Deposition Summary Template for Litigation Teams

Deposition Summary Template for Litigation Teams

A complete deposition summary template with page-line format, topic indexing, and witness credibility notes. Built for paralegals and attorneys.

A deposition summary (also called a deposition digest) condenses a transcript — often hundreds of pages — into a concise, navigable document that attorneys can use for trial preparation, motion practice, and settlement evaluation. A good summary saves an attorney from re-reading the entire transcript and highlights the testimony that matters.

This template covers the three most common summary formats: page-line, topic-based, and narrative. Choose the format that suits your case and your supervising attorney's preference.

Deposition Summary Header

Every summary should begin with a standardized header block, regardless of format.

DEPOSITION SUMMARY

Case:               [Case name and number]
Deponent:           [Full name of witness]
Date of Deposition: [MM/DD/YYYY]
Location:           [City, State / Virtual]
Duration:           [Start time - End time]
Court Reporter:     [Name, firm]
Videographer:       [Name, firm, if applicable]

Counsel Present:
  For Plaintiff:    [Attorney name, firm]
  For Defendant:    [Attorney name, firm]
  For [Third Party]:[Attorney name, firm]

Transcript Pages:   [Total page count]
Exhibits Marked:    [List exhibit numbers, e.g., Exs. 1-14]
Summary Prepared By:[Name, title]
Date of Summary:    [MM/DD/YYYY]

Format 1: Page-Line Summary

The page-line format is the most common in litigation practice. It provides a chronological summary keyed to specific transcript pages and lines, allowing attorneys to quickly locate testimony.

Page:LineTopicSummary
5:3-6:10BackgroundDeponent has been employed at Apex Retail Inc. since March 2019 as Chief Financial Officer. Holds an MBA from University of Colorado (2012) and a B.S. in Accounting from CSU (2008).
7:14-9:22Lease NegotiationsDeponent participated in negotiations for the Suite 400 lease in early 2023. Stated Plaintiff's broker represented that the HVAC system had been "fully replaced in 2021." Deponent relied on this representation.
10:1-12:18HVAC ComplaintsDeponent testified that HVAC failures began in June 2024. He personally sent an email to Plaintiff's property manager, Jane Martinez, on June 15, 2024 (Ex. 3). Key testimony: "I sent the email from my work account. I have the sent-mail confirmation." (11:8-11)
13:5-15:20Financial ImpactDeponent stated that the HVAC failure caused Apex to lose three major client meetings in July 2024. Estimated revenue loss at $175,000 based on lost contracts.
16:1-18:14Decision to Withhold RentDeponent confirmed that Apex's board voted to withhold rent beginning January 2025. Decision was based on legal advice. Objection noted: Plaintiff's counsel objected to disclosure of attorney advice; deponent did not reveal substance. (17:5-10)
19:3-22:8Exhibit Review (Exs. 4-7)Deponent identified Exhibits 4 through 7 as internal Apex board minutes from meetings held in October, November, and December 2024. Confirmed their accuracy.
23:1-24:15Cross-Examination — Prior Late PaymentsOn cross, deponent acknowledged that Apex paid rent 10-15 days late on four occasions in 2023 but stated those delays were due to "processing issues, not disputes." (23:18-20)

How to Use Page-Line Format Effectively

  • Be precise with citations. Always include both the starting and ending page:line so the attorney can read the full exchange.
  • Quote critical admissions verbatim. When a witness makes a key admission or denial, include the exact words in quotation marks with the specific line reference.
  • Flag objections. Note where objections were made and whether the witness answered over objection.
  • Mark exhibits. When a witness identifies or discusses an exhibit, reference the exhibit number.

Format 2: Topic-Based Summary

The topic-based format reorganizes testimony by subject matter rather than chronological order. This is useful when testimony covers the same topic at multiple points during the deposition.

