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Rule 37.Statement of discovery issues; Sanctions; Failure to admit, to attend deposition or to preserve evidence

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

In one sentenceRule 37 replaces ordinary discovery motions with a short statement of discovery issues for resolving disputes, and sets out the sanctions available when a party violates a discovery order, wrongly denies something later proven true, skips a deposition, or fails to preserve evidence.

Full Text of Rule 37

Text sizeJump to: (a) (b) (c) (d) (e)

(a) Statement of discovery issues.
(1) A party or the person from whom discovery is sought may request that the judge enter an order regarding any discovery issue, including:
(A) failure to disclose under Rule 26;
(B) extraordinary discovery under Rule 26;
(C) a subpoena under Rule 45;
(D) protection from discovery; or
(E) compelling discovery from a party who fails to make full and complete disclosure.
(2) Statement of discovery issues length and content. The statement of discovery issues must be no more than four pages, not including permitted attachments, and must include in the following order:
(A) the relief sought and the grounds for the relief sought stated succinctly and with particularity;
(B) a certification that the requesting party has in good faith conferred or attempted to confer with the other affected parties in person or by telephone in an effort to resolve the dispute without court action;
(C) a statement regarding proportionality under Rule 26(b)(3);
(D) if the statement requests extraordinary discovery, a statement certifying that the party has reviewed and approved a discovery budget; and
(E) if objection was made under Rule 45(e)(4), a statement certifying that the statement of discovery issues has been served on the person subject to the subpoena or a non-party affected by the subpoena.
(3) Objection length and content. No more than seven days after the statement is filed, any other party may file an objection to the statement of discovery issues. If a person subject to a subpoena or a non-party affected by a subpoena timely filed an objection under Rule 45(e)(4), the person subject to the subpoena or the non-party affected by the subpoena may file an objection to the statement of discovery issues. The objection must be no more than four pages, not including permitted attachments, and must address the issues raised in the statement.
(4) Permitted attachments. The party filing the statement must attach to the statement only a copy of the disclosure, request for discovery or the response at issue.
(5) Proposed order. Each party, or a person subject to a subpoena or a non-party affected by a subpoena, must file a proposed order concurrently with its statement or objection.
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(6) Decision. Upon filing of the objection or expiration of the time to do so, either party may and the party filing the statement must file a Request to Submit for Decision under Rule 7(g). The court will promptly:
(A) decide the issues on the pleadings and papers;
(B) conduct a hearing, preferably remotely and if remotely, then consistent with the safeguards in Rule 43(b); or
(C) order additional briefing and establish a briefing schedule.
(7) Orders. The court may enter orders regarding disclosure or discovery or to protect a party or person from discovery being conducted in bad faith or from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense, or to achieve proportionality under Rule 26(b)(2), including one or more of the following:
(A) that the discovery not be had or that additional discovery be had;
(B) that the discovery may be had only on specified terms and conditions, including a designation of the time or place;
(C) that the discovery may be had only by a method of discovery other than that selected by the party seeking discovery;
(D) that certain matters not be inquired into, or that the scope of the discovery be limited to certain matters;
(E) that discovery be conducted with no one present except persons designated by the court;
(F) that a deposition after being sealed be opened only by order of the court;
(G) that a trade secret or other confidential information not be disclosed or be disclosed only in a designated way;
(H) that the parties simultaneously deliver specified documents or information enclosed in sealed envelopes to be opened as directed by the court;
(I) that a question about a statement or opinion of fact or the application of law to fact not be answered until after designated discovery has been completed or until a pretrial conference or other later time;
(J) that the costs, expenses and attorney fees of discovery be allocated among the parties as justice requires; or
(K) that a party pay the reasonable costs, expenses, and attorney fees incurred on account of the statement of discovery issues if the relief requested is granted or denied, or if a party provides discovery or withdraws a discovery request after a statement of discovery issues is filed and if the court finds that the party, witness, or attorney did not act in good faith or asserted a position that was not substantially justified.
(8) Request for sanctions prohibited. A statement of discovery issues or an objection may include a request for costs, expenses, and attorney fees but not a request for sanctions.
(9) Statement of discovery issues does not toll discovery time. A statement of discovery issues does not suspend or toll the time to complete standard discovery.
(b) Motion for sanctions. Unless the court finds that the failure was substantially justified, the court, upon motion, may impose appropriate sanctions for the failure to follow its orders, including the following:
(1) deem the matter or any other designated facts to be established in accordance with the claim or defense of the party obtaining the order;
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(2) prohibit the disobedient party from supporting or opposing designated claims or defenses or from introducing designated matters into evidence;
(3) stay further proceedings until the order is obeyed;
(4) dismiss all or part of the action, strike all or part of the pleadings, or render judgment by default on all or part of the action;
(5) order the party or the attorney to pay the reasonable costs, expenses, and attorney fees, caused by the failure; and
(6) instruct the jury regarding an adverse inference.
(c) Motion for costs, expenses and attorney fees on failure to admit. If a party fails to admit the genuineness of a document or the truth of a matter as requested under Rule 36, and if the party requesting the admissions proves the genuineness of the document or the truth of the matter, the party requesting the admissions may file a motion for an order requiring the other party to pay the reasonable costs, expenses and attorney fees incurred in making that proof. The court must enter the order unless it finds that:
(1) the request was held objectionable pursuant to Rule 36(a);
(2) the admission sought was of no substantial importance;
(3) there were reasonable grounds to believe that the party failing to admit might prevail on the matter;
(4) that the request was not proportional under Rule 26(b)(3); or
(5) there were other good reasons for the failure to admit.
(d) Motion for sanctions for failure of party to attend deposition. If a party or an officer, director, or managing agent of a party or a person designated under Rule 30(b)(6) to testify on behalf of a party fails to appear before the officer taking the deposition after service of the notice, any other party may file a motion for sanctions under paragraph (b). The failure to appear may not be excused on the ground that the discovery sought is objectionable unless the party failing to appear has filed a statement of discovery issues under paragraph (a).
(e) Failure to preserve evidence. Nothing in this rule limits the inherent power of the court to take any action authorized by paragraph (b) if a party destroys, conceals, alters, tampers with, or fails to preserve a document, tangible item, electronic data, or other evidence in violation of a duty. Absent exceptional circumstances, a court may not impose sanctions under these rules on a party for failing to provide electronically stored information lost as a result of the routine, good-faith operation of an electronic information system.

