Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-cand-3_08-cv-05167/USCOURTS-cand-3_08-cv-05167-6/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 890
Nature of Suit: Other Statutory Actions
Cause of Action: Petition for limitation of liability

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United States District Court

For the Northern District of California

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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

 IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPLAINT 

OF SORTWELL, INC. dba Amnav

Maritime Services,

 /

No C 08-5167 VRW

PRETRIAL SCHEDULING ORDER 

Counsel for the parties in the above-entitled action appeared on April 1, 2010 for a 

Case Management Conference, pursuant Civil LR 16 and FRCP 16. It was therein

determined that: 

Expert Disclosure: No testimony pursuant to FRE 701-702 will be permitted unless

the party offering such testimony has complied with the following: On or before 45 days

before trial or, if for the purpose of rebuttal, 30 days after disclosure by another party, the

party has served upon all other parties a complete statement of all opinions or inferences to

which the witness is expected to testify and all facts or data upon which the expert relied in

forming these opinions or inferences, FRE 705, together with any writings, recordings or

photographs used by the expert opinion witness and a list of all other legal proceedings in

which the witness has given testimony or a sworn statement during the preceding five

years.

Experts will be bound by the opinions and inferences expressed in their statements

and will not be permitted to offer new matter at trial. 

Pretrial Conference: The Court will conduct a Pretrial Conference on May 19,

2011 at 3:30 P.M. Trial counsel shall attend this conference. 

Trial dates: Trial will begin on (Not set) at 8:30 A.M. in Courtroom 6. Trial shall be

conducted in a manner consistent with the undersigned judge’s Guidelines for the Conduct

of Trials, appended hereto. 

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United States District Court

For the Northern District of California

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NOT LESS THAN TEN DAYS BEFORE THE PRETRIAL CONFERENCE , the following matters

shall be accomplished: 

a. Trial memoranda. Counsel shall serve and file trial memoranda, not exceeding

fifteen (15) pages.

b. Jury instructions. In cases to be tried to a jury, each party shall serve the court, and 

all others, proposed jury instructions on all substantive issues and on any other

points not covered by the court's standard instructions, which may be found in the

Ninth Circuit Manual of Model Jury Instructions. Instructions shall be brief, clear,

written in plain English, free of argument, and shall be organized in logical fashion

so as to aid juror comprehension. Standard or form instructions, if used, must be

revised to address the particular facts and issues of this case.

 c. Proposed findings of fact. In non-jury cases, each party shall serve the court, and

all others proposed findings of fact on all material issues. Findings shall be brief,

clear, written in plain English and free of pejorative language, conclusions and

argument.

d. Exhibits. Each party shall serve all others with one set of all exhibits, charts,

schedules, summaries and diagrams and other similar documentary materials to be

used at the trial, together with a complete list of all such exhibits. Voluminous

exhibits shall be redacted by elimination of irrelevant portions or use of summaries.

FRE 1006. Each item shall be premarked using the form of mark attached; generally,

exhibits of a plaintiff with numbers, exhibits of a defendant with letters. If there is

more than one party on a side, each party's exhibits shall be designated to indicate

the party on whose behalf the exhibit is offered. 

 No exhibits, including damage exhibits, which have not been disclosed as required

by this paragraph will be received at trial. Counsel shall retain copies of their

respective exhibits until the conclusion of all proceedings, including appeals and

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United States District Court

For the Northern District of California

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other post-trial proceedings.

 e. Witnesses. Each party shall serve all others and file a statement identifying all

persons who the party may call as witnesses and summarizing their testimony. No

witnesses not included in the statement will be permitted to testify at trial and the

testimony of each witness will be limited to the matter set forth in the statement.

f. Designation of discovery excerpts. Each party expecting to use discovery excerpts

as part of its case in chief shall serve and lodge with the court a statement

identifying (1) by witness and page and line, all deposition testimony and (2) by

number and filing date, all interrogatory answers and requests for admission to be

used as part of its direct case. Each interrogatory answer intended to be offered as an

exhibit shall be copied separately and marked as an exhibit.

g. Objections to evidence. Each party anticipating making an objection to any

testimony or exhibits expected to be offered, or wishing to make a motion in limine,

shall serve and file a statement briefly identifying each item objected to and the

ground for the objection. Any response to a motion in limine or objection to

evidence shall be filed and served five days before the pretrial conference.

h. Jury voir dire and verdict forms. Each party shall submit proposed questions for

jury voir dire and a proposed form of verdict at the pretrial conference.

