Rule 36.Requests for Admission
Last amended July 1, 2023 · Last verified July 1, 2026
Full Text of Rule 36
Amendment History
Effective Date: July 1, 1970
Amended: July 1, 1972; July 1, 1976; July 1, 2004; July 1, 2005; July 1, 2008; July 1. 2009; July 1, 2012; July 1, 2014; July 1, 2017; July 1, 2019; July 1, 2023
Staff Note (July 1, 2004 Amendment)
Rule 36(A) Availability; procedures for use
The 2004 amendment added two provisions governing the service of and response to requests for admissions. New language was added to the second paragraph of division (A) that requires a responding party to quote the request for admission immediately preceding the party’s answer or objection. This provision ensures that the court and parties are not required to consult two documents or different parts of the same document in order to review the full text of a request for admission and the corresponding answer or objection. The provision is similar to the second sentence of S.D. Ohio Civ.R. 26.1.
To facilitate the responding party’s obligation to include the request for admission and answer or objection in the same document, the first paragraph of division (A) was modified to require the party submitting requests for admissions to provide the responding party with both a printed and an electronic copy of the requests for admissions. The electronic version must be provided in a format that will enable the responding party to readily include the requests for admissions and corresponding answers and objections in the same document without having to retype each request for admission. A party who is unable to provide an electronic copy of requests for admission may seek leave of court to be relieved of the requirement.
Corresponding amendments were made to Civ.R. 33(A) relative to interrogatories. Rule 36(C) Form of answers and objections to requests for admissions
The 2004 amendment deleted language that required a party submitting requests for admissions to allow sufficient space, not less than one inch, following each request for admission, in which the answering party could type an answer or objection. New language was added to division (A) governing the service of and response to requests for admissions.
Staff Note (July 1, 2005 Amendment)
Rule 36(C) Document containing request for admission
Civ.R. 36 is amended to require that a party include a specific caption on any document that includes one or more requests for admission. The amended rule recognizes that, unlike Civ.R. 33 (written interrogatories) and Civ.R. 34 (requests for production), Civ.R. 36 imposes a virtually self-executing sanction, i.e., admission by default, on a party that fails timely to respond. See generally Cleveland Trust Co. v. Willis, 20 Ohio St.3d 66 (1985).
The Rules Advisory Committee is aware that parties intermix requests for admission with Civ.R. 33 interrogatories and Civ.R. 34 requests for production. See, e.g., Seecharan v. Macy, 1999 WL 980579, No. 75130 (8th Dist. Ct. App., Cuyahoga, 10-28-99) (no abuse of discretion to deny motion to deem matters admitted; “the trial court refused to countenance the obscuring of requests for admissions in the midst of other discovery requests”). The Committee believes that although there often are good reasons for combining requests for admission with other discovery requests, the nature of some discovery documents can cause requests for admission to be overlooked and result in inadvertent admissions by default. The amendment is intended to minimize this risk by requiring the propounding party to include, in the caption of the document, a clear notice that the document contains requests for admission. A party is not required to respond to requests for admission that are not made in compliance with division (C).
Staff Note (July 1, 2008 Amendment)
The text of Civ.R. 36(A) is broken into three subparts. This is intended as a stylistic change only to make the material more accessible.
Staff Note (July 1, 2009 Amendment)
Recognizing that computer word processors have replaced the typewriter, Rule 36 was amended in 2004 to delete the former "minimum one-inch space" requirement in favor of a requirement that the party requesting admissions provide the responding party with an electronic copy of the request for use in preparing a new computer-generated document containing both the requests and the responses. The 2004 amendment continued to require that the printed copy be served, and only required that the electronic copy be "provided" to the party served. The amendment further permitted the electronic copy to be provided by means other than those described in Civ.R. 5(B) for service, specifically including "by electronic mail." Finally, the amendment permitted the court to relieve a party "who is unable to provide an electronic copy" of the duty to do so.
The 2004 amendment did not specify a consequence for the failure to provide an electronic copy. Because the time designated in the request for responding runs from service, and only the printed copy is served, the amendment left uncertain the obligations and appropriate remedy for a party served with a printed copy of requests for admission, but not provided with an electronic copy. The 2009 amendment specifies the consequence and appropriate remedy for this situation.
The amendment confirms that the period for responding, which is designated by the requesting party and cannot be less than twenty-eight days, shall run from the day of service of the printed copy, and that the failure to provide an electronic copy does not alter the response period. However, if before the designated period has expired, the responding party requests that the period be enlarged pursuant to Rule 6(B) because the requesting party has not provided an electronic copy, that reason shall constitute good cause for granting the requested extension, and the court’s order may require that an electronic copy be provided.
The amendment strikes a balance between the respective duties of the parties when a provision which merely makes it easier to transcribe the responses to a request for admission is not followed. It enforces the duty of the party requesting admissions to provide an electronic copy unless otherwise relieved of that obligation by the court. At the same it time makes it clear that a responding party served with a printed copy of a request for admissions cannot rely on the failure to receive an electronic copy as reason to do nothing and simply disregard the response time. A Civ.R. 6(B) request for enlargement of the period is an appropriate remedy for a responding party in this situation, and the amendment merely provides guidance in that regard. The rule states that the failure to receive an electronic copy constitutes good cause under Civ.R. 6(B). The amendment also confirms the court's discretion to relieve a party of the duty to provide an electronic copy when unable to do so, for example, when compliance would be difficult for a pro se party.
