Sign In
    Wisconsin Lawyer
    February 01, 1998

    Wisconsin Lawyer February 1998: Wisconsin's Voyage to Computerized Courts 2

     


    Vol. 71, No. 2, February 1998

    Previous Page

    Wisconsin's Voyage
    to Computerized Courts

    Electronic filing and recordkeeping

    Imagine a lawyer working late at night putting the finishing touches on a set of pleadings. A few more clicks of the mouse and the document is on file with the court. 13

    This is not possible in Wisconsin, but it is a routine event in some other courts. In Delaware, for instance, in 1991 courts mandated that attorneys file all documents in asbestos actions and complex insurance cases by modem. Since then, more than 25,000 documents have been filed electronically. The system permits lawyers to file lawsuits and retrieve documents without leaving their offices. It enables judges to copy and paste from briefs and other documents when preparing opinions. 14

    A similar system used for motor vehicle and foreclosure cases in Prince George's County, Maryland, also offers automatic date-stamps on documents and electronic fund transfers. 15At the federal level, courts recently amended procedure rules to permit electronic filing in appellate, district and bankruptcy courts. 16

    Of course, electronic filing works best if the court has an electronic record management system. Like Wisconsin, other states are striving to develop this ability. An Alabama court, for example, stores documents on disks, and just one disk can hold a year's worth of records. The court no longer needs to retain and store originals, thereby freeing courthouse space for other uses. Record retrieval that previously took hours or days is now "accomplished in minutes with a few keystrokes."17

    The Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York has pioneered "the use of the World Wide Web for providing docket listings, and access to copies of documents filed with the court." 18Still more ingenious, the court's dockets are created automatically when users complete a set of computer screens. Judges and the parties have access to case management reports, case and judicial calendars, financial reports and motion tracking listings. 19

    Electronic file management is faster, easier and more efficient - and it is more prudent, too. In 1993 a district justice office in Pennsylvania was fire-bombed and many records were destroyed. 20Fortunately, the court possessed a computerized filing system, which enabled it to rebuild all of the necessary files in a matter of hours.

    CD-ROM briefs

    Of all documents prepared by lawyers, briefs are accused most often of killing forests. From early drafts through service and filing, briefs devour reams of paper. Yet, even briefs cannot escape the tentacles of technology. Some courts across the country have begun to accept CD-ROM briefs - an electronic version of a paper brief with links to published cases, statutes, transcripts, photographs, videotapes and any other authority or evidence that can be stored on a compact disk. 21

    Muth/Ball

    R. Timothy Muth is a shareholder at Reinhart, Boerner, Van Deuren, Norris & Rieselbach's Milwaukee office, where he chairs the firm's Computer & Technology Law Practice Group.

    Colleen D. Ball is an associate at the firm's Milwaukee office, where she assists with computer litigation and chairs the firm's Appellate Practice Group.

    Both can be found on the World Wide Web. Both authors were counsel to the Milwaukee Bar Association which filed an amicus brief in the Flynn litigation.  

    A CD-ROM brief allows the reader to move between the text of the brief and citations to legal authorities or the trial record with the click of a button. A judge pulls up the CD-ROM brief on a computer screen. As she reads, the judge may see a citation to an interesting case that she would like to skim - even though she is reading on her laptop at home, far from the bound volumes of the Wisconsin Digest in the courthouse library. She merely clicks on the citation to Vosberg v. Putney, and the entire case appears instantly for her review. Or maybe the judge wonders just how accurately the brief has paraphrased the defendant's trial testimony. Click! She can see the transcript for herself. Perhaps the judge would like to view the "inflammatory" videotape that allegedly prejudiced the jury. She can watch that, too, on her computer screen while she is reading the brief.

    The advantages of CD-ROM briefs are readily apparent. They require little space; they are portable; and the user can even print hypertext documents while viewing them. 22 They are particularly useful in complex cases and appeals. For that reason, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (which handles numerous patent cases) and the U.S. Supreme Court already have accepted briefs on CD-ROM, and many federal courts are drafting guidelines for the preparation and filing of these so-called "cyberbriefs."

    Conclusion

    For some, the journey to the courthouse of the future is all but over. Funding fights have prevented Wisconsin from making the voyage at warp speed, but it is well on its way. Hopefully, Wisconsin's computerized lawyers will soon find a virtual welcome mat at the courthouse of the future.

    Endnotes

    1 Milwaukee County Judicial System Study, March 31, 1994, at II-36.

    2 In re Judicial Fact Finding, ¶ 51, Case No. 90-CV-14944, Feb. 8, 1993.

    3 Flynn v. Dept. of Administration, Case No. 95-CV-805, slip op. at 4 (Dane County Circuit Court, April 23, 1996).

    4 Id.

    5 Affidavit of Cynthia Archer at ¶ 2, dated Dec. 8, 1995, filed in Flynn v. Dept. of Administration, Case No. 95-CV-805 (Dane County Circuit Court).

    6 Id. at ¶ 4, Exhibit A (Letter of May 3, 1993, from Gov. Thompson to Washington County Register in Probate Kristine Deiss explaining the governor's 1993-95 CCAP appropriations request).

    7 Flynn at 5.

    8 Affidavit of Nathan S. Heffernan at ¶¶ 3-4, dated Dec. 7, 1995, filed in Flynn v. Dept. of Administration, Case No. 95-CV-805 (Dane County Circuit Court).

    9 Flynn at 2-3.

    10 Flynn at 29.

    11 D. Wong, Judge Rubin on How to Run an Automated Courtroom, Computer Counsel at 22 (Sept. 1993).

    12 Interactive Computer Helps Arizona Court Users, 78 Judicature 158 (1994); L. Weiss & J. Weaver, ATMs Bring the Court to You, 32 No. 3 Judges' J. at 57 (Summer 1993).

    13 A. Jacobius, Two More Courts Add Electronic Filing, ABA J. at 20 (Sept. 1995).

    14 Id.

    15 Id.

    16 F.R.C.P. 5; F.R.A.P. 25; F.R.B.P. 5005.

    17 Electronic Filing System Helps Manage Alabama Court Records, Lawyer's PC at 6, 7 (Aug. 15, 1995).

    18 Email letter from Bill Kammer, Gray Cary Ware & Freidenrich, San Diego, Calif. (Feb. 11, 1997) (on file with NET-LAWYERS@eva.dc.lsoft.com; re Electronic filing in federal courts).

    19 Email letter from M. Sean Fosmire, Marquette, Mich. (Feb. 14, 1997) (on file with NET-LAWYERS@eva.dc.lsoft.com; re Update to Courts.net page re SDNY-BK).

    20 S. Willoughby, Automating and Linking Pennsylvania's District Justice Courts: A Success Story, Judge's J. at 30 (Summer 1993).

    21 T. Newman & S. Ahmuty, CD-ROM Briefs, 218 N.Y.L.J. (Sept. 3, 1997).

    22Id.


Join the conversation! Log in to comment.

News & Pubs Search

-
Format: MM/DD/YYYY