Utah courts focus on procedural validity in determining whether deposition testimony is defensible for motion practice and trial use. The controlling inquiry is whether the deposition officer was authorized to administer the oath, whether the witness was under oath or affirmation, whether the testimony was accurately recorded, and whether the officer’s certification confirms the record is a true record of the deposition. Defects in oath administration, officer authority, or certification integrity can create risk when deposition testimony is later used under Rule 32 and the Utah Rules of Evidence.
Because Utah requires state certification to lawfully practice court reporting, retaining a Utah state-certified (C.C.R.) stenographic reporter helps ensure compliance with Utah’s professional regulatory framework in addition to meeting the procedural expectations of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. Many Utah reporters also hold respected national designations such as RPR, RMR, or CRR, reflecting examination-based proficiency, realtime capability, and adherence to ethical reporting standards (not legally required for admissibility, but often used by firms as objective competency signals).
Remote depositions are permitted under the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure by stipulation or court order. When conducted remotely, the oath must still be administered by an authorized officer, and the record must still carry the officer’s certification that the witness was under oath (or affirmation) and that the record is a true record of the deposition. Audio or video recordings do not substitute for a properly certified deposition record unless the parties stipulate to an alternative method or the court orders otherwise.
For Utah litigators, deposition defensibility is grounded in procedural compliance plus lawful professional practice. Retaining an experienced Utah state-certified court reporter (C.C.R.) who follows Rule 28 authority requirements and Rule 30 certification standards helps safeguard transcript reliability for dispositive motions, impeachment, and trial use.
Last reviewed for accuracy: April 2026