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What Is the Discovery Phase in Personal Injury Cases?

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Loyda Gomez
Written byLoyda GomezParalegal & Office ManagerB.A.Sc., Political Science & Government, John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY), 22+ years at The Orlow Firm, Bilingual: English and Spanish

Updated: June 23, 2026 · 13 min read

The discovery phase in a personal injury case is the formal pre-trial process where both sides gather and exchange evidence about the accident and injuries. In New York, this includes written questions (interrogatories), document demands, and sworn testimony called an Examination Before Trial (EBT). Discovery usually lasts six months to one year in New York City cases.

Have you just filed a personal injury lawsuit in New York, or are you about to? Discovery is the part of the case where most of the real work happens. It is where your medical records, the defendant's account of the accident, witness statements, and surveillance footage all come to light. The Orlow Firm has guided injured New Yorkers through discovery in Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Bronx courts for more than 40 years. One thing stays consistent: clients who understand the process feel far more in control of their own case.

New York has its own vocabulary and its own rules for discovery. The state calls a deposition an "Examination Before Trial," or EBT. The framework is set by Article 31 of the Civil Practice Law and Rules (CPLR) and by the Uniform Rules for the trial courts. Knowing this language and these timelines tells you what to expect at each step.

Why Discovery Matters for Your Personal Injury Case

Discovery exists so that neither side walks into trial blind. Without it, a trial would be a guessing game. And that guessing game would fall hardest on the injured person, who carries the burden of proving the case. Discovery forces both sides to put their evidence on the table before anyone steps in front of a jury.

It also levels the playing field. A defendant backed by a large insurance company cannot simply hide the records that matter. Under CPLR § 3101(a), New York requires "full disclosure of all matter material and necessary in the prosecution or defense of an action." That is a broad obligation, not an optional courtesy. The other side generally must turn over relevant records, even when those records hurt their position.

Most personal injury cases are resolved through what comes out of discovery. A thorough process surfaces the medical evidence, security camera footage, witness testimony, and corporate records that support a fuller recovery. The strength of that evidence shapes whether a case settles, for how much, and whether it heads to trial at all.

How Discovery Begins in New York: The Preliminary Conference

Discovery does not start the moment you file a lawsuit. It formally begins at the Preliminary Conference. This is a short court appearance, or in some cases a written agreement between the attorneys. It usually takes place 45 to 90 days after the defendant files an answer.

At the preliminary conference, the judge or judicial hearing officer sets a discovery schedule. This schedule contains deadlines for each step: serving document demands and interrogatories, conducting the EBTs, exchanging expert disclosure, and finally filing the Note of Issue. The Note of Issue is the document filed at the close of discovery that tells the court the case is trial-ready.

These deadlines carry real weight. Missing a court-ordered discovery deadline in New York City can lead to sanctions, preclusion of evidence, or in serious cases dismissal. Courts schedule follow-up conferences to keep both sides on track. They generally do not look kindly on a party that ignores the calendar.

The Main Discovery Tools in a New York Personal Injury Case

New York gives both sides several distinct tools to gather evidence. In a typical personal injury action, the defendant often serves interrogatories, document demands, and a deposition notice together rather than one at a time. Here is what each tool does.

Interrogatories (Written Questions)

Interrogatories are written questions that one party sends to the other. The answers must be in writing and sworn under oath. Common topics include the details of the accident, prior injuries, medical treatment history, employment and lost wages, and insurance coverage.

New York limits each side to 25 interrogatories, including subparts, without first getting the court's permission, under 22 NYCRR § 202.20. The response deadline is generally 20 days after service under CPLR § 3133, plus any applicable mailing period. That is much shorter than the 30-day window many people expect from federal cases. The 20-day clock surprises a lot of clients, which is why your attorney prepares these answers with you well before they are due.

Document Demands (Requests for Production)

A document demand is a formal written request for documents, records, photographs, and electronic data. The most common demands in personal injury cases cover medical records, HIPAA authorizations, police and accident reports, surveillance video, insurance policies, employment records, and any history of prior claims.

Electronic evidence is squarely covered. New York courts require parties to preserve and produce relevant emails, text messages, photos, and digital files. Destroying that evidence can trigger sanctions under CPLR § 3126. There is no fixed cap on the number of document demands. But a party faced with an overbroad request can ask the court for a protective order limiting it under CPLR § 3103.

