South Korea
All forms of discovery are conducted by and are under the direct supervision of the court. In other words, a party cannot directly ask the other party to produce documents or witnesses. All requests for discovery must be made to the court and must be approved by the court. The scope of discovery in South Korea is limited compared to discovery in some common law jurisdictions.
When the counterparty possesses relevant documents, the requesting party may request the court to issue a document production order. The request to the court must clearly identify:
- the document requested;
- contents of the requested document;
- identity of the document holder;
- facts to be proved by the document; and
- the grounds for requesting a document production order.
If the court issues a document production order, the document holder must submit the requested document to the court absent of any justifiable reason such as a privilege. The court has discretion to review any document withheld from production in private and decide whether it should be produced. If the document holder fails to comply with the court’s order without any justifiable reason, the court may accept the allegations of the other party as to the content of the document.
If a third party is in possession of relevant evidence, the court may issue a document production order against the third party. However, before determining whether to issue the order, the court must question the third party. For example, asking the third party to confirm whether it has possession of the requested documents and where they are stored. If the third party fails to comply with the court’s document production order, the third party may be subject to an administrative fine.
In addition to document production orders, a party may request the court to issue a clarification order against the counterparty on factual or legal issues. The requested party is obliged to respond and submit supporting evidence, if any.