Thank you for easing my mind. I'm about to select 65-year-old woman who get very nervous and I think you helped me a lot. There should be more people than like you. That get straight to the point again. I thank you so much for your time and I thank you so much for making me at ease.
Thank you for this... it helped me a lot!... BUT the background music was loud, annoying, and distracting, and nearly made me shut off the video. No music needed... I promise. : )
Good question. That would be strange indeed. We have never heard of that happening. In our view, conducting a deposition constitutes practicing law and only lawyers can legally do that (at least in all the jurisdictions we are familiar with).
The judge give us three months to come back to court for another deposition hearing, i don't think the judge took the case very seriously or didn't care for the case.....why he give three months to come back?
I was terrible harassed by the defendant lawyer, he was aeking the same question over and over again, and the stupid lawyer who was representing me was mute. Is this normal?
In most states, the opposing attorney is allowed to ask a wider variety of questions during a deposition than at trial due to the broad discovery rules. Attorneys are also more limited on the objections they can make during a deposition. The rules of evidence are more restrictive when you get to trial and, hopefully, your attorney will lodge objections to any inappropriate questions at trial. That being said, your attorney should always do his or her best to protect you from undue harassment at every stage of the litigation process.
Thank you for easing my mind. I'm about to select 65-year-old woman who get very nervous and I think you helped me a lot. There should be more people than like you. That get straight to the point again. I thank you so much for your time and I thank you so much for making me at ease.
Thank you for this video! (fingers crossed)
Music too loud
The music is distracting
Thanks for the insight and advice! Very informative.
Glad it was helpful!
The loud music in the background is very annoying and distracting. Otherwise great video
Thank you for the feedback. We are glad the information in this video was helpful and we will keep your feedback in mind for future videos.
I totally agree. It's almost impossible to concentrate on what he's teaching us. Please keep the music off these types of videos.
Sir ur able to explain all wellI
i am so happy listening tour so cool presentation
God bless
Thank you so much. Very helpful and informative video.
You’re welcome! @rahatrahman9456 are there any specific topics regarding personal injury law you’d like us to cover in a future video?
Thank you for sharing! Funny but true!
Wow! I was looking at an old chargeoff Barclays account on Experian. They have me 120 days 4 month in a row.
Thank you for this... it helped me a lot!... BUT the background music was loud, annoying, and distracting, and nearly made me shut off the video. No music needed... I promise. : )
Thank you for the feedback. Glad the video was helpful. We have reduced the back ground noise on more recent videos. Growing pains lol
thanks for video
No more background music please.
Thank you for the constructive criticism. We will definitely keep your suggestion in mind as we work on future videos.
Can a Paralegal be there at the deposition instead of a Attorney?
Good question. That would be strange indeed. We have never heard of that happening. In our view, conducting a deposition constitutes practicing law and only lawyers can legally do that (at least in all the jurisdictions we are familiar with).
The judge give us three months to come back to court for another deposition hearing, i don't think the judge took the case very seriously or didn't care for the case.....why he give three months to come back?
I was terrible harassed by the defendant lawyer, he was aeking the same question over and over again, and the stupid lawyer who was representing me was mute. Is this normal?
In most states, the opposing attorney is allowed to ask a wider variety of questions during a deposition than at trial due to the broad discovery rules. Attorneys are also more limited on the objections they can make during a deposition. The rules of evidence are more restrictive when you get to trial and, hopefully, your attorney will lodge objections to any inappropriate questions at trial. That being said, your attorney should always do his or her best to protect you from undue harassment at every stage of the litigation process.
😊❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
thank you
Any time!