Trial and Deposition Legal Forms and Checklists for Lawyers: LTF "Our form for Request to Our Expert re Report will give you a jump start on the report you need."

This little $12 item  will pay for itself just in correspondence dictation time alone! (Less than $12 for a limited period. See limited sale period below at right for a special limited offer we expect will turn you into a repeat customer)

As a special to reward new customers, we are selling the Request to Our Expert re Report until midnight of , for only $9.

If you are new, we intend to turn you into one of our loyal repeat customers!


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With this form in your office, your secretary can routinely prepare the letter for you, so all you do as sign.

More than that, this request to your expert will save you from your expert delivering a report that does not meet the court standards for what you must disclose.  Because there are court rule requirements for what that expert's report must contain, you must tell your expert to follow those requirements.

This form tells your expert the eight items his/her report must contain.  (I'll bet that even you forget that under the federal rules and many state rules, if an expert wants to use an exhibit during his/her testimony, that exhibit must be disclosed in the expert's report.) This form is not only the expert's checklist, it's also your checklist and a quick statement of the law.

It's a lot better to tell your expert the legal requirements before his/her report than afterwards requesting a redraft.  After the report is first submitted to you and you request changes, the ugly jury argument will be made by some adverse attorneys that your expert "will make any change they are paid to do."

Save yourself headaches. Put our Form #EX0706 Request to Our Expert re Report in your trial notebook. Then, when you retain an expert, send them a letter using Form #EX0706 as a template. 

Save yourself time.  Use Form #EX0706 Request to Our Expert re Report.

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