Mich. Admin. Code R. 418.93 - Joint final pre-trial conference
Rule 13.
(1)
Records or other exhibits of any kind that any party intends to offer as
evidence in the proceeding shall be exchanged between the parties no later than
14 days before the JFPTC. After the parties have gathered and exchanged the
existing medical and other evidence, upon stipulation of the parties or at the
discretion of the magistrate, there must be a JFPTC with the magistrate
regarding admissibility of evidence or any other preliminary matters.
(2) The parties may prepare and file a joint
final pre-trial statement that lists issues for adjudication, stipulations, and
any potential witnesses and exhibits, other than materials subject to
attorney-client privilege, that the parties intend to submit into evidence at
the time of trial. This will not constitute a waiver of any issue, witness
testimony, or exhibit not specifically raised or listed should a statement be
submitted.
(3) Any objections to
the proposed witnesses and exhibits shall be made by the parties and ruled upon
by the magistrate. Upon finding that a proposed exhibit under this rule is not
authentic or was created specifically for purposes of the litigation, the
magistrate may exclude the proposed exhibit. Any decision on any objections is
subject to R 418.90(5) and (6).
(4)
All admissible exhibits must be listed in a JFPTO, except as provided in
subrules (2) or (7) of this rule or R 418.94(6), and admitted at the time of
trial.
(5) After the completion of
the JFPTC, the magistrate shall place the case on the trial docket and assign a
trial date. The magistrate may schedule a subsequent JFPTC if
necessary.
(6) The parties are
bound by the stipulations listed on the JFPTO unless modified or withdrawn for
good cause shown. If a stipulation is modified or withdrawn, the party
proposing the stipulation may offer additional evidence, including testimony
necessitated by the withdrawal or modification.
(7) The parties must be entitled to necessary
rebuttal evidence and witnesses including materials subject to attorney client
privilege, not listed on the JFPTO at the time of trial. The parties may offer
rebuttal evidence and witnesses at the time of trial, not listed on the JFPTO,
including materials not previously disclosed due to attorney-client
privilege.
(8) While a case is
pending on the trial docket, the parties may attempt to cure or remedy any
objections raised by the opposing party at the JFPTC. The magistrate may make
subsequent rulings as to admissibility once the parties have had the
opportunity to cure or remedy any objections raised.
(9) At the discretion of the magistrate, a
case may be returned to the case development docket after being placed on the
trial docket if the circumstances require, to allow further
development.
Notes
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