Oregon First Set Of Requests For Admissions Propounded By Plaintiff to Defendant

State:
Multi-State
Control #:
US-PI-0270
Format:
Word; 
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This form is a sample plaintiff's first set of requests for admissions to defendant regarding an automobile accident.
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  • Preview First Set Of Requests For Admissions Propounded By Plaintiff to Defendant
  • Preview First Set Of Requests For Admissions Propounded By Plaintiff to Defendant
  • Preview First Set Of Requests For Admissions Propounded By Plaintiff to Defendant

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FAQ

In a civil action, a request for admission is a discovery device that allows one party to request that another party admit or deny the truth of a statement under oath. If admitted, the statement is considered to be true for all purposes of the current trial.

In a civil action, a request for admission is a discovery device that allows one party to request that another party admit or deny the truth of a statement under oath. If admitted, the statement is considered to be true for all purposes of the current trial.

Excluding requests identified in subsection F(2) of this rule, a party may serve more than one set of requested admissions on an adverse party but the total number of requests shall not exceed 30, unless the court otherwise orders for good cause shown after the proposed additional requests have been filed.

Common objections to requests for admission include: The request is impermissibly compound. The propounding party may ask you to admit only one fact per statement. You may object to any request that asks you to admit two or more different facts in a single request.

Requests for admissions may be used to (1) establish the truth of specified facts, (2) admit a legal conclusion, (3) determine a party's opinion relating to a fact, (4) settle a matter in controversy, and (5) admit the genuineness of documents.

One purpose of an RFA is to narrow the issues that are in dispute in your case and make it easier to present those issues to the Court at trial or in a motion for summary judgment. RFAs are thus commonly used to find out what facts are disputed in a case.

- The request for admission is a petition filed by one party in a lawsuit on another party in that lawsuit asking the second party to admit to the truthfulness of some fact or opinion. A request may also ask the party to authenticate the genuineness of a document.

You use different types of discovery requests to get different kinds of information: To ask the other side to answer a set of questions, you can use Interrogatories. To ask the other side to admit that certain facts are true or certain items are authentic, you can use Request for Admission.

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Oregon First Set Of Requests For Admissions Propounded By Plaintiff to Defendant