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Rule 33.Interrogatories to parties.

Last amended February 1, 2010 · Last verified July 6, 2026

In one sentenceRule 33 lets any party send another party written questions that must be answered in writing under oath within a set deadline, subject to a forty-question cap and an option to point to business records instead of writing out an answer.

Full Text of Rule 33

Text sizeJump to: (a) (b) (c) (d) (dc)

(a) Availability; Procedures for Use. Any party may serve upon any other party written interrogatories in accordance with subdivision (d) of this rule to be answered by the party served or, if the party served is a public or private corporation or a partnership or association or governmental agency, by any officer or agent, who shall furnish such information as is available to the party. Interrogatories may, without leave of court, be served upon the plaintiff after commencement of the action and upon any other party with or after service of the summons and complaint upon that party.
A party shall not propound more than forty (40) interrogatories to any other party without leave of court. Upon motion, and for good cause shown, the court may increase the number of interrogatories that a party may serve upon another party. For purposes of this rule, (1) any subpart or separable question (whether or not separately numbered, lettered, or paragraphed) propounded under an interrogatory shall be considered a separate interrogatory, and (2) the word “party” includes all parties represented by the same lawyer or firm. When the number of interrogatories exceeds forty (40) without leave of court, the party upon whom the interrogatories have been served need only answer or object to the first forty (40) interrogatories.
Each interrogatory shall be answered separately and fully in writing under oath in accordance with subdivision (d) of this rule, unless it is objected to, in which event the reasons for objection shall be stated in lieu of an answer. The answers are to be signed by the person making them, and the objections signed by the attorney making them. The party upon whom the interrogatories have been served shall serve a copy of the answers, and objections if any, within thirty (30) days after the service of the interrogatories, except that the defendant may serve answers or objections within forty-five (45) days after service of the summons and the complaint upon that defendant. The court may allow a shorter or longer time. The party submitting the interrogatories may move for an order under Rule 37(a) with respect to any objection to or other failure to answer an interrogatory. If that party so moves, the motion must set forth the complete text of an interrogatory to which objection is made and the complete text of the objection.
(b) Scope; use at trial. Interrogatories may relate to any matters which can be inquired into under Rule 26(b), and the answers may be used to the extent permitted by the rules of evidence.
An interrogatory otherwise proper is not necessarily objectionable merely because an answer to the interrogatory involves an opinion or contention that relates to fact or the application of law to fact, but the court may order that such an interrogatory need not be answered until after designated discovery has been completed or until a pre-trial conference or other later time.
(c) Option to produce business records. Where the answer to an interrogatory may be derived or ascertained from the business records, including electronically stored information, of the party upon whom the interrogatory has been served or from an examination, audit, or inspection of such business records, or from a compilation, abstract, or summary based thereon, and the burden of deriving or ascertaining the answer is substantially the same for the party serving the interrogatory as for the party served, it is a sufficient answer to such interrogatory to specify the records from which the answer may be derived or ascertained and to afford to the party serving the interrogatory reasonable opportunity to examine, audit, or inspect such records and to make copies, compilations, abstracts, or summaries. A specification shall be in sufficient detail to permit the interrogating party to locate and to identify, as readily as can the party served, the records from which the answer may be ascertained.
(d) Form of interrogatories and answers. A party propounding interrogatories shall provide sufficient space for a response to each interrogatory. The party responding to interrogatories may either (1) make answers on the spaces provided or (2) retype or otherwise reproduce each interrogatory and state the answer after each interrogatory, or (3) disregard the space provided and prepare answers separately from the interrogatories. If the responding party elects to answer on the space provided and the space is inadequate, additional pages may be used with a reference in the space to the additional pages.
(dc) District court rule. Rule 33 applies in the district courts in those instances where interrogatories are permitted by Rule 26(dc).

Amendment History

[Amended 12-17-84; Amended 6-12-90, eff. 10-1-90; Amended eff. 8-1-92; Amended eff. 10-1-95; Amended 11-4-2009, eff. 2-1-2010.]

Committee Comments

Committee Comments on 1973 Adoption

There is no provision corresponding to Rule 33 in Tit. 7, § 474(1)-(18), Code of Ala. And the procedures of Rule 33 are both simpler and broader than the previous statutory authorization, which they supersede, for interrogatories to an adverse party. Code of Ala., Tit. 7, §§ 477-486. Note also that interrogatories are available against any other party, not simply an adverse party.

The rule specifically provides that the scope of interrogatories is the same as that for discovery generally, as set out in Rule 26(b). Thus interrogatories may be used for purposes of discovery, and are not limited to obtaining material testimony in the cause, as required by the former statute. Code of Ala., Tit. 7, § 477.

Plain-English Summary

Interrogatories are written questions that one party sends to another party in the case, who must then answer them in writing and under oath. Unlike a deposition, there is no officer, no room, and no live back-and-forth — just a document with questions that go out and a document with answers that comes back, usually within thirty days, or forty-five days if a defendant receives them along with the summons and complaint. Because a lawyer for the responding party typically helps shape the answers, interrogatories tend to produce more guarded responses than depositions do, but they are also far cheaper and simpler to use, which makes them a common first step early in a case to pin down basic facts, contentions, and the names of people with relevant knowledge before moving on to depositions.

Rule 33 caps the tool to keep it from being abused: absent a court order allowing more, a party may not send more than forty interrogatories to another party, counting subparts as separate questions and treating everyone represented by the same lawyer as one party for this purpose. If more than forty arrive without permission, the receiving party only has to answer the first forty. Any objection to a question must be specific and must be served in place of an answer within the same deadline, which then forces the party who sent the interrogatory to ask the court to compel an answer if the objection seems unjustified. Rule 33 also excuses a party from writing out an answer that could just as easily be found by digging through business records: if the burden of finding the answer would be about the same for either side, the responding party can instead point the other side to the specific records and let them look for themselves.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many interrogatories can I send to the other side?

No more than forty without the court’s permission, and each subpart of a question counts separately toward that limit. A party can ask the court to allow more for good cause, such as a complex case that truly needs additional questions.

How long does the other side have to answer my interrogatories?

Generally thirty days after service. A defendant who receives interrogatories along with the summons and complaint gets forty-five days from service of those papers instead, though the court can shorten or lengthen either deadline.

Can the other side just refuse to answer a question they don’t like?

Not without stating a reason. If a party objects instead of answering, it must state the grounds for the objection in place of an answer. If the objection is not justified, the party who sent the interrogatory can ask the court for an order compelling a real answer.

What if the answer is buried in a huge pile of business records?

The responding party can skip writing out the answer and instead point to the specific records where the answer can be found, as long as digging through those records would be about equally burdensome for either side, and as long as the records are identified specifically enough for the other party to locate them.

Source & verification. The rule text, amendment history, and Committee Comments are reproduced verbatim from the official Alabama Rules of Civil Procedure (Ala. R. Civ. P. 33). Prescribed by the Supreme Court of Alabama (Ala. Const. amend. 328, § 6.11). The plain-English summary is original and written by us. Last verified July 6, 2026. · Official source
Also known as: interrogatories to parties rulewritten discovery questionsforty interrogatory limitbusiness records option interrogatoriesAla. R. Civ. P. 33