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Rule 30.Depositions upon oral questions

Part V: Depositions and Discovery · Last amended November 1, 2025 · Last verified July 13, 2026

In one sentenceRule 30 governs oral depositions in Utah — how to notice one, how long it can run, how objections and instructions not to answer work, and how a party can force an organization to produce a witness who can speak for it.

Full Text of Rule 30

Text sizeJump to: (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) (g) (h) (i)

(a) When depositions may be taken; when leave required. A party may depose a party or witness by oral questions. A witness may not be deposed more than once in standard discovery. An expert who has prepared a report disclosed under Rule 26(a)(4)(B) may not be deposed.
(b) Notice of deposition; general requirements; special notice; non-stenographic recording; production of documents and things; deposition of organization; deposition by telephone.
(1) The party deposing a witness must give reasonable notice in writing to every other party. The notice must state the date, time, and place for the deposition and the name and address of each witness. If the name of a witness is not known, the notice must describe the witness sufficiently to identify the person or state the class or group to which the person belongs. The notice must designate any documents and tangible things to be produced by a witness. The notice must designate the officer who will conduct the deposition.
(2) The notice must designate the method by which the deposition will be recorded. With prior notice to the officer, witness and other parties, any party may designate a recording method in addition to the method designated in the notice. Depositions may be recorded by sound, sound-and-visual, or stenographic means, and the party designating the recording method shall bear the cost of the recording. The appearance or demeanor of witnesses or attorneys must not be distorted through recording techniques.
(3) A deposition must be conducted before an officer appointed or designated under Rule 28 and must begin with a statement on the record by the officer that includes (A) the officer’s name and business address; (B) the date, time, and place of the deposition; (C) the name of the witness; (D) the administration of the oath or affirmation to the witness; and (E) an identification of all persons present. If the deposition is recorded other than stenographically, the officer must repeat items (A) through (C) at the beginning of each unit of the recording medium. At the end of the deposition, the officer must state on the record that the deposition is complete and state any stipulations.
(4) The notice to a party witness may be accompanied by a request under Rule 34 for the production of documents and tangible things at the deposition. The procedure of Rule 34 will apply to the request. The attendance of a nonparty witness may be compelled by subpoena under Rule 45. Documents and tangible things to be produced must be stated in the subpoena.
(5) A deposition may be taken by remote electronic means. A deposition taken by remote electronic means is considered to be taken at the place where the witness is located.
(6) A party may name as the witness a corporation, a partnership, an association, or a governmental agency, describe with reasonable particularity the matters on which questioning is requested, and direct the organization to designate one or more officers, directors, managing agents, or other persons to testify on its behalf. The organization must state, for each person designated, the matters on which the person will testify. A subpoena must advise a nonparty organization of its duty to make such a designation. The person so designated must testify as to matters known or reasonably available to the organization.
(A) Within 14 days of being served with a notice or subpoena, the noticed organization may serve a written objection.
(B) Prior to the deposition, the serving party and the organization must confer in good faith about the matters for examination regarding any objections, or those objections are waived.
(C) If timely objections are not resolved prior to the deposition, any party may seek resolution from the court in accordance with Rule 37, or if the notice seeks a deposition of a non-party organization, the non-party organization may seek resolution in accordance with Rule 45. The deposition may proceed only on the matters to which there has been no objection.
(c) Examination and cross-examination; objections during questioning.
(1) Questioning of witnesses may proceed as permitted at the trial under the Utah Rules of Evidence, except Rules 103 and 615.
(2) All objections must be recorded, but the questioning must proceed, and the testimony taken subject to the objections. Any objection must be stated concisely and in a non-argumentative and non- suggestive manner. A person may instruct a witness not to answer only to preserve a privilege, to enforce a limitation on evidence directed by the court, or to present a motion for a protective order under Rule 37. Upon demand of the objecting party or witness, the deposition is suspended for the time necessary to make a motion. The party taking the deposition may complete or adjourn the deposition before moving for an order to compel discovery under Rule 37.
(d) Limits. During standard discovery, oral questioning of a nonparty must not exceed four hours, and oral questioning of a party must not exceed seven hours.
(e) Submission to witness; changes; signing. Within 28 days after being notified by the officer that the transcript or recording is available, a witness may sign a statement of changes to the form or substance of the transcript or recording and the reasons for the changes. The officer must append any changes timely made by the witness.
(f) Record of deposition; certification and delivery by officer; exhibits; copies.
(1) The officer must record the deposition or direct another person present to record the deposition. The officer must sign a certificate, to accompany the record, that the witness was under oath or affirmation and that the record is a true record of the deposition. The officer must keep a copy of the record. The officer must securely seal the record endorsed with the title of the action and marked “Deposition of (name). Do not open.” and must promptly send the sealed record to the attorney or the party who designated the recording method. An attorney or party receiving the record must store it under conditions that will protect it against loss, destruction, tampering, or deterioration.
(2) Every party may inspect and copy documents and things produced for inspection and must have a fair opportunity to compare copies and originals. Upon the request of a party, documents and things produced for inspection must be marked for identification and added to the record. If the witness wants to retain the originals, that person must offer the originals to be copied, marked for identification and added to the record.
(3) Upon payment of reasonable charges, the officer must furnish a copy of the record to any party or to the witness.
(g) Failure to attend or to serve subpoena; expenses. If the party giving the notice of a deposition fails to attend or fails to serve a subpoena upon a witness who fails to attend, and another party attends in person or by attorney, the court may order the party giving the notice to pay to the other party the reasonable costs, expenses, and attorney fees incurred.
(h) Deposition in action pending in another state. Any party to an action in another state may take the deposition of any person within this state in the same manner and subject to the same conditions and limitations as if such action were pending in this state. Notice of the deposition must be filed with the court clerk of the county in which the person whose deposition is to be taken resides or is to be served. Matters required to be submitted to the court must be submitted to the court in the county where the deposition is being taken.
(i) Stipulations regarding deposition procedures. The parties may by written stipulation provide that depositions may be taken before any person, at any time or place, upon any notice, and in any manner and when so taken may be used like other depositions.

