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Rule 43.Taking of testimony

Group 6: Trials · Last amended July 9, 2024 · Last verified July 13, 2026

In one sentenceRule 43 governs how testimony and evidence come in at trial and on motions, addressing oral testimony and its remote-testimony exception, oaths, affidavits on motions, examining an adverse party or managing agent, an attorney testifying as a witness, transcripts as evidence, and juror questions to witnesses.

Full Text of Rule 43

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(a) Testimony.
(1) Generally. In all trials the testimony of witnesses shall be taken orally in open court, unless otherwise directed by the court or provided by rule or statute. Except as provided in CR 43(f)(1), the court may permit, with appropriate safeguards, testimony by remote means if the parties agree and the court approves, or if the court determines the purposes of CR 1 will be served. In determining whether testimony should be allowed by remote means per CR 1, the court may consider whether the witness is subject to a trial subpoena, whether there will be any prejudice to any party or the witness if testimony by remote means is permitted, the witness’ access to technology that allows the witness to be seen and heard, and the court’s ability to facilitate remote testimony. Advance notice of a party’s intention to use remote testimony must be given no less than 10 days prior to trial, absent good cause shown.
(2) Multiple examinations. When two or more attorneys are upon the same side trying a case, the attorney conducting the examination of a witness shall continue until the witness is excused from the stand; and all objections and offers of proof made during the examination of such witness shall be made or announced by the attorney who is conducting the examination or cross examination.
(b) and (c) [Reserved. See ER 103 and 611.] (d) Oaths of witnesses.
(1) Administration. The oaths of all witnesses in the superior court
(A) shall be administered by the judge;
(B) shall be administered to each witness individually; and
(2) Applicability. This rule shall not apply to civil ex parte proceedings or default divorce cases and in such cases the manner of swearing witnesses shall be as each superior court may prescribe.
(3) Affirmation in lieu of oath. Whenever under these rules an oath is required to be taken, a solemn affirmation may be accepted in lieu thereof. (e) Evidence on motions.
(1) Generally. When a motion is based on facts not appearing of record the court may hear the matter on affidavits presented by the respective parties, but the court may direct that the matter be heard wholly or partly on oral testimony or depositions. Oral testimony may be taken by remote means.
(2) For injunctions, etc. On application for injunction or motion to dissolve an injunction or discharge an attachment, or to appoint or discharge a receiver, the notice thereof shall designate the kind of evidence to be introduced on the hearing. If the application is to be heard on affidavits, copies thereof must be served by the moving party upon the adverse party at least 3 days before the hearing. Oral testimony shall not be taken on such hearing unless permission of the court is first obtained and notice of such permission served upon the adverse party at least 3 days before the hearing. This rule shall not be construed as pertaining to applications for restraining orders or for appointment of temporary receivers.
(f) Adverse party as witness.
(1) Party or managing agent as adverse witness. A party, or anyone who at the time of the notice is an officer, director, or other managing agent (herein collectively referred to as “managing agent”) of a public or private corporation, partnership or association which is a party to an action or proceeding may be examined at the instance of any adverse party. Attendance of such deponent or witness may be compelled solely by notice (in lieu of a subpoena) given in the manner prescribed in rule 30(b)(1) to opposing counsel of record. Notices for the attendance of a party or of a managing agent at the trial shall be given not less than 10 days before trial pursuant to CR 6. For good cause shown in the manner prescribed in rule 26(c), the court may make orders for the protection of the party or managing agent to be examined.
(2) Effect of discovery, etc. A party who has served interrogatories to be answered by the adverse party or who has taken the deposition of an adverse party or of the managing agent of an adverse party shall not be precluded for that reason from examining such adverse party or managing agent at the trial. Matters admitted by the adverse party or managing agent in interrogatory answers, deposition testimony, or trial testimony are not conclusively established and may be rebutted.
(3) Refusal to attend and testify; Penalties. If a party or a managing agent refuses to attend and testify before the officer designated to take the party’s deposition or at the trial after notice served as prescribed in rule 30(b)(1), the complaint, answer, or reply of the party may be stricken and judgment taken against the party, and the contumacious party or managing agent may also be proceeded against as in other cases of contempt. This rule shall not be construed:
(A) to compel any person to answer any question where such answer might tend to be incriminating;
(B) to prevent a party from using a subpoena to compel the attendance of any party or managing agent to give testimony by deposition or at the trial; nor
(C) to limit the applicability of any other sanctions or penalties provided in rule 37 or otherwise for failure to attend and give testimony.
(g) Attorney as witness. If any attorney offers to be a witness on behalf of the attorney’s client and gives evidence on the merits, the attorney shall not argue the case to the jury, unless by permission of the court.
(h) Report or transcript as evidence. Whenever the testimony of a witness at a trial or hearing which was reported is admissible in evidence at a later trial, it may be proved by the certified transcript thereof.
(i) [Reserved. See ER 804.]
(j) Report of proceedings in retrial of nonjury cases. In the event a cause has been remanded by the court for a new trial or the taking of further testimony, and such cause shall have been tried without a jury, and the testimony in such cause shall have been taken in full and used as the report of proceedings upon review, either party upon the retrial of such cause or the taking of further testimony therein shall have the right, provided the court shall so order after an application on 10 days’ notice to the opposing party or parties, to submit said report of proceedings as the testimony in said cause upon its second hearing, to the same effect as if the witnesses called by either party in the earlier hearing had been called, sworn, and testified in the further hearing; but no party shall be denied the right to submit other or further testimony upon such retrial or further hearing, and the party having the right of cross examination shall have the privilege of subpoenaing any witness whose testimony is contained in such report of proceedings for further cross examination.
(k) Juror questions for witnesses. The court shall permit jurors to submit to the court written questions directed to witnesses. Counsel shall be given an opportunity to object to such questions in a manner that does not inform the jury that an objection was made. The court shall establish procedures for submitting, objecting to, and answering questions from jurors to witnesses. The court may rephrase or reword questions from jurors to witnesses. The court may refuse on its own motion to allow a particular question from a juror to a witness.

