RulesofCivilProcedure.com Civil Procedure · Every State

Rule 27.Discovery before an action is filed or pending an appeal.

Last amended January 1, 2023 · Last verified July 1, 2026

In one sentenceRule 27 lets someone who expects to be a party to a future lawsuit petition the court to preserve testimony or evidence before that suit can be filed, and separately lets a party to an already-decided case get court permission to preserve evidence for further proceedings while an appeal is pending.

Full Text of Rule 27

Text sizeJump to: (a) (b)

a Before an action is filed.
1 Petition. A person who wants to perpetuate testimony—including his or her own—or to obtain discovery to preserve evidence about any matter cognizable in any court within the United States may file a verified petition in the superior court in the county where any expected adverse party resides. The petition must be titled in the petitioner’s name and must:
A show that the petitioner expects to be a party to an action cognizable in any court within the United States but cannot presently bring it or cause it to be brought;
B identify the subject matter of the expected action and the petitioner’s interest;
C show the facts that the petitioner desires to establish by the proposed discovery and the reasons for perpetuating it in advance of the expected action;
D identify the name or a description of each person whom the petitioner expects to be an adverse party and the person’s address to the extent known;
E identify the name and address of each person from whom discovery is sought—who may but need not be a person identified as an expected adverse party under Rule 27(a)(1)(D)—and the evidence the petitioner expects to obtain from the discovery; and
F ask for an order: (i) directing the clerk to issue a subpoena under Rule 45 at the petitioner’s request to obtain testimony or other evidence from each named person in order to preserve the testimony or other evidence; (ii) under Rule 35 for a physical or mental examination of an expected adverse party or of a person in the custody or under the legal control of an expected adverse party; or (iii) permitting the petitioner’s deposition under Rule 30 to preserve his or her testimony.
2 Hearing required. Unless the petitioner and all expected adverse parties file a stipulation agreeing to the discovery requested in the petition, or unless the court orders otherwise for good cause, the court must hold a hearing on the relief that the petition seeks.
3 Notice and service. Unless the court orders otherwise for good cause, the petitioner must serve each expected adverse party with a copy of the petition and a notice stating the time and place of the hearing at least 20 days before the hearing date. If an expected adverse party is a minor, an incapacitated person, or an adult in need of protection, Rule 17(g) applies. The petition and notice may be served either inside or outside Arizona in the same manner that a summons and pleading are served under Rule 4, 4.1, or 4.2, as applicable. If the petition seeks an order under Rule 35 for a physical or mental examination, the petition and notice must be served on the expected adverse party whose examination is sought or who has custody or legal control of the person whose examination is sought. In all other instances, if service cannot be made with reasonable diligence on an expected adverse party, the court may order service by publication or otherwise.
4 Opposition and reply. Unless the court orders otherwise, any expected adverse party may file an opposition to the petition at least 5 days before the hearing date. The opposition must be served on the
petitioner and each other expected adverse party using any of the methods described in Rule 5(c). Unless the court orders otherwise, the petitioner may not file a reply memorandum.
5 Order and effect.
A Order. If satisfied that perpetuating the testimony or preserving other evidence may prevent a failure or delay of justice, the court must enter an order that: (i) identifies each person who may be served with a subpoena under Rule 45 to obtain testimony or for the inspection of documents or premises and specifies the subject matter of the permitted examination; (ii) permits the physical or mental examination of an expected adverse party or of a person in the custody or under the legal control of an expected adverse party; or (iii) permits the deposition of the petitioning party.
B Effect and use. Discovery authorized by the court must be conducted, and may be used, as provided in these rules. A reference in these rules to the court where an action is pending means, for this rule’s purposes, the court where the petition for the discovery was filed. A deposition to perpetuate testimony taken under these rules may be used under Rule 32(a) in any later-filed action in an Arizona state court involving the same subject matter. Subpoena recipients have the rights of nonparties under Rule 45 regardless of whether they are identified as an expected adverse party under Rule 27(a)(1)(D).
C Appointment of counsel. If a court authorizes a deposition, but an expected adverse party is not served in the same manner that a summons and pleading are served under Rule 4, 4.1, or 4.2, as applicable, and is otherwise unrepresented by counsel, the court must appoint an attorney to represent that expected adverse party and to cross-examine the deponent. The petitioner must pay for an appointed attorney’s services in an amount fixed by the court.
b Pending appeal.
1 Generally. The superior court that rendered judgment may, if an appeal has been taken or may still be taken, permit a party to conduct discovery under the rules to preserve evidence for use in any later superior court proceedings in that action.
2 Motion. A party who seeks to perpetuate testimony or preserve evidence under the rules may move for leave to conduct discovery. The moving party must provide the same notice and serve the motion in the same manner as if the action was still pending in superior court. The motion must:
A identify the name and address of each person to be deposed or from whom discovery under the rules is sought, and the expected substance of the testimony or other discovery; and
B show the reasons for perpetuating the testimony or other discovery.
3 Order and effect. If satisfied that perpetuating the testimony or preserving the other evidence may prevent a failure or delay of justice, the court may order the requested discovery. Discovery authorized by the court must be conducted, and may be used, as provided in these rules.

Amendment History

Promulgated by R-16-0010, effective January 1, 2017; amended by R-22-0011, effective January 1, 2023.

Plain-English Summary

Sometimes evidence risks disappearing before a lawsuit can even begin. Rule 27 lets a person who expects to become a party to a future case, but cannot yet bring it, file a verified petition asking the court to let them perpetuate testimony or preserve other evidence in advance. The petition has to show why the anticipated action cannot yet be brought, identify the expected adverse parties and the evidence sought, and explain why preserving it now matters. Unless everyone agrees to skip it, the court holds a hearing, and expected adverse parties must get notice and a copy of the petition at least 20 days beforehand, served the same way a summons and complaint would be served.

If the court is satisfied that perpetuating the testimony or evidence could prevent a failure or delay of justice, it can authorize a subpoena for testimony or documents, a physical or mental examination, or a deposition of the petitioner. That discovery is then usable later under the same rules that govern any other deposition, and if an expected adverse party isn't properly served and has no attorney, the court must appoint one — at the petitioner's expense — to cross-examine the witness.

Subdivision (b) covers the opposite end of a case: once a judgment has been entered and an appeal has been or may still be taken, a party can move the superior court for leave to preserve evidence for use in further proceedings in that same action, following largely the same notice and service requirements.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who can use Rule 27 to get discovery before filing a lawsuit?

Someone who expects to be a party to a future action but cannot yet bring it, and who wants to perpetuate testimony or preserve evidence.

What must a Rule 27 petition include?

Why the anticipated action can’t yet be brought, the subject matter and the petitioner’s interest, the facts to be established, the identity of expected adverse parties, and the order the petitioner wants.

Is a hearing required on a Rule 27 petition?

Yes, unless the petitioner and all expected adverse parties stipulate to the requested discovery or the court excuses a hearing for good cause.

Can Rule 27 be used after a judgment while an appeal is pending?

Yes, subdivision (b) lets a party seek leave to preserve evidence for later proceedings in the same action while an appeal has been or may still be taken.

Source & verification. The rule text and History are reproduced verbatim from the official Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure (Ariz. R. Civ. P. 27). Prescribed by the Supreme Court of Arizona (Ariz. Const. art. 6, § 5). The plain-English summary is original and written by us. Last verified July 1, 2026. · Official source
Also known as: perpetuation of testimonypre-litigation discoverydiscovery pending appeal