Amendment History

Amended effective Jan. 1, 1987; November 1, 1999; November 1, 2000; April 1, 2002; November 1, 2007; November 1, 2011; December 13, 2011; April 1, 2013; May 1, 2015; May 1, 2021; November 1, 2025.

Advisory Committee Notes

The 2011 amendments to Rule 37 make two principal changes. First, the amended Rule 37 consolidates provisions for motions for a protective order (formerly set forth in Rule 26(c)) with provisions for motions to compel. Second, the amended Rule 37 incorporates the new Rule 26 standard of “proportionality” as a principal criterion on which motions to compel or for a protective order should be evaluated. Paragraph (a) adopts the expedited procedures for statements of discovery issues formerly found in Rule 4-502 of the Code of Judicial Administration. Statements of discovery issues replace discovery motions, and paragraph (a) governs unless the judge orders otherwise.

Plain-English Summary

Utah handles discovery disputes through a statement of discovery issues rather than a conventional motion. Any party, or a person from whom discovery is sought, can ask a judge to enter an order on a discovery issue — failing to disclose under Rule 26, extraordinary discovery under Rule 26, a subpoena under Rule 45, protection from discovery, or compelling a party to make full and complete disclosure. The statement itself is capped at four pages, not counting permitted attachments, and has to lay out, in order, the relief sought and its grounds, a certification that the filer tried in good faith to work things out with the other side before involving the court, a statement about proportionality under Rule 26(b)(3), a discovery-budget certification if extraordinary discovery is at issue, and, where relevant, proof that a subpoena-related objection was served on the affected non-party. Any other party has seven days to file an objection, also capped at four pages, and a person subject to a subpoena who objected under Rule 45(e)(4) can object to the statement too. The only attachment allowed is a copy of the disclosure, request, or response at issue, and each side has to file a proposed order along with its statement or objection. Once the objection window closes, either side may, and the filer must, request a decision under Rule 7(g); the court then decides on the papers, holds a hearing (preferably remote, consistent with Rule 43(b)'s safeguards), or orders further briefing.

