Small Claims Trial Preparation (20:XIII)

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Many, if not most, litigants find trials to be extremely unnerving. While a small claims trial is not predictable, preparing well in advance can help a party to avoid surprises, present a more compelling case, and alleviate fears about the process.

It is important to consider the merits of a claim before proceeding to trial. If there is no reasonable or admissible evidence, the claim is bound to fail (e.g., a statute prohibits recovery), or a limitation period has passed, the judge may impose a penalty. A penalty of up to 10 per cent of the amount of the claim may be imposed if a party proceeds to trial without any reasonable basis for success244.

A. Trial Binder

A tabbed trial binder helps a party to effectively present its case at trial. A suggested format is:

Tab l: Opening Statement: a brief summary of the issues in the case.
Tab 2: Pleadings: all filed documents in chronological order with a list or index.
Tab 3: Example
Tab 4: Example
Tab 5: Example
Tab 6: Example
Tab 7: Example
Tab 8: Example
Tab 9: Example


    Tab 2:      Tab 3:     Orders: all court orders that have been made. Tab 4:    Claimant’ s  Case:  anticipated  evidence  of  the  claimant  and  claimant’ s  witnesses,  including reminders  for  introduction  of  exhibits  and  blank  pages  for  taking  notes  of  the  cross-examination. Tab 5:    Defendant’ s  Case:  blank  pages  for  notes  of  the  direct  examination of  defendant  and defendant’ s witnesses and anticipated cross-examination questions. Tab 6:    Closing  Arguments/Submissions:  brief  review  of  the evidence,  suggested  ways  to  reconcile conflicts in the evidence, a review of only the most persuasive case law and its application to the facts. Tab 7: Case Law: prepare three copies of each case relied on (for you, the judge, and the opposing party).  Carefully  scrutinize  the  need  for  multiple  cases  to  support  your  argument  and  limit yourself to as few as possible. Tab 8: Exhibits: you will need the original (the exhibit) and three copies (for you, the judge, and the opposing  party).  You  need  to  be  able  to  prove  when,  why,  and  by  whom  the  exhibit  was created, and also be able to argue why it is relevant (i.e. document plan or photograph). Tab 9:    Miscellaneous: any additional documents, notes, lists, and correspondence. B.Expert Witnesses Expert witnesses should only be permitted when their expertise  and special knowledge is necessary for  the  court  to  understand  the  issues245. The  expert’ s  testimony  cannot  include  the  expert’ s assessment  of  the  credibility  of  either  the  claimant  or  the  defendant246.  Expert  witness  testimony  is