Discovery Scope and Power in California Family Law

Discovery Scope and Power in California Family Law

What Is Discovery?

Discovery is the formal legal process by which parties in a lawsuit obtain information from each other and from third parties before trial. In California family law cases, discovery is governed by the Family Code, the Code of Civil Procedure, and the California Rules of Court. It is one of the most important tools available to ensure that both parties have access to the facts necessary to resolve issues of property division, support, custody, and other family law matters.

The fundamental principle underlying discovery is that litigation should be decided on the merits, not through surprise or concealment. California’s discovery statutes are designed to promote transparency and help the court reach fair outcomes based on complete information.

Scope of Discovery in Family Law

The scope of discovery in California is remarkably broad. Under Code of Civil Procedure section 2017.010, any party may obtain discovery regarding any matter, not privileged, that is relevant to the subject matter involved in the pending action, if the matter either is itself admissible in evidence or appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.

In family law cases, this broad scope means you can seek discovery related to income and earning capacity for support calculations, assets and debts for property division, parenting fitness and the best interests of the child, and the existence of separate versus community property. The standard is relevance, not admissibility—meaning you can seek information in discovery even if that specific information might not be admissible at trial, as long as it could lead to admissible evidence.

Types of Discovery Available

California law provides several discovery methods, each suited to different purposes. Form interrogatories are preprinted, standardized questions approved by the Judicial Council. In family law cases, Form Interrogatories—Family Law (FL-145) cover topics such as income, expenses, assets, debts, and custody-related issues. These are often the starting point for discovery in family law cases.

Special interrogatories are custom questions drafted by the requesting party. Under Code of Civil Procedure section 2030.030, a party may propound up to 35 specially prepared interrogatories without a declaration of necessity. Additional interrogatories require a supporting declaration.

Requests for production of documents (Code of Civil Procedure section 2031.010) allow you to demand that the other party produce specific documents such as tax returns, bank statements, pay stubs, retirement account statements, and real estate records.

Requests for admissions (Code of Civil Procedure section 2033.010) ask the other party to admit or deny specific facts. This can be a powerful tool to narrow the issues for trial and establish undisputed facts.

Depositions allow you to question the other party or a witness under oath before trial. The testimony is recorded by a court reporter and can be used at trial. Depositions are governed by Code of Civil Procedure sections 2025.010 through 2025.620.

Mandatory Disclosure Requirements

Family law cases in California have unique mandatory disclosure requirements that go beyond standard civil discovery. Under Family Code sections 2100 through 2113, both parties must serve preliminary declarations of disclosure early in the case, including an Income and Expense Declaration (FL-150) and a Schedule of Assets and Debts (FL-142) or two Property Declarations (FL-160), one for community property and one for separate property.

These disclosures must be served within 60 days of filing the petition or within 60 days of filing a response. Final declarations of disclosure must be served before or at the time of entering a judgment. The purpose of these mandatory disclosures is to ensure full transparency regarding each party’s financial situation.

The duty to disclose is ongoing. If your financial circumstances change during the case, you are obligated to update your disclosures. Failure to comply with disclosure requirements can result in the court setting aside a judgment under Family Code section 2122.

Responding to Discovery

When you receive discovery requests, you generally have 30 days to respond (35 days if served by mail within California). Responses must be verified—meaning signed under penalty of perjury—and must be code-compliant.

You may object to specific discovery requests on grounds such as privilege, relevance, overbreadth, undue burden, or ambiguity. However, objections must be specific and made in good faith. Boilerplate objections without substantive basis can result in sanctions.

If you fail to respond to discovery within the required timeframe, you may waive your objections and the requesting party can file a motion to compel, potentially resulting in monetary sanctions against you.

Motions to Compel Discovery

When a party fails to respond to discovery or provides inadequate responses, the requesting party may file a motion to compel under Code of Civil Procedure sections 2030.300, 2031.310, or 2033.280, depending on the type of discovery. The motion must include a meet and confer declaration showing that the moving party attempted to resolve the dispute informally before filing the motion.

