1. What Trial Action Involves and How Going to Trial Changes Case Management
Cases that go to trial are not simply cases that failed to settle. They are cases where both parties made strategic decisions that settlement could not resolve, and the case management from that point forward is fundamentally different from litigation that expects to resolve short of trial.
Once trial is set, the pretrial conference under Federal Rule 16 produces a pretrial order that controls trial conduct: it identifies the witnesses each party will call, the exhibits each party will offer, the stipulated facts that are not in dispute, and the legal issues the court will need to resolve. Exhibits not on the pretrial list are generally excluded at trial. Witnesses not identified are generally not permitted to testify. The pretrial order is the blueprint the trial will follow, and counsel who are not disciplined about what goes into it frequently discover at trial that evidence or witnesses they assumed were available have been excluded by the court's application of the order's terms.
The decision to take a case to trial also changes how deposition testimony will be used, how experts will be deployed, and how the case's core factual narrative must be structured to work for a lay jury rather than for a sophisticated mediator. A case theory that persuaded a mediator to recommend a settlement number may not translate to a compelling opening statement. A set of documents that supported a damages expert's model at mediation must be made comprehensible to jurors who have no financial analysis background and who will be deciding the case based partly on which lawyer they believed. Civil trial process and complex litigation counsel must rebuild the case's presentation architecture when the path moves from settlement to trial, because the audience is entirely different.
How Pre-Trial Motions Determine What the Jury Sees and What Claims Survive
By the time jury selection begins, the most important decisions about what the jury will and will not hear have already been made through motions in limine and summary judgment practice.
A motion for summary judgment under Federal Rule 56 tests whether any genuine dispute of material fact exists that requires a jury to resolve. When there is no disputed fact, the court decides the legal question and the case or the claim ends before trial. Summary judgment is the dispositive motion that eliminates weak claims before they go to a jury, and the party who understands how summary judgment standards interact with the available discovery record has a significant advantage in managing exposure before trial.
Motions in limine are pretrial motions that ask the court to make advance rulings on the admissibility of specific evidence at trial. A well-crafted motion in limine can exclude a prior bad act that would prejudice the jury against the defendant, bar an expert's opinion that does not satisfy FRE 702 requirements, or prevent the opposing party from making references to insurance coverage that Rule 411 prohibits. The decisions made on motions in limine often determine the trial's outcome more directly than the testimony that follows. A damages theory unsupported by admissible expert testimony is not a damages theory the jury can act on, regardless of how effectively it is argued in closing.
| Trial Format | Decision-Maker | Standard of Proof | When Preferred |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jury trial | 12 (federal) or 6 (many state) lay jurors | Preponderance of the evidence (civil) | Complex credibility disputes; damages-heavy cases; sympathetic plaintiffs |
| Bench trial | Judge alone | Same legal standard | Technical or complex legal issues; cases where jury sympathy runs against client; contract interpretation |
2. What Trial Action Requires during Jury Selection and Why Voir Dire Sets the Foundation
Jury selection is the only moment in trial when counsel can directly assess who will decide the case. It is also the moment when the case's core themes are first introduced to the people who will resolve it.
Voir dire serves two purposes that experienced trial counsel pursue simultaneously. The first is identifying jurors whose backgrounds, experiences, or stated views make them unsuitable for the specific case and exercising challenges to remove them. The second is beginning to communicate the case's central narrative to the jurors who will remain. A question that asks whether jurors believe large corporations are inherently less credible than individual witnesses is both a challenge-for-cause probe and the opening move in a credibility battle the plaintiff intends to win. The jurors who answer that question one way are excused. The jurors who answer it the other way are being heard by the rest of the panel, who now know what the case will be about.
Peremptory challenges allow counsel to remove a limited number of jurors without stating a reason, subject to the Batson doctrine's prohibition on race and gender-based strikes. The strategic use of peremptory challenges requires a theory about which jurors will respond most favorably to the case and which will not, developed through the combination of juror questionnaire responses, voir dire answers, and courtroom body language observation. Jury consultants are used in major commercial trials to assist with this analysis, particularly in cases where the damages ask is large enough that a single juror's anchoring effect on deliberations can shift the verdict by millions.
How Opening Statements, Examination, and Closing Arguments Form a Single Narrative
Trial action is not a series of independent events. Opening statement, direct examination, cross-examination, and closing argument work together as a single story told in sequence, and coherence across all four stages is what distinguishes a case that wins from one that technically puts on evidence but never persuades.
The opening statement tells the jury what the evidence will show. It is not argument; it is a preview. But the narrative framework established in opening must be one that the evidence actually delivers, because a juror who was told in opening that a key witness would say one thing and then heard that witness say something different has been given a reason to distrust everything the presenting party told them. Opening statements that promise less than the evidence will deliver are safer than openings that promise more.
Cross-examination of adverse witnesses is where trial lawyers distinguish themselves. The objective is not to destroy the witness but to use the witness to establish facts that advance the cross-examiner's theory of the case. A cross that attempts to get the witness to change their story on the primary disputed facts often fails and leaves the witness more credible than before cross began. A cross that locks the witness into concessions about peripheral facts that the cross-examiner will later connect to the central theory of the case accomplishes more with less risk.
Federal court trials in the U.S. District Courts operate under local rules and individual judge practices that vary significantly from district to district and from judge to judge within the same district. A judge who requires all exhibits to be pre-marked and listed in a joint exhibit binder before trial creates a different preparation burden than a judge who allows exhibits to be introduced sequentially as witnesses are examined. A judge who limits opening statements to 30 minutes per side imposes a different narrative discipline than one who allows several hours. Understanding the specific judge's trial practice preferences, gathered from prior trial transcripts and the experiences of counsel who have tried cases before that judge, shapes every aspect of the trial preparation process. Federal court trial practice requires research into the judge's courtroom that goes beyond the local rules.