Examination Before Trial (EBT / Deposition)

The Examination Before Trial is usually the most important discovery event in any New York personal injury case. An EBT is sworn, recorded testimony given before a court reporter, outside of court. It carries the same legal weight as testimony given in front of a judge and jury.

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This video walks through the process of filing an NYC car accident lawsuit, including the litigation steps that follow filing — such as discovery, depositions, and the path to settlement or trial.

Under 22 NYCRR § 202.20-b, each side may take up to 10 depositions, and each deposition is limited to 7 hours per witness. A court can extend that for good cause. The people most often examined in a personal injury EBT are the injured plaintiff, the defendant or defendants, eyewitnesses, treating doctors, and expert witnesses.

Both attorneys can object during the questioning. But the witness generally still has to answer unless the question reaches into privileged territory. The transcript matters long after the EBT ends. It can be used at trial to highlight inconsistencies or to refresh a witness's memory. Consistency between what you say at your EBT and what you say at trial is one of the most important things to your credibility. That is exactly why we treat thorough EBT preparation as essential, not optional.

Requests for Admission

A request for admission asks the other side to admit or deny a specific fact in writing. When a fact is admitted, it is removed from dispute. This narrows the issues for trial and cuts down on litigation cost. For example, if the defendant admits owning the property where a slip and fall happened, that ownership question no longer needs to be proven.

Independent Medical Examinations (IMEs)

Defendants in personal injury cases routinely demand an Independent Medical Examination. This is a physical examination of the injured plaintiff by a doctor the defendant selects. IMEs are common in New York City cases. The findings are frequently disputed and often become a point of contention between competing experts at trial. Your attorney should walk you through what to expect before you attend.

Expert Disclosure

Before trial, each side must disclose its expert witnesses, their qualifications, and the substance of the opinions they intend to offer. Expert testimony is common in personal injury cases. Medical experts speak to the nature of injuries and prognosis, accident reconstruction experts address how a collision occurred, and economists calculate lost earnings.

How Long Does Discovery Take in a Personal Injury Case?

Discovery in a New York personal injury case usually takes anywhere from a few months to well over a year. It depends on how complex the case is.

  • Simple cases: generally 3 to 6 months
  • Complex cases (multiple parties, serious injuries, or disputed liability): often 6 to 18 months or longer

Each New York City borough runs its own court procedures, and those procedures affect the pace:

  • Queens County: uses Compliance Conferences (CSCP-1, CSCP-2, CSCP-3), frequently held virtually, with parties emailing signed stipulations when discovery is on schedule.
  • Manhattan (New York County): applies a 12-month standard or 15-month complex discovery deadline. The clock runs from the filing of the Request for Judicial Intervention under its Differentiated Case Management system.
  • Brooklyn (Kings County): runs a multi-part system that moves a case from the Preliminary Conference Part to the Central Compliance Part and then the Final Compliance Part.
  • Bronx County: uses a Designated Discovery Part and requires parties to try informal resolution of disputes before filing a formal motion, with sanctions available for noncompliance.
  • New York City Civil Court (claims under $50,000): sets a Note of Issue deadline at the Preliminary Conference.

Several things commonly stretch discovery out: missing evidence, uncooperative defendants or insurers, medical disputes that require multiple expert opinions, and fights over electronically stored information. Knowing how a specific borough actually operates makes a real difference in keeping a case moving. Our main office sits in Flushing. Our deep roots in Queens court practice, where Adam Orlow is a former President of the Queens County Bar Association, help us anticipate the local rhythm rather than react to it.

What Happens If the Other Side Refuses to Cooperate?

When a party fails to respond to discovery demands, the requesting side can file a motion to compel compliance. New York gives courts real authority to enforce discovery. Under CPLR § 3126, a court can impose penalties for willful non-disclosure. Those penalties include financial sanctions, striking pleadings, precluding evidence, or even striking the answer entirely. That last step can open the door to a default judgment.

New York City courts take these violations seriously. A defendant who hides records or fails to show up for a scheduled EBT can face genuine consequences. For an injured plaintiff, that matters. The discovery process has teeth, and a reluctant defendant cannot simply run out the clock.

What Discovery Means for Your Settlement

Discovery changes the entire tone of settlement negotiations, because it moves both sides from speculation to documented fact. Before the discovery phase, a defendant's insurer can dismiss a claim as exaggerated. After discovery, that same insurer has seen the medical records, the deposition transcripts, and the evidence of liability.