Similar amendments were made to Civ.R. 33, addressing the failure to provide an electronic copy of interrogatories.
Staff Note (July 1, 2012 Amendment)
The introductory paragraph of Civ.R. 36(A) and the provisions of Civ.R. 36(A)(1) are amended to eliminate difficulties raised by the 2004 amendment to Civ.R. 36(A) that requires a party serving requests for admission to “provide” an electronic copy to the served party. This amendment is enabled by the 2012 amendment to Civ.R. 5(B) which permits documents after the original complaint to be served by electronic means.
Civ.R. 5(A) requires that copies of all documents in an action be “served” on the parties. When the Civ.R. 36 requirement for an electronic copy was established in 2004, there was no provision for “service” by electronic means and it was deemed impractical to require that an electronic copy be “served” by mailing a computer disk or otherwise delivering it by one of the other methods permitted under the existing Civ.R. 5(B). Thus the 2004 amendment to Civ.R. 36 provided that a printed copy must be “served” (by one of the methods listed under Civ.R. 5(B)), and that an electronic copy also must be “’provided’ on computer disk, by electronic mail, or by other means agreed to by the parties.” That requirement was problematic not only because of the required dual format but also in determining a party’s recourse when a paper copy was served but an electronic copy was not provided – a problem addressed by the 2009 amendment to Civ.R. 36.
The 2012 amendment simply requires that an electronic copy be served, which can be accomplished electronically under the 2012 amendments to Civ.R. 5(B), or by any other method provided under Civ.R. 5(B). Although service of a paper copy is no longer necessary, it is not prohibited and would be appropriate, for example, when a party who is unable to provide an electronic copy is relieved of that requirement by the court.
Similar amendments have been made to Civ.R. 33 relating to interrogatories.
Staff Note (July 1, 2014 Amendment)
Rule 36(A)(1) is amended to correct an oversight in the final publication of the 2012 amendments to the rule. Those prior amendments intended that requests for admission be served by electronic means making separate service of a printed copy unnecessary except for unusual circumstances. The final publication of the 2012 amendment inadvertently retained language from the prior rule stating that the designated time for responses runs from service of “a printed copy of” the requests. The quoted words were not intended to be included and are stricken. A similar correction is made to Civ.R. 33 with respect to interrogatories.
Staff Note (July 1, 2017 Amendment)
Civ.R. 36(A) Requests for admission
The rule is amended to permit service of requests for admission on parties other than the plaintiff only after service of the summons and complaint upon that party and to disallow service of requests for admission with service of the summons and complaint
Staff Note (July 1, 2019 Amendment)
Division (A)
Recognizing the advancements in technology that have occurred since the 2004 amendment to the rule, the amendment also changes the description of the type of electronic copy that shall be served from a copy that is “reasonably useable for word processing and provided on computer disk” to a copy “on a shareable medium and in an editable format.”
Plain-English Summary
Division (A) lets any party serve a written request asking another party to admit the truth of a matter within the scope of Rule 26(B) discovery -- including opinions or the application of law to fact, and the genuineness of documents, copies of which must accompany the request unless already available. The request may be served on the plaintiff once the action begins and on any other party once served with the summons and complaint, and should go out electronically whenever feasible, with a paper copy to any unrepresented party. Each matter must be set out separately, and the responding party must quote each request immediately before answering or objecting to it. Unless the responding party serves a written answer or objection within at least twenty-eight days, the matter is admitted by default. An answer must specifically deny the matter or explain in detail why the party can't truthfully admit or deny it, and a denial must address the substance of the request -- if only part is true, the responding party must admit that part and qualify or deny the rest. A party can't claim lack of information as a reason for failing to admit or deny unless it states that it made a reasonable inquiry and that the information available to it still isn't enough to answer. Believing a matter presents a genuine issue for trial isn't by itself grounds to object; the party must instead deny it or explain why it can't be admitted or denied. The requesting party may move the court to rule on an objection, order a better answer, or deem the matter admitted, or the court may put off final resolution to a pretrial conference or another time before trial.
Division (B) makes an admission conclusively established in the case unless the court allows it to be withdrawn or amended -- something the court should permit when doing so would help resolve the case on the merits and wouldn't unfairly prejudice the party who obtained the admission. An admission under this rule binds the admitting party only in the pending action, not in any other proceeding. Division (C) requires a document that mixes a request for admission with other discovery to say so clearly in a caption, and a party need not respond to a request for admission that doesn't carry that caption.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens if a party never responds to a request for admission?
The matter is deemed admitted. Rule 36(A)(1) gives the responding party at least twenty-eight days to serve a written answer or objection, and silence beyond that period is treated as an admission.
Can an admission made under Rule 36 be used against that party in a different lawsuit?
No. An admission made under Rule 36 is for the purposes of the pending action only and cannot be used against the admitting party in any other proceeding.
Can a party take back an admission once it's made?
Yes, with the court's permission. Rule 36(B) lets the court allow withdrawal or amendment when it would help resolve the case on the merits, so long as the party who obtained the admission isn't left unfairly prejudiced in maintaining its claim or defense.