As far as I have found, the term is "court reporter." Stenographer is what they are normally referred to in a deposition. They are usually qualified to serve as a court reporter, but work outside the court.
A court reporter, also known as a stenographic reporter makes a word for word stenographic record of all that is said during a disposition.
Any person who records and transcribes a verbatim record in any sworn proceeding by means of written symbols or abbreviations in shorthand or machine writing.
The defendant sits in the dock in a courtroom. It is the enclosed space where the person on trial stands or sits during court proceedings.
1. There are civil proceedings pending or the record contains classified information. 2. The requested information is exempt from release under the Privacy Act, and the exemption rule has been published in the Federal Register.
No, you cannot amend a deposition. A deposition is a record of a person's answers to questions asked by an attorney under oath. Amending would render in incomplete.
Adversary proceedings are proceedings that occur in bankruptcy court. This refers to a creditor arguing that a debt should be paid by the other person in the proceeding, instead of being thrown out or dismissed.
A guardian ad litem is a court appointed person that represents the interests of a child during divorce proceedings. They can also be used in cases regarding parental rights.
none
Short answer- yes, statements made in judicial proceedings are completely privileged.
If no provisions were set up during the divorce proceedings, medical bills would revert to the person receiving treatment.
To raise an objection during a deposition, the person being deposed should wait for the questioning attorney to finish speaking, then state the objection clearly and concisely. The objection should be based on a valid legal ground, such as relevance or privilege. The deponent should not answer the question until the objection is resolved by the attorneys or the court reporter.
Perhaps - but it is not a certain thing that it would be admissable. Maybe only if the individual giving the deposition had died prior to the trial, and that it then became the 'next best'evidence. If the person was still living, almost certainly not. If the person who gave the deposition for the civil trial was still living, they would be required to appear in person in a criminal trial.