A party may also request that they be allowed to enter upon designated land or other property in the possession or control of the party upon whom the request is served for the purpose of inspection and measuring, surveying, photographing, testing, or sampling the property or any designated object or operation on the land or property, provided that the request is within the scope of Rule 122(a).
Documents or things made available or produced under this rule may be used in court to the extent permitted under the rules of evidence; see Rule 137(a). [ARCP 34(a), (b)]
"The Justice Court Rules of Civil Procedure allow a party to request from another party up to five (5) documents or items, or up to five (5) categories of documents or items, unless the requesting party asks the court for permission to request more documents, items, or categories of documents or items, and the court gives permission because the requesting party showed good cause for requesting more. If you do not produce a document or a category of documents or items because you object to a specific request, you must state a reason for your objection. A party may also request to enter on to designated land or other property to inspect it, or to take measurements, photographs, or samples.
"A party who produces documents must provide them as they are kept in the usual course of business, or they must organize and label them in response to the requests. Electronic documents or electronic records must be produced in the format that has been requested or in the format that the electronic documents or records are usually kept.
"You must provide your original response to requests under this rule to the party who sent them to you, and you must provide a copy to every other party in the lawsuit. Your response to requests made under this rule is due forty (40) days after the requests have been served on you, unless the requests were served with the summons and complaint, in which case your response is due within sixty (60) days after the date of service, or unless otherwise ordered by the court. If you do not comply with the requests that have been made in this notice, the party who served them may file a motion asking that the court order you to comply. If the court enters that order, the court may also require you to pay expenses, including reasonable attorneys' fees, incurred by the other party in obtaining the order. If you fail to comply with the order, the other party may ask the court to impose additional penalties against you, including: that you may not introduce evidence of some or all or your claims or defenses in this lawsuit; if you are a plaintiff, that your lawsuit be dismissed; or if you are a defendant, that judgment be entered against you by default."[ARCP 26.2(f), 34(a), (b)]
Just. Ct. R. Civ. proc. 125