Topic: HVAC System Condition

Page:LineSummary
7:14-8:5Broker represented HVAC was "fully replaced in 2021" during lease negotiations.
10:1-11:11HVAC failures began June 2024. Deponent emailed property manager on June 15, 2024 (Ex. 3).
30:8-31:2On redirect, deponent stated he followed up with a second email on July 3, 2024 (not produced in discovery — flagged for follow-up).

Topic: Financial Damages

Page:LineSummary
13:5-15:20Estimated $175,000 in lost revenue from three canceled client meetings.
28:12-29:4Acknowledged on cross that two of the three clients later signed contracts with Apex in Q1 2025, but at reduced rates.

Topic: Decision to Withhold Rent

Page:LineSummary
16:1-18:14Board voted to withhold rent starting January 2025. Based on legal advice (substance not disclosed).
23:1-24:15Prior late payments (four occasions in 2023) were due to processing, not disputes.

Format 3: Narrative Summary

The narrative format reads like a condensed story. It is best suited for short depositions or when the audience includes non-attorneys (e.g., an insurance adjuster or corporate client).

Robert Chen, CFO of Apex Retail Inc., was deposed on October 15, 2025, in connection with the Greenfield Properties breach-of-lease litigation. The deposition lasted approximately three hours and covered four main areas: lease negotiations, HVAC complaints, financial impact, and the decision to withhold rent.

Chen testified that during lease negotiations in early 2023, Plaintiff's broker stated the HVAC system had been "fully replaced in 2021." Apex relied on this representation. Beginning in June 2024, the system experienced repeated failures. Chen personally emailed Plaintiff's property manager on June 15, 2024, and claims to have followed up on July 3, 2024, though the second email has not been produced in discovery.

Chen estimated that the HVAC failures caused $175,000 in lost revenue, though he acknowledged on cross-examination that two of the three affected clients eventually signed contracts at reduced rates. In late 2024, Apex's board voted to withhold rent starting January 2025, a decision Chen attributed to legal advice without disclosing its substance.

Witness Credibility Notes

Add a confidential section at the end of every summary with your assessment of the witness's demeanor and reliability. This section is for attorney eyes only.

Demeanor: Deponent was calm and responsive. Made eye contact with questioning counsel. Did not appear evasive.

Consistency: Testimony was largely consistent with prior written discovery responses. One discrepancy noted — deponent referenced a second follow-up email (July 3, 2024) that was not produced. This should be investigated.

Vulnerabilities: Admission of prior late rent payments could weaken the constructive-eviction defense. However, deponent provided a reasonable explanation (processing delays).

Strengths: Clear, specific testimony about HVAC complaints and reliance on broker's representation. The June 15 email (Ex. 3) corroborates his account.

Exhibit Cross-Reference Table

Exhibit No.DescriptionDiscussed at Page:LineIdentified By
Ex. 3Email from Chen to Martinez, 6/15/202410:1-11:11Deponent
Ex. 4Apex board minutes, 10/202419:3-20:5Deponent
Ex. 5Apex board minutes, 11/202420:6-21:2Deponent
Ex. 6Apex board minutes, 12/202421:3-22:8Deponent
Ex. 7Apex revenue report, Q3 202413:5-14:8Deponent

Tips for Effective Deposition Summaries

  1. Start with a quick read. Skim the entire transcript before summarizing. Understanding the arc of the testimony helps you identify what matters.
  2. Use the attorney's priorities. Ask the supervising attorney what issues to focus on before you begin.
  3. Do not editorialize. Summarize what the witness said, not what you think about it — except in the credibility section.
  4. Flag follow-up items. If testimony reveals a missing document, an inconsistency with prior discovery, or a new witness, note it prominently.
  5. Keep it proportional. A 200-page transcript should yield a 10-15 page summary, not 50 pages.

Automate Deposition Summaries with NotuDocs

Summarizing depositions is one of the most time-intensive tasks in litigation. NotuDocs can process deposition recordings and transcripts, automatically generating page-line summaries, topic indexes, and exhibit cross-references — reducing hours of work to minutes.

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