Rule 35.Physical and mental examinations
Group V: Disclosures and Discovery · Last amended March 1, 2019 · Last verified July 14, 2026
Full Text of Rule 35
Notes
Drafter’s Note, Amendment Effective January 1, 2005: Subdivision (a) is amended to conform to the federal rule, as amended in 1991, which permits court ordered or stipulated examinations by anyone suitably licensed or certified. The amendments to subdivision (b) are technical.
Advisory Committee Note — 2019 Amendment: Subsection (a). Rule 35(a) expressly addresses audio recording and attendance by an observer at court-ordered physical and mental examinations. A court may for good cause shown direct that an examination be audio recorded. A generalized fear that the examiner might distort or inaccurately report what occurs at the examination is not sufficient to establish good cause to audio record the examination. In addition, a party whose examination is ordered may have an observer present, typically a family member or trusted companion, provided the party identifies the observer and his or her relationship to the party in time for that information to be included in the order for the examination. Psychological and neuropsychological examinations raise subtler questions of influence and confidential and proprietary testing materials that make it appropriate to condition the attendance of an observer on court permission, to be granted for good cause shown. In either event, the observer should not be the attorney or employed by the attorney for the party against whom the request for examination is made, and the observer may not disrupt or participate in the examination. A party requesting an audio recording or an observer should request such a condition when making or opposing a motion for an examination or at a hearing on the motion. Subsection (b). A Rule 35(b) report should contain opinions concerning the physical or mental condition in controversy for which the examiner is qualified to render an opinion. The disclosure deadlines contemplate that the report will be provided by the initial expert disclosure deadline, assuming that deadline is within 30 days of the examination. There may be rare circumstances that would justify a rebuttal Rule 35 examination. Any report prepared from a rebuttal examination must be timely disclosed by the rebuttal expert disclosure deadline or within 30 days of the examination, whichever occurs first. If the expert disclosure deadlines have passed, a party seeking a Rule 35 examination must move to reopen the applicable expert disclosure deadlines unless otherwise stipulated in writing by the parties. To reopen an expert disclosure deadline, the moving party must demonstrate excusable neglect or changed circumstances, such as where there has been an unanticipated change in a party’s physical or mental condition.
Amendment History
Amended eff. 9-27-71; Amended eff. 1-1-05; Amended eff. 3-1-19.
Plain-English Summary
When a lawsuit turns on someone's physical or mental condition — a claimed injury, a disputed capacity, a question of paternity resolved through blood typing — the other side often needs its own qualified professional to examine that person, not just take the treating doctor's word for it. Rule 35 is the mechanism for that. A court can order the examination, but only on a motion showing good cause, with notice to everyone involved and to the person who will be examined. The order has to spell out the details: when and where the exam happens, its scope and conditions, and who will perform it. The default setting is a professional office in the judicial district where the case is pending, not somewhere the examining party finds more convenient.
Because these exams can feel invasive, Rule 35 builds in some protection for the person being examined. For good cause, a party or the examiner can ask the court to require an audio recording of the session, with the requesting side arranging and paying for it. A party can also ask to bring an observer — typically a family member or someone else they trust — though that person cannot be the party's own lawyer or anyone who works for the lawyer, and cannot interfere with or participate in the exam itself. Observers are more readily allowed for an ordinary physical exam than for a psychological or neuropsychiatric one, where a court's permission is required before anyone besides the examiner and the person being examined sits in.
After the exam, the party who asked for it must give the other side a copy of the examiner's detailed written report — findings, diagnoses, test results — if requested, generally within 30 days or by the relevant expert-disclosure deadline, whichever comes first. Once the examined party asks for and receives that report, or takes the examiner's deposition, that party gives up any privilege over other examinations of the same condition, so the door swings both ways: get the findings, and the other side gets full access to compare notes. If a party refuses to hand over a report it owes, the court can order it produced, and if it still is not, the court can bar the examiner from testifying at trial.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a court force me to undergo a medical or psychological exam in a Nevada lawsuit?
Only when your physical or mental condition is truly in controversy in the case, and only on a motion showing good cause, with notice to you and every party. The court's order has to specify the time, place, scope, and the person who will conduct the exam.
Can I have someone with me during a Rule 35 examination?
You can ask, and Rule 35(a)(4) generally allows one observer — someone other than your attorney or anyone who works for your attorney — for an ordinary physical exam. For a neuropsychological, psychological, or psychiatric exam, an observer is allowed only if the court permits it for good cause.
Can the examination be audio recorded?
Only if a party or the examiner asks the court for it and shows good cause. A general worry that the examiner might describe the session unfairly is not enough on its own; the party requesting the recording arranges and pays for it.
Do I get a copy of the examiner's report after being examined?
Yes, if you ask. The party who moved for the exam must provide the examiner's written report — including findings, diagnoses, and test results — generally within 30 days of the exam or by the applicable expert-disclosure deadline, whichever comes first.
If I get the examiner's report, do I have to share my own medical records or reports on the same condition?
Requesting and receiving the report, or deposing the examiner, waives any privilege you have over other examinations of that same condition, in that case or any related one. Rule 35(b)(3) then entitles the party who moved for the exam to receive like reports of earlier or later examinations of the same condition.