Your deposition is not your 
						opportunity to tell your story, but instead the defense 
						attorney's opportunity to obtain what he or she wants, 
						and only what the attorney wants, from you. Counsel will 
						purposely avoid questions you might want him or her to 
						ask which you think would enhance your claim. Counsel 
						does not want to hear anything about any subjects 
						selected by you. Therefore, be as laconic as possible. 
						Answer as many questions as possible with a yes or no 
						answer, and do not give a narrative unless required.
						
							
							
							
							
							
							    
							Never volunteer any information that is not 
							specifically addressed in the question. Do not tell 
							the examiner where he or she may find the answer, 
							either. At a deposition you should adopt a defensive 
							posture. This is not your opportunity to tell the 
							whole story. It is not your day in court. That will 
							come later, at the trial, when your own attorney 
							asks you questions on direct examination. All you 
							need to do is respond to the questions asked.
							
							 
							
							    
							If any question is unclear, or you are not sure of 
							the answer, you have the right to ask for the 
							question to be rephrased or repeated. You should not 
							guess at any answer. You may add to your answer by 
							saying: “To the best of my recollection . . .”, 
							or“At this time . . .” or “I cannot be certain, but 
							. . . .” Leave the door open for clarification 
							later. If you think of a more accurate answer later 
							in the deposition, be sure to advise the examiner 
							that you want to return to a previous question to 
							make your answer more complete. After the 
							deposition, if you realize that you made a mistake, 
							tell your attorney so he or she can supplement your 
							deposition in the manner allowed in your 
							jurisdiction. 
							
							 
							
							    
							Be extremely careful about answering questions 
							designed to elicit exact details of an event, such 
							as times and distances. For example, in motor 
							vehicle accident cases, defense attorneys are 
							trained to pin down the plaintiff on how many 
							seconds elapsed between the time the plaintiff first 
							saw the other car and the moment of impact, and how 
							many feet the vehicles were apart when the other 
							vehicle was first noticed. Defense counsel wants to 
							give the plaintiff’s answers to these questions to 
							an accident reconstruction expert who will testify 
							at trial that on the basis of the time and distance 
							estimates by the plaintiff, the plaintiff was guilty 
							of inattentive driving or lookout, negligent 
							management and control, or some other violation of 
							the rules of the road. If precise quantitative 
							estimates are not given, defense counsel’s plan may 
							be foiled. In other types of cases, questions 
							calling for the plaintiff’s recollection of exact 
							details of any event are similarly dangerous traps. 
							The plaintiff’s memory of the events should be 
							reviewed in advance of the deposition. A chronology 
							of events should be outlined to the extent possible, 
							but speculation or conjecture concerning precise 
							descriptions, accounts, measurements and timelines 
							should be avoided at all cost. It is far safer to 
							testify in qualitative, rather than quantitative 
							terms, such as “a short time,” or “a short 
							distance,” rather than using precise figures. Even 
							approximations can be damaging if not well thought 
							out in advance. There is nothing wrong with simply 
							stating, “I do not recall.” 
							
							 
							
							    
							Defense counsel will have two purposes for taking 
							your deposition. The first is to obtain the 
							information you will provide on your own behalf at 
							trial, so that counsel is not surprised by anything 
							and can adequately advise the insurer what you will 
							say. Remember that the vast majority of cases are 
							settled before trial, so it is in your interest to 
							answer accurately and completely all questions to 
							the extent that your answers will aid in the 
							settlement negotiations later. The second purpose is 
							to obtain any information that might be used to 
							impeach you in the event that the case goes to 
							trial. Therefore, you should not say anything 
							inconsistent with what is in the medical records, 
							prior statements, or other utterings. You must 
							assume that competent defense counsel has or will 
							obtain before trial your complete criminal arrest 
							and conviction record, credit record, accident 
							claims record, history of motor vehicle accidents, 
							history of worker's compensation claims, medical 
							history, hospital record, life, disability and 
							health insurance applications, civil court record, 
							and any other information obtainable through public 
							or private sources subject to subpoena. Anything 
							you’ve ever said can and will be used against you.
							
		
							 
							
							    
							Counsel will cover at least the following topics in 
							some detail: 
		
							 
							
							    
							Biographical facts; 
							
    Education; 
							
    Employment history; 
							
    Physical exertion category of work prior to accident
    (sedentary, light, medium, heavy or very heavy);  
							
    Skilled or unskilled work history; 
							
    Transferable skills learned; 
							
    Earnings history, with tax returns; 
							
    Prior health and medical history; 
							
    Prior social and recreational facts; 
							
    Events on day of accident, in great detail;
							
    Conversations with adverse party and witnesses on the 
    scene; 
							
    Your role and responsibility for the accident or event, to
    show contributory negligence; 
							
    Injuries sustained;
		
							    
							Chronological medical history subsequent to day of 
							accident, 
    with treatment by each physician;
							
							
							    
							Timetable for acute and chronic stages of your 
							injury;
							
							    
							Prior and subsequent accidents with injuries, if 
							any, of any 
    type (fall down, vehicle, workers 
							compensation, etc.); 
							
							    
							Your view of the nature and extent of disability and 
							
    impairment of each area of the body that was 
							involved; 
							
							    
							Activities affected, including activities of daily 
							living and 
    recreational activities; 
							
							    
							Temporary restrictions imposed by doctors; 
							
							
							    
							Functional capacity evaluations - permanent 
							restrictions 
    imposed by doctors; 
							
							    
							Physical exertion category of post-accident work you 
							are 
    capable of doing with restrictions; 
							
							    
							Transferability of skills from work done prior to 
							injury; 
							
							    
							Time lost from work, with specific dates; 
							
							
							    
							Work history after accident; 
							
							    
							Earnings history after accident, with tax returns;
							
							
    How injuries have affected ability to do basic work 
							activities; 
							
							    
							How injuries have affected earning capacity; 
							 
							
							    
							Future loss of earning capacity; 
							
							    
							Bills incurred and future treatment expected. 
		
							 
							
							    
							You should take another look at your medical 
							records.  You should have copies already.  
							You should also take another look at any statement 
							or answers to interrogatories you may have given.
							 
							
							        
							A typical defense attorney trick is to ask what hurt 
							on a particular doctor visit, such as at the 
							emergency room, and how you would rate the pain on a 
							scale of 1 - 10. Counsel will have the chart on the 
							table. If you say at the deposition that your injury 
							was killing you, and was a 9, but the records say 
							you rated it a 4 on the date of the accident, 
							counsel will know you are exaggerating and will have 
							some grounds for impeachment. 
							 
							
							    
							Go over all these points with your attorney well in 
							advance of the deposition so you are prepared for 
							what lies ahead.