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VirtualCourthouse April 1998; Issue
3.4 Electronic Filing Electronic filing is the transmission by computer of a court pleading to the
Clerk of the Court. The filing should contain all necessary case management and
financial information in electronic format. It should facilitate electronic
document management for the litigant, the lawyer, the clerk and the court. The
elements of electronic filing are: (i) electronic transmission; (ii) case
management integration; (iii) financial information integration; (iv) work
process integration; (v) jurisdictional and regional diversity; (vi) supports
dispute resolution; and (vii) litigation community input. Electronic Transmission A lot of energy and emotion is expended on electronic filing systems that are
focused on the Internet. The key to this element is the movement of the
electronic document from one place to another. This can be accomplished on the
Internet but it can also be accomplished on a telephone line or a wide area
network (WAN). Care must be taken to analyze the pluses and minuses of each
method. Areas of analysis should include cost, security,
stability/dependability. Analysis should also include the impact of the method
chosen on the remaining elements. For instance, will the use of the Internet as
opposed to a WAN support or deter financial information integration? The
transmission being only one of seven elements should not allow the "political
correctness" of the Internet to blind consideration of other elements. Case Management Integration The redundancy of the input of the same information at numerous stages of the
process must be eliminated. A well-designed electronic filing system captures
case management information electronically. Staff time for the input of
information is kept to a minimum. Financial Information Integration Perhaps the most time consuming and staff consuming part of the process for
filing court papers both in the law office and the court is financial. In the
law office, the lawyer must go through the bookkeeper to get a filing check. In
the court, the clerk has to record the check, issue a receipt and send the check
to the accounting department. There should be only one step in the law office
and one step in the court, both electronic. Work Process Integration The filing of court documents is process driven and not detail driven. One must first identify the flow of INFORMATION IN and then the flow of INFORMATION OUT. This element could be the greatest cost saving for both the lawyer and the court. JusticeLINK, the national electronic filing pilot, overwhelmingly
demonstrated that the time savings could exceed 25 percent. In the Clerk's
Office, clerical steps for the docketing of a motor tort were reduced from 168
steps to 122 steps. In a foreclosure case, 122 steps were reduced to 97 steps.
In the lawyer's office, the savings were determined to be in excess of $15,000
per lawyer. Supports Dispute Resolution Often the focus on the electronic transmission of the document clouds the
main mission of the courts -- to decide cases fairly, impartially and
expeditiously. The case file is only one element of information a judge needs to
decide a case. It must be integrated with the law and the facts -- the other
elements. Litigation Community Input A large and diverse group of individuals are affected by the electronic
filing of pleadings. The impact of a system on these groups must be sought and
considered. They include: (i) lawyers, (ii) judges, (iii) clerks of court, (iv)
court administrators, (v) litigators, (vi) rules committees/policy makers, (vii)
law librarians, and (viii) law schools Jurisdictional and Regional Diversity The great temptation is to concentrate on statewide systems. After all, the
argument goes: It is better to deal with just 50 systems. This analysis ignores
the reality of jurisdictional diversity and the necessity of regional diversity.
Few if any states are capable of a "one-size-shoe" fix for all of the courts of
the state. Limited jurisdiction courts, for instance, have a work process, case
management, and financial information need that is different from general
jurisdiction courts, which differs from appellate courts. The diversity between
state courts and federal courts adds yet another challenge. Finally, the
diversity between several states within a region of states provides an
additional hurdle. Many courts already have mature systems, which cannot be
radically changed. Finally, the litigants' needs -- the most important -- do not
stop at state, county or federal lines. An electronic filing system must be
flexible enough to accommodate this diversity. Funny Pleadings and Things: A United States District Court Judge from Oklahoma was pushed over the edge
by a group of argumentative lawyers when he issued the following order: "Defendant's Motion to Dismiss or in the Alternative, to Continue Trial is denied. If the recitals in the briefs from both sides are accepted at face value neither side has conducted discovery according to the letter and spirit of the Oklahoma County Bar Association Lawyer's Creed. This is an aspirational creed not subject to enforcement by this Court, but violative conduct does call for judicial disapprobation at least. If there is a hell to which disputatious, uncivil, vituperative lawyers go, let it be one in which the damned are eternally locked in discovery disputes with other lawyers of equally repugnant attributes." © 1998 ... by Arthur M.
Monty Ahalt |
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Email: amahalt@virtualcourthouse.com
Copyright © 2003 MontyAhalt.com |