A clear medical record showing permanent injury, supported by your own doctor's rebuttal of the defense IME, strengthens a settlement demand considerably. Deposition testimony that locks in the defendant's account of events gives you a strong edge if that account suddenly shifts at trial. Insurers tend to evaluate settlement far more seriously after the EBTs, once they know what a jury would actually hear.

Strong evidence of liability combined with well-documented damages puts an injured plaintiff in a much better negotiating position. Cases with thin or incomplete discovery are simply harder to value. That is one of the main reasons a thorough discovery phase, even when it takes time, works in the injured person's favor.

How to Prepare for Your Role in Discovery

You are not a bystander during discovery. A few habits make a real difference in how smoothly your case moves.

  • Keep everything related to your injury. Save medical bills, prescriptions, out-of-pocket expense receipts, pay stubs documenting lost wages, and any written communication with insurers.
  • Preserve digital evidence. Photos of the scene and texts about the accident can matter. Be cautious with social media, since defense counsel may seek it and a casual post can be taken out of context.
  • Answer interrogatories carefully with your attorney. Your responses become part of the permanent record, so accuracy matters more than speed.
  • Be honest and thorough at your EBT. Inconsistencies between your deposition and your trial testimony can damage your credibility. It is fine to say "I don't know" or "I don't remember" when that is the truth. Guessing is what gets witnesses into trouble.
  • Treat the EBT seriously. Dress appropriately and stay composed. Defense attorneys often prepare reports on a plaintiff's demeanor for the insurance adjuster.
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This video explains trial procedures at The Orlow Firm, providing context for where discovery fits in the overall personal injury litigation process — from filing through to trial.

Related Questions

What is the difference between an EBT and a deposition in New York?

There is no practical difference. They are the same thing. New York courts simply use the term "Examination Before Trial," or EBT, for what most other states call a deposition. Both refer to sworn, recorded out-of-court testimony taken before a court reporter, and both carry the same legal weight at trial.

How many interrogatories are allowed in a New York personal injury case?

Each side is limited to 25 interrogatories, including all subparts, without the court's permission, under 22 NYCRR § 202.20. A party that needs to exceed that number must ask the court to allow it. Courts will grant additional interrogatories where the case genuinely requires them.

What is a Note of Issue in a New York personal injury lawsuit?

The Note of Issue is the document filed at the end of discovery to tell the court the case is ready for trial. Filing it signals that the parties have completed (or are nearly finished with) the exchange of evidence, and it places the case on the trial calendar. The discovery schedule set at the preliminary conference includes the deadline to file it.

What happens after discovery ends in a personal injury case?

Once discovery closes and the Note of Issue is filed, the case moves toward trial. Many cases settle during this window, often after both sides have evaluated the full evidentiary record. If the case does not settle, the parties may file pre-trial motions, attend a settlement conference, and ultimately proceed to trial.


Sources & Official Resources

New York Laws Cited

  1. CPLR § 3101 — Scope of Disclosure (Full Disclosure of Material and Necessary Matter)
  2. CPLR § 3126 — Penalties for Failure to Disclose
  3. CPLR § 3103 — Protective Orders in Discovery
  4. CPLR § 3133 — Service of Answers or Objections to Interrogatories (20-Day Deadline)

Court Rules Cited 5. 22 NYCRR § 202.20 — Interrogatories (Limit of 25) 6. 22 NYCRR § 202.20-b — Limitations on Depositions (10 Depositions, 7 Hours Per Witness)

Helpful Resources 7. Queens County Bar Association — Past Presidents


Contact The Orlow Firm

If you or someone you love has been injured in New York City and your case is heading into discovery, knowing what to expect is an important first step. The same is true if you have not yet filed but want to understand the road ahead. The Orlow Firm has guided injured New Yorkers through the discovery process in Queens, Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the Bronx for more than 40 years.

Call (646) 647-3398 for a free consultation. We work on contingency. You pay nothing unless we win.

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This article provides general information and is not legal advice. Every case is different. Contact an attorney to discuss your specific situation.

The Following People Contributed to This Page

Loyda Gomez
Written byParalegal & Office ManagerB.A.Sc., Political Science & Government, John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY), 22+ years at The Orlow Firm, Bilingual: English and Spanish

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