If the court grants the motion to compel, it must impose monetary sanctions against the losing party or their attorney unless the court finds that the losing party acted with substantial justification or that other circumstances make the imposition of sanctions unjust. Sanctions typically include the reasonable attorney’s fees and costs incurred in bringing the motion.

Discovery Limitations and Privileges

While discovery is broad, it is not unlimited. Privileged information is protected from discovery. Common privileges in family law cases include the attorney-client privilege, the spousal communication privilege (Evidence Code section 980), the psychotherapist-patient privilege, and the right to privacy under the California Constitution.

The court may also issue protective orders under Code of Civil Procedure section 2030.090 to limit discovery that is oppressive, burdensome, or an invasion of privacy. The court balances the need for the information against the potential harm of disclosure.

Practical Discovery Strategy

For self-represented litigants, a practical approach to discovery starts with the mandatory disclosures. Review what your spouse has provided and identify gaps or inconsistencies. Then use form interrogatories as your first line of discovery—they are pre-approved by the Judicial Council and cover the most common issues.

Follow up with requests for production to obtain the underlying documents that support or contradict the information provided in interrogatory responses and financial disclosures. If you suspect hidden assets or income, consider a deposition where you can question your spouse under oath and follow up on inconsistent answers in real time.

Document everything and maintain an organized file of all discovery sent and received. This will be invaluable when preparing for trial or settlement negotiations.

Disclaimer: This article on California family law is published for informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Family law issues are fact-specific and complex. Consult with a licensed family law attorney for specific advice about your case.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is discovery in a California family law case?

Discovery is the formal process by which spouses (and third parties) exchange information relevant to the case before trial. In California family law, it is governed by the Family Code, the Code of Civil Procedure, and the California Rules of Court. It helps to make sure property, support, and custody decisions are made on the merits, not on surprise or concealment.

How broad is the scope of discovery in California?

Very broad. Under Code of Civil Procedure section 2017.010, a party may seek discovery on any non-privileged matter that is relevant to the subject matter of the case, as long as the information is admissible at trial or reasonably likely to lead to admissible evidence. The standard is relevance, not admissibility, so you can ask for things you could not necessarily use at trial.

What types of discovery are available in California family law?

The main tools are form interrogatories (FL-145), special interrogatories (up to 35 without a supporting declaration under CCP section 2030.030), requests for production of documents (CCP section 2031.010), requests for admissions (CCP section 2033.010), and depositions (CCP sections 2025.010 through 2025.620). Each tool serves a different purpose, and most cases use a combination.

What are the mandatory disclosures in a California divorce?

Both spouses must serve a preliminary declaration of disclosure within 60 days of filing the petition or response. This includes an Income and Expense Declaration (FL-150) and either a Schedule of Assets and Debts (FL-142) or two Property Declarations (FL-160). Final disclosures must be served before judgment. The duty to update is ongoing if your finances change.

How long do I have to respond to discovery in California?

Generally 30 days from the date of service, or 35 days if the request was served by mail within California. Responses must be verified under penalty of perjury and code-compliant. Missing the deadline can waive your objections and expose you to a motion to compel and monetary sanctions.

What happens if the other party ignores my discovery requests?

You can file a motion to compel under CCP sections 2030.300, 2031.310, or 2033.280, depending on the type of discovery. The motion must include a meet-and-confer declaration showing you tried to resolve the dispute first. If the court grants the motion, it must impose monetary sanctions on the losing party absent substantial justification.

What information is protected from discovery?

Privileged information is off-limits. Common privileges in family law include attorney-client privilege, the spousal communication privilege (Evidence Code section 980), the psychotherapist-patient privilege, and the right to privacy under the California Constitution. Courts can also issue protective orders under CCP section 2030.090 to limit oppressive, burdensome, or invasive requests.

Dan Sweeney, California Family Law Attorney

About Dan

Dan Sweeney brings more than 20 years of California family law experience to every session.

  • Former manager of the San Diego Superior Court Family Law Facilitator’s Office
  • Assisted thousands of self-represented litigants in a wide array of issues
  • Over ten years experience representing private clients in divorce and custody litigation
  • Understands what your judicial officer is looking for and where self-represented litigants often fall short

Learn more about Dan →

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