---
name: discovery-dispute-letter
title: Discovery Dispute Resolution Letter
description: Drafts discovery dispute resolution letters documenting meet-and-confer efforts and unresolved issues in U.S. litigation. Use when drafting meet-and-confer letters, discovery conference follow-ups, or pre-motion to compel correspondence during the discovery phase.
author: CaseMark
author_url: https://github.com/CaseMark/skills/tree/main/skills/legal/discovery-dispute-letter
license: Apache-2.0
version: 0.1.0
execution_mode: open
jurisdiction: us
practice: litigation
language: en
tags: [drafting, letter]
---

# Discovery Dispute Resolution Letter

Drafts a court-ready letter that documents meet-and-confer efforts, memorializes agreements, and builds the record for potential motions to compel.

## Required Inputs

1. **Case info** — caption, court, case number, judge, discovery deadline
2. **Conference details** — date, participants, outcomes (if conference held)
3. **Disputed requests** — exact request language, objections raised, compromises discussed
4. **Scheduling order** — discovery cut-off, motion deadlines

## Letter Structure

**Header:** Date, opposing counsel address, Re line with full caption, case number, client name, matter number, discovery cut-off date. Include "Via Email" with address.

**Body sections in order:**

1. **Opening** — Reference conference date/participants, acknowledge agreements, identify remaining disputes. Note motion practice may follow.
2. **Agreements Reached** — Numbered list of compromises with compliance deadlines. Request written confirmation.
3. **Outstanding Disputes** — Organized by discovery method (RFPs, interrogatories, depositions). Use the per-dispute format below.
4. **Deadlines** — Specific response date tied to court schedule. State motion to compel and sanctions consequences.
5. **Closing** — Invite further discussion, propose specific follow-up date/time. Include preservation reminder.
6. **Signature Block** — Name, title, contact info, cc list, attachments (original requests, conference notes, scheduling order).

## Per-Dispute Format

Each disputed item must include all four elements:

1. **Exact Request Language** — quote verbatim as served
2. **Opposing Objection** — quote verbatim
3. **Why Objection Lacks Merit** — cite applicable rules and authority
4. **Proposed Compromise** — narrowed alternative demonstrating reasonableness

## Letter Type Variations

- **Pre-conference agenda** — collaborative tone; outlines issues for conferral; sent before meet-and-confer
- **Post-conference follow-up** — precise, collaborative; memorializes agreements, narrows disputes; sent within 24–48 hours
- **Pre-motion to compel** — firm, formal; final attempt before court involvement; allow response time before filing deadline

## Guidelines

- **Write for the judge** — every sentence may become a motion exhibit; make the client look reasonable
- **Quote exactly** — requests and objections must be verbatim as served
- **Characterize fairly** — describe opposing responses accurately even when inadequate
- **Cite authority** — FRCP 26(b)(1) (proportionality), FRCP 30(a)(1) (depositions), FRCP 33(d) (interrogatories), plus local rules
- **Demonstrate good faith** — show willingness to compromise on scope, timing, or format
- **Pin down follow-up** — always propose a specific callback date/time to prevent indefinite delay
- **Preservation language** — remind of ongoing duty to preserve documents and ESI

## Court-Specific Notes

- **Federal** — Rule 26(f) meet-and-confer required; Rule 26(b)(1) proportionality; magistrate referral; CMO deadlines
- **State** — verify local meet-and-confer requirements; check objection standards and discovery cut-off calculations
- **Complex commercial** — address e-discovery protocols, protective orders, voluminous production, privilege log disputes

## Checklist

- Local meet-and-confer rules satisfied
- Reasonable response deadline provided
- All disputed items identified with exact request language
- Good faith compromise demonstrated for each dispute
- Legal authority cited for contested positions
- Firm but professional tone throughout
- Preservation language included
- Letter is court-exhibit ready