Copies. Each of the foregoing documents filed or lodged with the court must be

accompanied by a copy for use in the judge's chambers. In addition, one copy of the

witness and exhibit list should be provided to the court reporter.

Transcripts. If transcripts will be requested during or immediately after the trial,

arrangements must be made with the court reporter at least one week before trial

commences.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

________________________________ 

Vaughn R Walker

United States District Chief Judge

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United States District Court

For the Northern District of California

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2

GUIDELINES FOR THE CONDUCT OF TRIALS

For Trials before the Honorable Vaughn R Walker

These guidelines are provided to trial counsel to facilitate the fair and efficient

conduct of trials in this court and should be accepted in that spirit.

1. Pretrial Submissions and Witness Scheduling. 

Each party's pretrial statement must identify all witnesses the party expects to call

and the exhibits intended to be offered. At least 24 hours beforehand, the party

should advise all other parties of the order in which witnesses are expected to be

called and the exhibits to be offered by each witness.

2. Opening Statements/Closing Arguments. 

An opening statement is simply an objective summary of what counsel expects the

evidence to show. No argument or discussion of the law is permissible. Opening

statements are limited to fifteen minutes and closing arguments to thirty minutes

unless the court expressly grants leave to exceed these limits. Only one lawyer may

open or close for a party and to ensure the credibility of opening statements, the 

lawyer who makes the opening statement must also make the closing argument. 

3. Questioning Witnesses. 

a. Conduct the examination from the lectern. Ask permission to approach the

witness when necessary and return to the lectern as soon practicable. Treat

witnesses with courtesy and respect; do not become familiar.

b. Ask brief, direct and simply stated questions. Cover one point at a time.

Leading questions may be used for background or routine matters. Direct

examination is not a deposition and should not be conducted like one. Go

directly to the point of the witness's testimony. 

c. Cross-examination similarly should consist of brief, simple and clearly stated

questions. 

d. Only one lawyer for each party may examine any one witness. This includes

any objections made during course of trial. 

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United States District Court

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e. Once a witness has been sworn, no lawyer may discuss that witness's

testimony with the witness until the witness has completed testimony and

been excused.

4. Using Depositions

a. The deposition of an adverse party may be used for any purpose. Simply

identify the deposition and page and line numbers and read the relevant

portion. Opposing counsel may then ask to read such additional testimony as

is necessary to complete the context, but this request should be made

immediately to maintain context. An unduly belated request may be denied

as untimely. 

b. The deposition of a witness not a party may be used for impeachment or if the

witness has been shown to be unavailable. For impeachment, allow the

witness to read the designated portion first, ask simply whether the witness

gave that testimony, and then read it. Opposing counsel may immediately

read additional testimony necessary to complete the context.

c. A deposition may also be used to refresh a witness's recollection by showing

the relevant part of the deposition to the witness. After showing the witness

the prior testimony, ask whether the deposition refreshes recollection. If the

answer is affirmative, ask what the witness now recalls. Do not ask the

witness to read from the deposition. If the witness says something along the

lines of “It says here * * *,” be sure to pin down the witness’ present

recollection. If the witness professes no present recollection, pin down what

was the witness’ prior testimony. 

d. NOTE: It is the responsibility of counsel anticipating use of a deposition at

trial to check in advance of trial that the transcript has been made available to

the witness for signature and that the original is delivered to the court by the

first day of trial.

5. Objections

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United States District Court

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a. To make an objection, rise, say "objection" and briefly state the legal ground (e

g "hearsay," "privilege," "irrelevant").

b. Do not make a speech or argument, or summarize evidence, or suggest the

answer to the witness.

c. Where an evidentiary problem is anticipated, bring it to the court's attention in

advance to avoid interrupting the orderly process of trial.

