Rule 80.11.Procedure in expedited actions
Group XI: Special Rules for Certain Actions · Last amended July 11, 2022 · Last verified July 14, 2026
Full Text of Rule 80.11
Notes
Reporter’s Notes: —2022 Order Rule 80.11, originally adopted by the Supreme Court’s order of June 15, effective August 15, 2016, with a sunset date of August 16, 2019, is now made permanent. The original sunset date applied only if the Court took no further action. By order of April 30, 2018, the Court ordered the rule, as amended, to be continued and directed the Advisory Committee on the Rules of Civil Procedure to continue to review its operation and to advise the Court whether it should be further revised or made permanent. If the Court did not order otherwise, the rule would be void and inapplicable in any action commenced after August 31, 2022. See Rule 80.11, History, Editor’s note. The Committee discussed the rule at several recent meetings. A Vermont Bar Association membership survey conducted on behalf of the Committee indicated that, although the expedited action procedure provided by Rule 80.11 is not used extensively, it is generally viewed as useful and effective, with no significant suggestions for revision. After review and discussion of the survey results, the Committee voted unanimously to recommend to the Court that V.R.C.P. 80.11 as presently constituted be promulgated as a permanent rule effective not later than August 31, 2022.
Reporter’s Notes—2018 Amendment: Rule 80.11(e)(3)(B) is amended to change its 15-day time period to 14 days consistent with the simultaneous “day is a day” amendments to V.R.C.P. 6.
Reporter’s Notes—2016 Amendment: Rule 80.11 as added June 15, effective August 15, 2016, is amended to reflect the abrogation and replacement of V.R.C.P. 16.3. New Rule 16.3 significantly simplifies the procedure of the former rule and provides only for mediation, rather than for a variety of alternative dispute resolution methods. The present amendments are intended to reflect those changes by substituting “mediation” for “alternative dispute resolution” wherever it appears and replacing cross-references to former Rule 16.3 with references to the appropriate provisions of the new rule. For clarity and convenience, the paragraph of the original Reporters Notes to V.R.C.P. 80.11 referring to “ADR” under former Rule 16.3 is repeated here with references corrected to substitute “mediation” for the former term and correct cross-references: Unless the parties stipulate as to the matters listed in V.R.C.P. 16.2 and the provisions of Rule 80.11(d) for scheduling mediation, Rule 80.11(b) requires a scheduling conference and scheduling order early in the case to address those matters. Under Rule 80.11(c), there are important limitations on motion practice, including a requirement that the party filing a nondispositive motion must certify that the party has made a good faith attempt to obtain the opposing party’s agreement to the requested relief. Rule 80.11(d) requires parties who have not voluntarily undertaken mediation to engage in mediation in accordance with V.R.C.P. 16.3 but on a tight schedule and under other limitations. Paragraph (d)(4) requires the court to make a specific determination as to whether to require mediation if either or both parties cannot pay its cost.