Amendment History

Adopted May 5, 1967, effective July 1, 1967; amended, adopted Aug. 9, 1976, effective Jan. 1, 1977; amended, adopted Dec. 19, 1978, effective April 2, 1979; amended June 2, 1988, effective Sept. 1, 1988; amended, effective Oct. 1, 2002; amended, effective September 1, 2006; amended June 3, 2010, effective September 1, 2010; amended, effective April 28, 2015; amended, effective September 1, 2015; amended, effective February 1, 2021; amended June 7, 2024, effective July 9, 2024.

Plain-English Summary

Rule 43 covers the mechanics of putting evidence before the court once a case reaches trial or a contested motion. As a baseline, witness testimony at trial is taken orally in open court, but the rule now allows remote testimony with appropriate safeguards if the parties agree and the court approves, or if the court finds that permitting it serves the just, speedy, and inexpensive resolution of the action. In deciding that question the court can weigh whether the witness is under a trial subpoena, whether any party or the witness would be prejudiced, whether the witness has the technology needed to be seen and heard, and whether the court can facilitate it, and a party who wants to use remote testimony generally has to give notice at least ten days before trial. When two attorneys share one side of a case, only one of them may examine or cross-examine a given witness from start to finish, including handling the objections and offers of proof tied to that witness.

Several subsections deal with how facts get established outside live trial testimony. Oaths are administered by the judge, individually to each witness, except in ex parte civil proceedings or default divorce cases, where the court sets its own practice, and an affirmation can always substitute for an oath. On motions, the court can decide disputed facts on affidavits, or direct that the matter be heard wholly or partly through oral testimony or depositions, and oral testimony on a motion may itself be given remotely. Applications for an injunction, a motion to dissolve one, or a motion to appoint or discharge a receiver come with their own notice requirements: the notice has to say what kind of evidence will be used, affidavits have to be served at least three days ahead if that is the chosen method, and oral testimony at such a hearing needs the court's advance permission plus three days' notice to the other side, though none of this reaches applications for restraining orders or temporary receivers.