6. Exhibits

a. All exhibits must be marked before the trial starts, using the form of label

following these guidelines. Copies must be provided to opposing counsel and

the court before trial.

b. When offering an exhibit, follow this procedure to the extent applicable

(unless foundation has been stipulated):

Request permission to approach the witness;

Show the witness the document and say: “I show you [a letter] dated ___,

premarked Exhibit ___. Can you identify that document?”

Identification having been made, make your offer as follows: “I offer Exhibit

___.”

NOTE: In some circumstances, of course, additional questions may be

necessary to lay the foundation, but be sure you have laid your foundation

before offering the exhibit.

c. It is the responsibility of counsel to see that all exhibits to be included in the

record are formally offered and ruled on, and that all of the court's copies of

exhibits are in the hands of the clerk. Take nothing for granted.

7. Interrogatories and Requests for Admission

Counsel wishing to place into the record an interrogatory answer or response to

request for admission should prepare a copy of the particular interrogatory or

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request and accompanying response, mark it as an exhibit and offer it. Pleadings and

papers in the court file are not a part of the trial record unless offered as an exhibit

and received into evidence.

8. Conduct of Trial

a. The court expects counsel and the witnesses to be present and ready to

proceed promptly at the appointed hour — normally starting at 8:30 am the

first day of trial. A witness on the stand when a recess is taken should be back

on the stand when the recess ends.

b. Bench conferences should be minimized. Raise anticipated problems at the

start or end of the trial day or during a recess.

c. Have a sufficient number of witnesses available in court to testify so as not run

out of witnesses. Running out of witnesses may be taken by the court as

resting your case.

d. Trials normally are conducted 8:30 am to 4:00 pm Mondays through Fridays

with approximately a one-hour luncheon break. Due to law and motion

hearing on Thursdays, the trial schedule on that day generally runs from 8:30

am to 12:30 pm. Do not, however, assume that the court will recess on any of

those days unless prior arrangements have been made with the court.

e. Counsel are expected to cooperate with each other in the scheduling and

production of witnesses. Witnesses may be taken out of order if necessary. 

Every effort should be made to avoid calling a witness twice (as an adverse

witness and later as a party's witness).

9. Jury Trial

a. When trial is to a jury, counsel should present the case so that the jury can

follow it. Witnesses should be instructed to speak clearly and in plain

language. When documents play an important part, a means of displaying the

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documents to the jury is crucial to juror comprehension. Take advantage of

the court’s evidence presentation facilities. If one party augments these

facilities, that party must offer the use of the augmented facilities to all other

parties. 

b. Jury instructions should be submitted at the pretrial conference but may be

supplemented during the trial. Only those dealing with the particular issues

in the case need be presented. Instructions are to be drafted specifically to

take into account the facts and issues of the particular case, and in plain

language; do not submit copies from form books. Do not submit

argumentative or formula instructions.

c. Do not offer a stipulation in the presence of the jury unless agreement has

previously been reached. Preferably such stipulations should be in writing.

d. In final argument, do not express personal opinions, vouch for your client or

ask jurors to place themselves in the position of a party, or encourage

speculation as to possible consequences of the litigation beyond the evidence

presented.

e. Normally, the court will instruct the jury before closing argument. 

Accordingly, there will be little need to explain the law in the closing

argument although, of course, argument should focus on how the facts as

proved or not fit the legal requirements.

10. General Decorum

a. Colloquy between counsel on the record is not permitted -- all remarks are to

be addressed to the court.

b. Vigorous advocacy does not preclude courtesy to opposing counsel and

witnesses and respect for the court. Undue familiarity with witnesses, parties

or other lawyers (e g, first names) or the court (e g "Judge" or "Sir") on the

record is not appropriate.

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c. Do not engage in distracting activity at counsel table or move about the

courtroom while opposing counsel is arguing or questioning witnesses, or in

other ways cause distraction. Neither counsel nor client while at counsel table

should indicate approval, disapproval or other reactions to any testimony or

argument.

Revised 12/08

Case 3:08-cv-05167-JW Document 39 Filed 04/02/10 Page 9 of 10
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

NORTHERN DISTRICT OF

CALIFORNIA

Case number: 

PLTF/DEFT EXHIBIT NO. _____

Date admitted: ________________

By: ___________________________

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