining new information.
Rule 11 was designed to highlight the importance of constitutional rights by requiring the judge in district court to discuss these rights with the defendant before accepting his plea. In other words, Rule 11 was created to help the defendant understand the basic consequences of the decision to plead guilty.