Nevada Code § 126.111

Pretrial hearing; testimony. [Effective through June 30, 2026.]
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
1. The court shall endeavor to resolve the
issues raised in an action pursuant to this chapter by an informal hearing.
2. As soon as practicable after an action
to declare the existence or nonexistence of the father and child relationship
has been brought, an informal hearing must be held. The court may order that
the hearing be held before a master or referee. The public shall be barred from
the hearing. A record of the proceeding or any portion thereof must be kept if
any party requests or the court orders. Strict rules of evidence need not be
observed, but those prescribed in NRS
233B.123 apply.
3. Upon refusal of any witness, including
a party, to testify under oath or produce evidence, the court may order the
witness to testify under oath and produce evidence concerning all relevant
facts. If the refusal is upon the ground that the witnesss testimony or
evidence might tend to incriminate the witness, the court may grant the witness
immunity from prosecution for all criminal offenses shown in whole or in part
by testimony or evidence the witness is required to produce, except for perjury
committed in his or her testimony. The refusal of a witness who has been
granted immunity to obey an order to testify or produce evidence is a civil
contempt of the court.
4. Testimony of a physician concerning the
medical circumstances of the pregnancy and the condition and characteristics of
the child upon birth is not privileged.
NRS 126.111 Pretrial hearing;
testimony. [Effective July 1, 2026.]
1. The court shall endeavor to resolve the
issues raised in an action pursuant to this chapter by an informal hearing.
2. As soon as practicable after an action
to declare the existence or nonexistence of the father and child relationship
has been brought, an informal hearing must be held. The court may order that
the hearing be held before a judicial officer appointed by the court or
referee. The public shall be barred from the hearing. A record of the
proceeding or any portion thereof must be kept if any party requests or the
court orders. Strict rules of evidence need not be observed, but those
prescribed in NRS 233B.123 apply.
3. Upon refusal of any witness, including
a party, to testify under oath or produce evidence, the court may order the
witness to testify under oath and produce evidence concerning all relevant
facts. If the refusal is upon the ground that the witnesss testimony or
evidence might tend to incriminate the witness, the court may grant the witness
immunity from prosecution for all criminal offenses shown in whole or in part
by testimony or evidence the witness is required to produce, except for perjury
committed in his or her testimony. The refusal of a witness who has been
granted immunity to obey an order to testify or produce evidence is a civil
contempt of the court.
4. Testimony of a physician concerning the
medical circumstances of the pregnancy and the condition and characteristics of
the child upon birth is not privileged.

‹ Prev All Nevada sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.