Effective January 1, 2025, the Hon. Daniel D. Regan will preside over Discovery Motions heard in the Civil Division of the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas.
Discovery is very important if you are wanting to obtain specific information to further strengthen your case or disprove the other side. This provides a chance for both sides to build a strong case and further provide evidence to support their claim.
Do Most Cases Settle After Discovery? Many personal injury lawsuits conclude either during or at the end of the discovery phase. In many cases, the defendants don't want evidence against them revealed in court.
Discovery allows you to get information and evidence from the other party or other persons you can use in your lawsuit.
Pre-Trial Procedure. (a) There will be a pre-trial conference in every civil case unless counsel for all parties stipulate in writing to the contrary and approval is granted by the Court.
Prosecutors must also provide the defendant copies of materials and evidence that the prosecution intends to use at trial. This process is called discovery, and continues from the time the case begins to the time of trial.
At the end of the discovery process, both parties should have a reasonably good idea of the strength of their opponent's case as well as their own. A weakness in one party's position may encourage it to try negotiating a settlement to avoid going to trial.
(3) An answer to preliminary objections is required (within twenty (20) days after service of the preliminary objections) only to preliminary objections raising an issue under Pa.
—A proof of service shall contain a statement of the date and manner of service and of the names of the persons served. Under 18 Pa. C.S. § 4904 (unsworn falsification to authorities) a knowingly false proof of service constitutes a misdemeanor of the second degree.
Under the Pennsylvania statute of limitations, a plaintiff must bring a medical negligence claim within two years after an injury occurs. There is an exception, deemed the “discovery rule,” which allows extra time to file the claim if the plaintiff was unaware of the injury until after two years had passed.