Reporter’s Notes: Rule 80.11 is added to address the widely recognized problem that the cost and time needed to litigate civil claims are often disproportionate to the value of the cases. Currently, simple nonmonetary claims and any case exceeding the small claims threshold of $5000 must be brought as a civil action under the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure. As a result, the pursuit of potentially meritorious claims and defenses may be discouraged because of the cost entailed, or litigants may represent themselves—a course that is ineffective and imposes significant costs on opposing parties and court resources. The new rule is designed to provide an effective, efficient, and predictable case management process for lower- value or less-complicated cases. Its intent is to make it economically feasible for lawyers to take on these cases and for litigants to be able to afford to hire lawyers. Rule 80.11 will also result in the more efficient conduct of litigation in cases where litigants are self-represented or have limited representation under V.R.C.P. 79.1(h). Making representation both more economical and less time-consuming will increase access to justice. The rule was developed by a committee of the Vermont Bar Association (VBA) working in conjunction with the Civil Division Oversight Committee and the Court’s Advisory Committee on the Rules of Civil Procedure. After an initial comment period and public presentation at the fall 2014 VBA meeting, a draft rule, revised by the VBA committee on the basis of extensive comments received, was sent out for comment at the request of the Court’s Advisory Committee on Rules of Civil Procedure. The present rule incorporates further changes resulting from review by the Advisory Committee after the second comment period. With the adoption of Rule 80.11, Vermont will join several federal district courts and the courts of a number of other states that have developed rules to expedite procedures in less-complicated civil cases. See Inst. for the Advancement of the Am. Legal Sys., A Summary of the Short, Summary, and Expedited Civil Action Programs Around the Country (2015) http://iaals.du.edu/sites/default/files/documents/publications/summary_chart_of_current_sse_programs.pdf [https://perma.cc/N56V-C4C5]. Rule 80.11(a)(1)(A) provides that the expedited procedures apply when a case is expressly designated as an “expedited action” in a complaint alleging that no more than $50,000 is in controversy, exclusive of interest, costs, and attorney’s fees. Subparagraph (B) allows the parties to agree that an action will be commenced and carried on as an expedited action regardless of the amount in controversy, or to agree that an action commenced under the ordinary provisions of the rules may subsequently be designated and carried on as expedited. Subparagraph (C) allows the court, on any party’s motion, to designate an action as expedited regardless of the amount in controversy if designation will advance “the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination” standard of V.R.C.P. 1. Rule 80.11(a)(2)(A) provides that a plaintiff, by filing an action designated as expedited, waives recovery of any damages in excess of $50,000. Subparagraph (B) makes similar provision for the filer of a counterclaim, cross- claim, or third-party claim in response to an expedited filing, subject to the provision of subparagraph (C) that if the filer of an ancillary claim, seeking relief beyond that allowed for application of the rule, so requests in the pleading, the judge will strike the expedited action designation and the action will proceed as an ordinary civil action. Rule 80.11(a)(3) requires that all filings subsequent to designation, whenever and however it occurs, must be clearly labeled “EXPEDITED ACTION.” Paragraph (4) allows the court on motion to remove the action from the expedited process on a showing of good cause—for example that more than $50,000 is in controversy and there is no contrary showing of need for the expeditious process pursuant to subparagraph (1 )(C), or that there is a demonstrable need for procedural steps not permitted by other provisions of Rule 80.11. Note that paragraph (6) provides that the court, for good cause, may make exceptions to deadlines or other limits provided in the rule, subject to a showing of need based on excusable neglect if the request is made after the deadline. See also Rule 80.11(e)(5) (stipulation or motion for additional discovery). These provisions may address specific concerns that might otherwise require removal of the action from expedited status. Rule 80.11(a)(5) provides that the general provisions of the Civil Rules apply to expedited actions unless otherwise provided in, or inconsistent with the rule; however, careful attention should be paid to the significant differences in key procedural areas. Unless the parties stipulate as to the matters listed in V.R.C.P. 16.2 and the provisions of Rule 80.11(d) for scheduling ADR, Rule 80.11(b) requires a scheduling conference and scheduling order early in the case to address those matters. Under Rule 80.11(c), there are important limitations on motion practice, including a requirement that the party filing a nondispositive motion must certify that the party has made a good faith attempt to obtain the opposing party’s agreement to the requested relief. Rule 80.11(d) requires parties who have not voluntarily undertaken ADR to engage in ADR in accordance with V.R.C.P. 16.3 but on a tight schedule and under other limitations. Paragraph (d)(4) requires the court to make a specific determination as to whether to require ADR if either or both parties cannot pay its cost. Rule 80.11(e) imposes significant limits on discovery to minimize its time and cost. Under Rule 80.11(e)(1), all discovery except of retained experts must be completed within 180 days after the last answer is filed. Paragraph (2) requires that initial disclosures like those required under the federal rules must be made within 30 days after the last answer is filed. Similarly, under paragraph (3), automatic disclosures of the identity of retained experts and the substance of their testimony are required. Rule 80.11(e)(4) provides limits on specific forms of discovery: The parties are limited to 15 Rule 33 interrogatories, 15 Rule 34 requests to produce, and 15 Rule 36 requests for admission in each case including discrete subparts. Oral depositions other than of experts are limited to 15 hours total for each party. Expert depositions may be taken within 30 days after disclosure and are limited to three hours each. Rule 80.11(e)(5)(A) allows stipulations for additional discovery within existing deadlines. Under subparagraph (B), the court may extend deadlines or other limitations on additional discovery for good cause as provided in Rule 80.11(a)(6). The foregoing provisions expediting all aspects of pretrial procedure culminate in the requirement of Rule 80.11(f)(1) that all cases must be ready for trial within nine months of the time the answer is filed. Once a case is ready, further provisions of subdivision (f) expedite the trial itself, requiring a pretrial conference covering issues pertaining to trial and mandating the exchange of witness and exhibit lists and copies of exhibits under penalty of preclusion of a witness or exhibit. Objections must be filed seven days prior to trial. Rule 80.11(g) provides that the rule applies to all cases filed after its effective date and that parties to cases pending on that date may jointly stipulate that their cases may go forward under the rule. See subparagraph (a)(1)(B).
