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Rule 34.Production of documents and things and entry upon land for inspection and other purposes.

Last amended November 18, 2009 · Last verified July 6, 2026

In one sentenceRule 34 lets one party make another party hand over documents and electronically stored information for inspection and copying, or open up land and property for a firsthand look, subject to the same relevance limits that govern discovery generally.

Full Text of Rule 34

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

(a) Scope. Any party may serve on any other party a request (1) to produce and permit the party making the request, or someone acting on the requestor's behalf, to inspect, copy, test, or sample any designated documents or electronically stored information (including writings, drawings, graphs, charts, photographs, sound recordings, images, and other data or data compilations stored in any medium from which information can be obtained, translated, if necessary, by the respondent through detection devices into reasonably usable form), or to inspect, copy, test, or sample any designated tangible things that constitute or contain matters within the scope of Rule 26(b) and that are in the possession, custody, or control of the party upon whom the request is served; or (2) to permit entry upon designated land or other property in the possession or control of the party upon whom the request is served for the purpose of inspection and measuring, surveying, photographing, testing, or sampling the property or any designated object or operation thereon, within the scope of Rule 26(b).
(b) Procedure. The request 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. The request shall set forth the items to be inspected either by individual item or by category and shall describe each item and category with reasonable particularity. The request may specify the form or forms in which electronically stored information is to be produced. The request shall specify a reasonable time, place, and manner of making the inspection and performing the related acts.
The party upon whom the request is served shall serve a written response within thirty (30) days after the service of the request, except that a defendant may serve a response within forty-five (45) days after service of the summons and complaint upon that defendant. The court may allow a shorter or longer time. The response shall state, with respect to each item or category, that inspection and related activities will be permitted as requested unless the request is objected to, including an objection to the requested form or forms for producing electronically stored information, in which event the reasons for objection shall be stated. If objection is made to part of an item or category, the part shall be specified and inspection permitted of the remaining parts. If objection is made to the requested form or forms for producing electronically stored information – or if no form was specified in the request – the responding party must state the form or forms it intends to use. The party submitting the request may move for an order under Rule 37(a) with respect to any objection to or other failure to respond to the request or any part thereof, or any failure to permit inspection as requested.
A party who produces hard copies of documents for inspection that are not electronically stored shall produce them as they are kept in the usual course of business or shall organize and label them to correspond with the categories in the request.
Regarding the discovery of electronically stored information:
(i) if a request does not specify the form or forms for producing electronically stored information, a responding party must produce the information in a form or forms in which it is ordinarily maintained or in a form or forms that are reasonably usable; and
(ii) a party need not produce the same electronically stored information in more than one form.
(c) Persons not parties. A person not a party to the action may be compelled to produce documents, electronically stored information, and things or to submit to an inspection as provided in Rule 45.
(dc) District court rule. Rule 34 applies in the district courts in those instances where production and inspections are permitted by Rule 26(dc).

Amendment History

[Amended 1-4-82, eff 3-1-82; Amended eff. 10-1-95; Amended eff. 11-18-2009.]

Committee Comments

Committee Comments on 1973 Adoption

This rule supplants Tit. 7, §§ 426, 487-490, Code of Ala. Subparagraph (a) states the objects within the reach of the Rule and includes entry upon land in addition to tangible things. No showing of good cause need be made. Of course, objections based upon departure from the scope of Rule 26(b) may be made. Note the use of the word “respondent” in Rule 34(a). Under former Alabama practice, the word respondent has a significant meaning in Equity. The use of the term “Respondent” in this Rule is not to be confused with the old Equity definition. As used herein, it simply means the party against whom discovery is sought. Subdivision (b) states the requirement that the request elaborate upon the manner, time and place for the discovery. Thirty days is permitted for answer or objection unless the action has been recently filed, in which event the response is due no later than 45 days from service of the complaint. The party against whom an objection is interposed must move under Rule 37(a) if he desires to pursue the matter.

Plain-English Summary

Lawsuits often turn on paper (or, these days, on files that never touch paper at all): contracts, emails, invoices, photographs, inspection reports, text messages. Rule 34 is the tool that gets those materials out of one party’s hands and into the other’s. It also covers a second, less common situation: sometimes the thing you need to examine isn’t a document at all, but a place — the scene of an accident, a piece of land, a building — and Rule 34 lets a party walk onto property that belongs to or is controlled by the other side to inspect, measure, photograph, or test it.

The mechanics are simple by design. A party sends a written request describing, item by item or by category, what it wants to see, along with a reasonable time and place for the inspection. The party receiving the request has thirty days to respond in writing (a defendant gets a longer runway tied to when it was served with the lawsuit), and for each item it must either agree to produce it or object and say why. If part of a request is objectionable but part isn’t, the responding party has to hand over the part it can’t object to. Because so much information today exists only in digital form, Rule 34 also addresses how electronically stored information gets produced — a requesting party can ask for a particular format, and if the parties can’t agree, the responding party has to explain what format it intends to use and produce the information in a form that is reasonably usable.

One quirk worth knowing: Rule 34 only reaches parties to the lawsuit. If the documents or property you need belong to someone who isn’t a party, you can’t use Rule 34 to get them — you have to use a subpoena instead. When a party refuses to produce something it should, or drags its feet, Rule 34 doesn’t have its own enforcement teeth; the requesting party has to go to Rule 37 and ask the court to compel compliance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use Rule 34 to get documents from someone who isn’t a party to my lawsuit?

No. Rule 34 only applies to parties. To get documents, electronically stored information, or access to property from a nonparty, you need to serve a subpoena under Rule 45 instead.

How long does someone have to respond to a Rule 34 request?

Generally thirty days after being served with the request. A defendant gets whichever is longer of thirty days after the request or forty-five days after being served with the summons and complaint, unless the court sets a different deadline.

What happens if the other side objects to only part of my request?

They have to say specifically which part they’re objecting to and why, and they still have to produce and allow inspection of everything else in the request that isn’t covered by the objection.

Can I specify the file format for electronic documents, like requiring native files instead of PDFs?

Yes. You can ask for electronically stored information in a particular form. If the other side objects to that form, or you don’t specify one, they have to tell you what form they intend to use, and the information they produce has to be reasonably usable.

What can I do if the other party ignores my request or refuses to produce what I asked for?

You can file a motion under Rule 37 asking the court to order compliance. Rule 34 itself doesn’t include a built-in enforcement mechanism, so getting a court order is the next step when informal efforts to resolve the dispute fail.

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. 34). 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: request for productionRFP discoverydocument production requestentry upon land inspectionrequests to produce documentsAla. R. Civ. P. 34