Skip to content

North Carolina Business Litigation Report

Reporting on Judicial Decisions of Significance to Business & Shareholders

MENU

HomeAbout MackAbout this BlogContact

Rule 408

Subscribe to Rule 408 via RSS

Settlement Agreements Are Discoverable

By Mack Sperling on April 22, 2008
Posted in Discovery

Today, Judge Tennille issued a very short order in Azalea Garden Board & Care, Inc. v. Vanhoy, granting a defendant’s Motion to Compel production of a settlement agreement entered into between the plaintiff and another defendant. 

I’m mentioning the case only because this is an issue that recurs with some frequency.  There’s often a non-party which might…

About this Blog

This is a blog for lawyers, though I don’t mean to run anyone off who wants to read it. But I’m writing for the most part about cases that involve issues of North Carolina business law, and the day-to-day practice of business litigation in North Carolina courts.
Case Database

Topics

Archives

Links

  • Amended Rules of the NC Business Court (effective 1-1-17)
  • Delaware Court Opinions (Searchable)
  • North Carolina Business Corporation Act
  • North Carolina Business Court Website
  • North Carolina General Statutes
  • North Carolina Rules Of Civil Procedure

Blogs

  • Delaware Business Litigation Report
  • Delaware Corporate and Commercial Litigation Blog
  • Electronic Discovery Law
  • New York Business Divorce Blog
  • Newsroom Law Blog
  • NY Times DealBook
  • Supreme Court of the United States Blog

Recent Updates

  • NC Business Court: A Pox On Both Your Houses
  • Things Not To Do When Filing A Motion For Summary Judgment In The NC Business Court
  • Two Words To Avoid When Drafting A Covenant Not To Compete
  • Changing Deposition Testimony. Are there limits?
  • NC Business Court Castigates Pro Se Claimant For Abusive Language

North Carolina Business Litigation Report

DisclaimerPrivacy Policy

About Mack Sperling

I’m a business litigator in North Carolina.

I grew up in New York, went to college there (at Union College in Schenectady), and then came to North Carolina to law school at UNC-Chapel Hill. I clerked for United States District Judge Frank Bullock of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina after graduating. Read More

Copyright ©2025, Mack Sperling. All Rights Reserved.
Law blog design & platform by LexBlog LexBlog Logo