Amendment History

Amended effective January 1, 1995; November 1, 1999; April 1, 2000; November 1, 2002; January 1, 2009; November 1, 2011; May 1, 2015; November 1, 2025.

Plain-English Summary

Rule 30 is the workhorse deposition rule: it covers notice, recording, timing, conduct, and follow-up for depositions by oral questions. A party may depose any party or witness, but not the same witness twice during standard discovery, and not an expert who has already produced a report disclosed under Rule 26(a)(4)(B).

Notice has to be reasonable and in writing, naming the date, time, and place, identifying the witness (or describing the witness or group if the name isn't known), listing any documents to be produced, and naming the officer who will conduct it. The notice also has to designate how the deposition will be recorded — sound, sound-and-visual, or stenographic — and the party choosing the method pays for it; another party can add a second recording method with advance notice. Whoever presides has to open the deposition on the record with the officer's name and address, the date, time, and place, the witness's name, the oath, and who's present, repeating the identifying information at the start of each new recording unit for non-stenographic depositions, and closing with a statement that the deposition is complete. A notice to a party can be paired with a Rule 34 document request; compelling a nonparty witness to attend, and to bring documents, takes a subpoena under Rule 45. Depositions can also be taken remotely, and a remote deposition is treated as occurring where the witness is physically located.

One of the rule's most useful tools is the organizational deposition, commonly called a 30(b)(6) deposition after the paragraph that creates it. A party can name a corporation, partnership, association, or government agency as the deponent, describe the topics for examination with reasonable particularity, and require the organization to designate one or more officers, directors, managing agents, or other representatives to testify on its behalf about matters known or reasonably available to the organization. The organization has 14 days after being served to object in writing, and before the deposition goes forward, the parties must confer in good faith about the listed topics and any objections — an objection not addressed in that conference is waived. If a timely objection can't be resolved before the deposition date, either side can ask the court to sort it out under Rule 37 (or, for a nonparty organization, under Rule 45), and the deposition proceeds only on the topics no one contested.

During questioning, the Utah Rules of Evidence apply as they would at trial, except for Rules 103 and 615. Objections go on the record, but the questioning keeps moving — objections have to be concise and can't be argumentative or suggestive to the witness. A lawyer can instruct a witness not to answer only to preserve a privilege, enforce a court-ordered limit on evidence, or set up a motion for a protective order, and the objecting side can demand a pause to make that motion. Standard-discovery depositions are capped at four hours of questioning for a nonparty and seven hours for a party. After the transcript or recording becomes available, the witness has 28 days to submit a signed statement of changes and the reasons for them, which the officer attaches to the record. The officer is responsible for certifying, sealing, and transmitting the completed record, and for furnishing copies on request. If a party who noticed a deposition doesn't show up, or doesn't serve the subpoena needed to compel a witness, the court can shift the resulting costs and fees to that party. The rule also covers depositions taken in Utah for out-of-state cases, and lets parties stipulate around the default procedures entirely — any time, place, or manner they agree to.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much notice do I have to give before taking a deposition?

The rule requires "reasonable notice in writing," stating the date, time, and place, identifying the witness, listing any documents to be produced, and naming the officer who will conduct it.

How long can an oral deposition last?

During standard discovery, questioning of a nonparty is capped at four hours and questioning of a party at seven hours.

Can I depose the same witness more than once?

Not during standard discovery — a witness may not be deposed more than once in that phase.

Can I depose an expert who already gave a written report?

No. An expert who has prepared a report disclosed under Rule 26(a)(4)(B) may not be deposed.

What is Utah's equivalent of a 30(b)(6) corporate designee deposition?

Rule 30(b)(6) lets a party name a corporation, partnership, association, or government agency as the deponent and describe the topics with reasonable particularity. The organization must then designate one or more officers, directors, managing agents, or other representatives to testify about matters known or reasonably available to it — the same function a federal 30(b)(6) notice serves.

Can an organization object to a deposition notice directed at it?

Yes. It has 14 days after service to object in writing, and the parties must then confer in good faith about the topics before the deposition. Objections not raised in that conference are waived, and unresolved timely objections go to the court under Rule 37, or Rule 45 for a nonparty organization.

Can a lawyer tell a witness not to answer a deposition question?

Only to preserve a privilege, enforce a court-ordered limitation on the evidence, or set up a motion for a protective order — not merely because the lawyer objects to the question.

Can a deposition be taken remotely?

Yes. A deposition by remote electronic means is treated as taken at the location where the witness is present.

How long do I have to review and correct my deposition transcript?

28 days after the officer notifies you that the transcript or recording is available, you can submit a signed statement listing any changes and the reasons for them.

Source & verification. Rule text, Advisory Committee Notes, and amendment history are reproduced verbatim from the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, adopted by the Utah Supreme Court. Last verified July 13, 2026. · Official source
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