Amendment History
Adopted June 15, 2016, eff. Aug. 15, 2016; July 11, 2016, eff. Sept. 12. 2016; Sept. 20, 2017, eff. Jan. 1, 2018; May 9, 2022, eff. July 11, 2022.
Plain-English Summary
Some cases are not worth the cost of a full-blown lawsuit. Rule 80.11 gives parties a faster, cheaper alternative: a case qualifies as an expedited action if the complaint says so and seeks no more than $50,000 in damages, if all parties agree by stipulation, or if the court finds designation would serve everyone's interest in a just, speedy, and inexpensive result. Choosing the $50,000 track means waiving any recovery above that amount, and the same cap applies to counterclaims, cross-claims, and third-party claims unless the claimant asks to have the expedited label removed and proceed as an ordinary case. Every filing after designation must be marked "EXPEDITED ACTION," and the court can remove that designation later for good cause.
The pace is brisk throughout. A scheduling conference must happen within 21 days after the last answer is filed unless the parties have already stipulated to a schedule. Motion briefs are capped at 3,000 words, replies at 1,500, and any nondispositive motion must certify a good-faith attempt to reach agreement first. Mediation must be scheduled within 21 days and completed within 90 days, capped at six hours unless the parties agree to more, with costs split evenly unless a party cannot pay.
Discovery is tightly rationed: 180 days to complete it, initial disclosures due within 30 days, expert disclosures on a set schedule, and hard limits of 15 interrogatories, 15 document requests, 15 admission requests, and 15 total hours of fact-witness depositions per party, with expert depositions capped at three hours. Every case must be ready for trial within 270 days of the last answer, followed by a pretrial conference and an exchange of witness and exhibit lists two weeks before trial. The court can extend or waive any deadline for good cause, and the rule applies to cases filed after its effective date, with pending cases able to opt in by stipulation.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does a case become an expedited action under Rule 80.11?
Three ways: the complaint expressly designates it as expedited and seeks no more than $50,000 in damages, all parties file a joint stipulation to that effect, or the court grants a party's motion finding that designation serves the just, speedy, and inexpensive resolution of the case.
What happens if I designate my case as expedited but later want more than $50,000?
Filing under the $50,000 designation waives recovery above that amount unless the parties have stipulated otherwise. A party seeking more, or nonmonetary relief, in a counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim must ask to have the expedited designation struck so the case proceeds as an ordinary action.
How long do the parties have to complete discovery?
All discovery other than expert disclosures must be completed within 180 days after the last answer is filed, with initial disclosures due within 30 days and specific deadlines for expert reports keyed to the close of fact discovery.
Are there limits on the number of interrogatories, requests, and depositions?
Yes. Each party is limited to 15 interrogatories, 15 requests to produce, and 15 requests for admission, plus a total of 15 hours of oral depositions of parties and fact witnesses, with expert depositions capped at three hours each.
Is mediation mandatory in an expedited action?
Yes, unless the parties have already filed a certificate and report of voluntary mediation. Otherwise mediation must be scheduled within 21 days of the last answer, completed within 90 days, and generally last no more than six hours.