Litigation
Cal. Litig. 2014, Volume 27, Number 3
Content
- A New Aggregate Litigation Model Emerges - Technology-Driven Mass Actions
- Confidence Before the Court: How to Find It
- Court Filings: Time to Sign Out of the Signature Requirement?
- Editor's Foreword Show and Tell: Food Fight in the Courtroom
- Experiences of a New Lawyer
- From the Section Chair
- Have a Voice! Weighing In On Prospective California Judges Through the Jne Commission
- Letters to the Editor
- Litigation Section Executive Committee Past Chairs
- Masthead
- McDermott On Demand: the Rules of Procedure or the Rule of Law?
- Past Editors-in-Chief
- Recent Activity in Frivolous Appeals
- Summary Contempt and Due Process: England, 1631, California, 1888
- Table of Contents
- To Demur or Not in Slapp Cases: Don't Shoot Yourself in the Foot
- Court Reporters Transcripts in a Digital World: Yesterday's Rules Don't Fit Today's Technology
Court Reporters Transcripts in a Digital World: Yesterday’s Rules Don’t Fit Today’s Technology
By Melinda W. Ebelhar
Did you know that there’s a California statute that forbids you from providing someone else with a copy of a reporter’s transcript? Did you know that there’s a Rule of Court that requires you to provide someone else with a transcript? When you loan a transcript under that rule, you are supposed to "get it back." But how do you "get back" an electronic copy of a transcript?
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