Montana Court Reporting Requirements & Deposition Admissibility Standards

Montana operates as a licensed court reporter jurisdiction for official stenographic records. When a deposition transcript is intended to serve as the official record in Montana litigation, it must be prepared and certified by a properly authorized Certified Court Reporter (CCR) in accordance with Montana Supreme Court certification standards and the Montana Rules of Civil Procedure. A transcript prepared by an uncertified individual may be subject to challenge if relied upon as the official evidentiary record.



Under Montana Rule of Civil Procedure 28 and Rule 30, depositions must be taken before an officer authorized to administer oaths, and the transcript must be properly certified. The certification must affirm that the testimony was accurately reported and transcribed and that the reporter held proper authorization at the time of the proceeding. Montana courts depend on the certified stenographic transcript as the authoritative record for motion practice and trial presentation.



Remote depositions are permitted in Montana by agreement of the parties or court order. The credentialing requirement for official stenographic transcripts applies equally in remote proceedings. Oath administration must comply with procedural rules, and certification language must conform to Montana standards. Audio or video recordings may supplement testimony but do not replace a certified transcript absent express agreement or judicial authorization.



For deposition transcripts intended for court filing, evidentiary reliance, or appellate preservation in Montana courts, retention of a properly credentialed CCR ensures compliance with Supreme Court standards and protects against admissibility objections.

Last reviewed for accuracy: April 2026

State-Mandated Credentials

CredentialCertified Court Reporter (CCR)
Status✓ Required
Applies ToOfficial stenographic deposition transcripts
Issuing AuthorityMontana Judicial Branch

Permitted Reporting Methods

Stenographic, Video, Audio recording methods as permitted by Montana law.

Transcript Certification

For admissibility purposes, Montana attorneys should ensure:

The transcript is certified by the officer before whom the deposition was taken

Certification language reflects compliance with the Montana Rules of Civil Procedure

Any errata sheets or witness signature requirements are properly addressed

Exhibits are clearly marked, identified, and referenced in the transcript

Remote Depositions

Remote depositions permitted.

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Common Montana Admissibility Pitfalls

Failure to properly qualify or identify the deposition officer
Defective or incomplete certification language
Informal oath administration during remote depositions
Poor exhibit control or unclear exhibit references
Assuming video or audio recordings can substitute for a certified transcript without stipulation

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is a state certification required for Missouri depositions?
A: Yes. Missouri requires a Certified Court Reporter for official stenographic deposition transcripts.
Q: Does remote testimony change credential requirements?
A: No. State certification requirements apply equally to remote and in-person depositions.
Q: Can a videographer replace a stenographic transcript?
A: No. Video may supplement the record, but it does not replace a certified stenographic transcript prepared by a state-certified court reporter.

Authoritative Sources

Montana Rules of Civil Procedure (Depositions & Discovery)
Montana Rules of Evidence
Montana Supreme Court Rules & Administrative Orders

Montana Court Reporters

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