Key Amendments to Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, Effective January 2021

Recent amendments to the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure (TRCP) will significantly impact Texas discovery, expert disclosures and litigation practice. Generally, the amendments further align the TRCP with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Texas Government Code. Outlined below are the key updates, which became effective Jan. 1, 2021, and apply to civil cases filed on or after that date.

  1. Initial, Expert and Pretrial Disclosures Automatically Required. Throughout the amendments governing discovery, references to “requests for” disclosures were replaced or supplemented to note that initial, expert and pretrial disclosures are now automatically required.
  1. Discovery Period Determined by Due Date of Initial Disclosures. Under the amended Level 1 and Level 2 Discovery Control Plans, as set forth in Rules 190.2 and 190.3, the respective discovery periods commence when initial disclosures are due. Under Level 1, the discovery period continues for 180 days from the date the initial disclosures are due. Under Level 2, the discovery period continues until the earlier of 30 days before the date set for trial or nine months after the initial disclosures are due. Further, with respect to the timing and sequence of discovery, amended Rule 192.2 provides that “unless otherwise agreed to by the parties or ordered by the Court, a party cannot serve discovery until after the initial disclosures are due.”
  1. Expedited Actions: Amount in Controversy Increased to $250,000. The statutory limit of lawsuits governed by Rule 169 increased from an aggregate $100,000 or less, including all damages, penalties, costs, expenses, interest and fees, to now encompass “suits in which all claimants … seek only monetary relief aggregating $250,000 or lessexcludinginterest, statutory or punitive damages and penalties, and attorney’s fees and costs.” Accordingly, any action with an amount in controversy of up to $250,000, not including interest, fees and costs, will be governed by the expedited action process. This increase is also reflected in the amendments to Rule 47, which provides the requisite statements of relief to be included in a party’s original pleading, and Rule 190.2, which outlines the applicable Level 1 Discovery Control Plan.
  1. Additional Time for Oral Depositions. Under Discovery Control Plan Level 1, the total time for oral depositions is now 20 hours for each party.
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