The range of orders a court can enter is broad: barring or compelling discovery, limiting its terms or methods, restricting who's present, protecting trade secrets or confidential information, controlling how sealed material or simultaneous exchanges are handled, delaying a question until later in the case, and allocating the costs, expenses, and fees of discovery as justice requires — including ordering a party to pay the other side's reasonable costs and fees if the party, witness, or attorney didn't act in good faith or took a position that wasn't substantially justified. A statement of discovery issues can ask for those costs and fees, but not for sanctions, and filing one doesn't pause or extend the clock on standard discovery.

Separately, when a party violates a discovery order, the court can impose sanctions unless the failure was substantially justified: deeming facts established against the disobedient party, barring that party from supporting or opposing designated claims or defenses or from introducing certain evidence, staying the case until the order is obeyed, dismissing or striking all or part of the action or entering default judgment, ordering payment of reasonable costs and fees caused by the failure, or instructing the jury on an adverse inference.

Rule 37 also connects to Rule 36. If a party denies the genuineness of a document or the truth of a matter under a request for admission, and the requesting party later proves it true, the requesting party can move for the reasonable costs and fees spent proving it — and the court has to grant that motion unless the denial was covered by a valid objection under Rule 36(a), the admission sought wasn't substantially important, the denying party had reasonable grounds to believe it might prevail, the request wasn't proportional under Rule 26(b)(3), or some other good reason excuses the failure to admit.

If a party, or an officer, director, managing agent, or a person designated under Rule 30(b)(6) to testify for a party, fails to show up for a properly noticed deposition, the other side can move for sanctions under this rule — and the absent party can't excuse the no-show by claiming the discovery was objectionable unless a statement of discovery issues was already on file. Separately, nothing in Rule 37 limits a court's inherent power to sanction a party that destroys, conceals, alters, tampers with, or otherwise fails to preserve evidence in violation of a duty to keep it, though absent exceptional circumstances, a court can't sanction a party for electronically stored information lost through the routine, good-faith operation of an electronic system.

The Advisory Committee Notes describe the 2011 overhaul of this rule as folding the old protective-order motion practice into the same rule as motions to compel, and building in the proportionality standard adopted for Rule 26 as a central factor in resolving both. The expedited statement-of-discovery-issues procedure in section (a) replaced the state's prior discovery-motion practice and governs discovery disputes unless a judge orders otherwise.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I ask a Utah court to resolve a discovery dispute?

By filing a statement of discovery issues, capped at four pages, describing the relief sought, certifying a good-faith attempt to resolve the dispute without court involvement, and addressing proportionality. This procedure replaces ordinary discovery motions.

How long does the other side have to respond to a statement of discovery issues?

Seven days to file an objection, also capped at four pages.

Do I have to try to work things out before filing a statement of discovery issues?

Yes. The statement must certify that the filer conferred, or tried in good faith to confer, with the other affected parties before asking the court to step in.

Can a statement of discovery issues include a request for sanctions?

No. It may include a request for costs, expenses, and attorney fees, but not a request for sanctions.

What sanctions can a Utah court impose for violating a discovery order?

Deeming facts established, barring the disobedient party from supporting or opposing certain claims or introducing certain evidence, staying the case, dismissing or striking pleadings or entering default judgment, ordering payment of costs and fees, or giving an adverse-inference jury instruction — unless the failure was substantially justified.

Can I recover attorney fees if the other side denied something I later proved true?

Often, yes. If a party denies a request for admission and the requesting party later proves the matter true, the court must order payment of the costs of proving it unless one of several exceptions applies, such as a valid objection or a lack of substantial importance.

What happens if a company representative doesn't show up for a deposition?

The other side can move for sanctions under Rule 37(b), and the absence can't be excused as objectionable discovery unless a statement of discovery issues was already on file.

Does filing a statement of discovery issues pause the discovery deadlines?

No. A statement of discovery issues does not suspend or toll the time to complete standard discovery.

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
Also known as: statement of discovery issues utahdiscovery sanctions utahmotion to compel discovery utahutah rule 37failure to attend deposition sanctions utahspoliation of evidence utahfailure to admit sanctions utah