3. What Trial Action Produces after the Verdict and What Comes Next
A jury verdict is not a final resolution. It is the beginning of the post-verdict phase, which includes motions that can modify or eliminate the verdict, an appeal window, and enforcement proceedings if the prevailing party cannot collect voluntarily.
A motion for judgment as a matter of law under Federal Rule 50 argues that no reasonable jury could have found for the prevailing party based on the evidence presented at trial. The motion must have been made at the close of the opposing party's evidence to be preserved for post-trial renewal. If the court denies the motion at trial and the jury returns a verdict, the losing party has 28 days to file a renewed Rule 50 motion or a motion for new trial under Rule 59. A new trial motion can challenge the verdict as against the weight of the evidence, as the product of juror misconduct, or as the result of legal errors during trial. These post-trial motions are the precursor to appeal, and preserving the grounds for these motions at the proper procedural moments during trial is as important as the trial advocacy itself.
Appeal from a final judgment in federal civil cases goes to the Circuit Court of Appeals under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The appellate court reviews legal questions de novo, factual findings for clear error, and discretionary trial rulings for abuse of discretion. The standard of review is critical: a losing party whose case depends on the appellate court second-guessing the jury's factual findings faces a nearly impossible standard, while a losing party who can demonstrate that the trial court applied the wrong legal standard to a question of law faces de novo review that gives the appellate court the same authority to decide the issue as the trial court had. Civil appellate law and Supreme Court and appellate practice require identifying those legal issues before trial is over and preserving the record that the appellate court will review.
How Judgment Enforcement Works When the Winning Party Cannot Collect Voluntarily
Winning a jury verdict produces a judgment. Collecting on that judgment is a separate proceeding that requires its own strategy.
A judgment creditor who obtains a final judgment can register it in any federal district where the debtor has assets, conduct post-judgment discovery to identify assets, obtain writs of execution to seize and sell non-exempt property, and garnish wages and bank accounts subject to applicable exemptions. In commercial cases, the most valuable assets are often receivables, intellectual property, real estate equity, and interests in other business entities, each of which requires a different enforcement mechanism and a different priority analysis against any other creditors who may have claims on the same assets.
A judgment debtor who files for bankruptcy immediately after a verdict creates an automatic stay that suspends all collection efforts, which is why judgment creditors sometimes seek to use the post-verdict period to record the judgment and begin enforcement before the debtor can file. Fraudulent transfer claims under the Uniform Voidable Transactions Act allow judgment creditors to reach assets that the debtor transferred to third parties with intent to delay or defraud creditors, reaching transfers made before and after the judgment. Judgment enforcement and business dispute collection requires a post-verdict enforcement strategy built during the trial, not after the judgment debtor has had months to move assets.
4. Frequently Asked Questions about Trial Action
Trial action questions arrive from litigants who received a trial date that is 90 days away and are unsure whether their case is ready, from businesses that won a verdict but cannot locate the defendant's assets, from parties evaluating whether their trial court made a legal error that would support a successful appeal, and from clients who want to understand what happens between the jury's verdict and a check clearing. Those situations generate the following answers.
What Is Trial Action and How Does It Differ from a Case That Settles?
Trial action is civil litigation that proceeds past settlement negotiations to a contested evidentiary hearing before a judge or jury. It differs from a settled case in that a third party, either a jury of lay persons or a judge, decides the outcome rather than the parties themselves. The decision to proceed to trial is made when the parties cannot agree on a resolution and when at least one party believes the likely trial outcome is better than what settlement offers. Trial action requires different preparation than settlement-track litigation: documentary evidence must be organized for jury presentation, witnesses must be prepared to testify rather than just to provide information to a mediator, and the case narrative must be simplified and compelling rather than comprehensive.
What Pre-Trial Motions Matter Most before a Civil Trial?
The two most consequential pre-trial motions are summary judgment under FRCP Rule 56, which eliminates claims or defenses where no genuine factual dispute requires jury resolution, and motions in limine, which secure advance rulings on what evidence the jury will and will not hear. A successful Daubert challenge to a damages expert eliminates the supporting opinion for the damages calculation the jury would otherwise consider. A successful motion to exclude prior bad act evidence eliminates prejudice that would be difficult to cure with an instruction. The pre-trial motion practice often determines more of the outcome than the trial itself, because evidence ruled inadmissible before trial never reaches the jury.
What Can the Losing Party Do after an Adverse Jury Verdict?
The losing party can file a renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law under FRCP Rule 50(b) within 28 days of judgment, arguing that no reasonable jury could have found as the jury did. A motion for new trial under Rule 59 can seek a new trial on grounds that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, resulted from juror misconduct, or was produced by legal error during trial. If these post-trial motions are denied, the losing party can appeal the final judgment to the Circuit Court of Appeals under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The appellate court reviews legal questions de novo but reviews factual findings only for clear error, making the nature of the preserved error decisive to the appeal's viability.
How Does the Winning Party Actually Collect after Getting a Judgment?
A final judgment can be enforced through post-judgment discovery to identify the debtor's assets, writs of execution directing the U.S. Marshal or sheriff to seize and sell non-exempt property, and garnishment of wages and bank accounts. The judgment can be registered in any federal district where the debtor has assets, extending the creditor's reach nationally. If the judgment debtor files for bankruptcy, an automatic stay suspends collection, and the creditor must participate in the bankruptcy proceeding to protect the judgment's priority. Assets fraudulently transferred before or after the judgment can be reached through voidable transaction claims under the Uniform Voidable Transactions Act. Building the enforcement strategy before the verdict, including identifying assets while discovery is still available, is significantly more effective than beginning the search after judgment is entered.
08 Jun, 2026









