Methods
of
discovery
are
important
for
you
as
a
client
to
understand
because
I
want
to
work
in
partnership
with
you
to
prepare
your
case
and
reach
your
litigation
goals.
There
are
6
typical
topics,
or
methods
of
discovery,
that
we
use
in
divorce
litigation.
So
if
you
can
familiarize
yourself
with
those,
then
you
and
I
can
have
a
meeting
and
discuss
how
you
want
to
engage
in
discovery.
Some
discovery
methods
cost
more
than
other
discovery
methods,
so
we
want
to
be
mindful
that
we're
pursuing
things
that
are
tailored
to
meet
your
goals
and
are
within
your
budget
that
you
have
for
the
divorce.
So
the
first
thing
I'm
going
to
talk
about
is
written
discovery.
Under
the
Missouri
Rules
of
Civil
Procedure,
we
can
send
to
the
opposing
party
what
are
called
interrogatories
and
requests
for
production.
Interrogatories
are
written
questions
that
we're
asking
the
opposing
party
to
answer
under
oath.
We
are
limited
as
to
how
many
interrogatories
that
we
can
send.
The
Missouri
Revised
Rules
of
Civil
Procedure
only
permit
us
25
interrogatories.
We
can
also
send
requests
for
production.
Those
are
requests
where
we
can
ask
for
bank
statements,
journals,
anything
that
you,
is
a
document
that
the
other
party
is
in
possession
of
that
you
would
like
to
have
we
can
ask
for.
So
written
discovery
is
generally
a
less
expensive
way
of
gathering
information
that
we
need.
The
second
method
that
we
have
is
we
send
subpoenas.
Lots
of
different
types
of
entities
can
be
subpoenaed
in
a
divorce
case.
We
can
get
bank
records,
records
of
any
kind
of
financial
institution.
It
could
be
credit
card
records,
retirement,
any
kind
of
asset
record.
We
can
gather
employment
records
if
we
need
to
verify
how
much
your
spouse
makes
or
what's
in
their
employee
401(k)
401(k)
plan
or
other
types
of
compensation
they
have,
even
the,
the
work
hours
that
they
have.
If
there's
schedule
questions,
we
can
subpoena
those.
We
can
subpoena
medical
records
if
there's
any
kind
of
medical
discovery
we
can—
we
need
to
do.
We
can
subpoena
school
records,
police
records,
Children's
Division
records,
Any
kind
of
record
that
we
would
need
to
prepare
your
case
or
gather
information
that
we
might
not
otherwise
be
able
to
receive,
we
can
subpoena.
Subpoenas
can
be
another
inexpensive
way
of
gathering
documents.
They're—
the
cost
is
generally
limited
to
the
production
of
the
subpoena
by
our
office.
You're
going
to
have
to
pay
a
process
server
to
take
the
subpoena
and
serve
the
subpoena.
And
sometimes
the
entities
charge
us
for
copies
or
records.
So,
for
instance,
medical
records,
generally
there's
going
to
be
a
cost
associated.
We
can
limit
the
cost
of
a
subpoena
by
letting
the
entity
know
if
the
cost
is
going
to
exceed
a
certain
amount,
they
can
let
us
know
beforehand,
and
then
you
can
decide
if
you
want
to
go
forward.
Another
method
of
discovery
that
is
a
very
useful
method
is
depositions.
Depositions
would
be
where
I
formally
interview
a
party
or
a
witness
we
have
a
court
reporter
present,
and
they
create
a
transcript
of
everything
that
we
say.
Depositions
sometimes
are
necessary,
but
they
are
an
additional
expense
because
we
have
attorney
time
and
we
have
court
reporter
costs.
I
would
generally
like
to
have
a
conversation
with
you
about
depositions,
and
then
you
can
make
a
decision
whether
you
think
it's
necessary.
If
it
is
a
highly
contested
case,
we
almost
always
always
are
going
to
need
depositions
to
prepare
the
case,
or
if
our
case
is
proceeding
to
trial
because
we're
unable
to
resolve
it,
I'm
generally
going
to
recommend
that
we
do
depositions.
Another method of discovery that we use that's inexpensive would be you providing documents to us, or you providing information to us. The first thing that I would generally have you do is write a chronolog— chronological history of your relationship that details important events for me. This can be places you've lived, places you've worked, important events in the marriage, important conflicts you want me to be aware of, information with regard to your children. That is a document that you can prepare at no cost to you and provide to me, and I can have in my file as a resource, and also I can have in my file as a springboard to have discussions with you about other information that we need. Another method would be witness interviews. If you have people that have information related to a topic in your case, you can provide that information to me and give me their contact information so that I can have a discussion with them.
If you have witnesses that you'd like me to speak with, I prefer if you create a brief summary for me of what information you think they will have, how you think it will be helpful, and give me some idea of what you think they're going to say so that when I talk to them, I I can have an informed discussion about what, what we're talking about. The last method of discovery that's fairly typical would be obtaining experts. And that would generally be— experts can range anywhere from a real estate appraiser is considered an expert, a child psychologist is considered an expert.
So there are a wide variety of experts that we use in divorce litigation. Generally, expert selection is detailed, specifically to the needs of your case. Um, sometimes clients come to me initially and say, "What about getting an expert on a certain topic?" Sometimes I come to them, but be aware that experts could be necessary or could be a resource to you, and those would be under the umbrella of discovery.