The rule gives a party the right to call an adverse party, or an officer, director, or other managing agent of an adverse corporate or associational party, as a witness, with attendance compelled by notice rather than a subpoena, and trial attendance notices due at least ten days ahead. Having already deposed that person or served interrogatories does not stop a party from also examining them at trial, and admissions made along the way in interrogatory answers, depositions, or trial testimony are not treated as conclusively established, they can still be rebutted. A party or managing agent who refuses to attend and testify risks having pleadings stricken and judgment entered, on top of ordinary contempt exposure, though nothing in the rule forces self-incriminating testimony, blocks the use of an actual subpoena, or displaces the sanctions available under Rule 37.

The remaining subsections are narrower but still practical. An attorney who takes the stand and testifies on the merits of the client's own case cannot then argue that case to the jury without the court's permission. A certified transcript can prove what a witness said at an earlier trial or hearing when that testimony is admissible at a later one, and on the retrial of a case that was tried to the court alone, the earlier verbatim testimony can, with court approval on ten days' notice, stand in for live testimony at the second hearing, without cutting off either side's right to offer additional testimony or to cross-examine on the earlier record. Finally, the rule requires the court to let jurors submit written questions for witnesses, with counsel getting a chance to object outside the jury's hearing, and the court retains discretion to rephrase or decline to ask a particular juror question.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can trial testimony be given remotely under Rule 43?

Yes, with appropriate safeguards, if the parties agree and the court approves, or if the court determines that remote testimony serves the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of the action. The court weighs factors like whether the witness is under subpoena, potential prejudice, the witness's access to adequate technology, and whether the court can facilitate it, and a party generally must give at least ten days' notice before trial.

If two attorneys represent the same party, can they split the examination of one witness?

No. The attorney who begins examining a witness must continue through that witness's entire time on the stand, including handling objections and offers of proof tied to that witness's testimony.

How does a party compel an adverse party or a managing agent to testify?

Attendance can be compelled solely by notice, given the way notice is given for a deposition, rather than by subpoena. Notice for trial attendance must be served at least ten days before trial. If the party or managing agent still refuses to attend and testify, the court may strike that party's pleadings and enter judgment, in addition to contempt proceedings.

Does deposing an adverse party beforehand prevent examining that party again at trial?

No. Having taken a deposition or served interrogatories on an adverse party or their managing agent does not preclude examining them again at trial, and prior admissions in interrogatory answers, depositions, or trial testimony are not conclusive, they remain subject to rebuttal.

Can an attorney testify as a witness in a case the attorney is trying?

Yes, but if the attorney testifies on the merits, that attorney cannot argue the case to the jury unless the court permits it.

What happens to testimony from an earlier trial if a nonjury case is retried?

If the earlier testimony was taken in full as part of the record on review, either party can ask the court, on ten days' notice to the other side, to let that report of proceedings stand in as testimony at the retrial, as though the same witnesses had been called and sworn again. Neither party loses the right to offer further testimony or to cross-examine on the strength of the earlier record.

Are jurors allowed to ask questions of witnesses in Washington civil trials?

Yes. The court must permit jurors to submit written questions directed to witnesses. Counsel can object to a question without the jury learning an objection was made, and the court can rephrase a juror's question or decline to ask it.

What notice is required before an affidavit-based hearing on an injunction application?

The notice of the application must state what kind of evidence will be used. If it will be heard on affidavits, copies must be served on the other side at least three days before the hearing, and oral testimony at that hearing is not permitted unless the court grants permission in advance and the other side gets three days' notice of that permission.

Source & verification. Rule text and amendment history are reproduced verbatim from the Washington Superior Court Civil Rules, adopted by the Supreme Court of Washington. Last verified July 13, 2026. · Official source
Also known as: remote testimony Washington trialoath of witness civil trialexamining adverse party at trialattorney as witness rulejuror questions to witnessesCR 43