Embedding Hyperlinks in Court Filings: A Great Leap Forward
March 23, 2009
Michael Atkins in Civil Procedure

I recently received a notice from the Eastern District of Washington’s electronic filing system saying I can now file documents with hyperlinks to other documents within the system. This means I can file a brief that cites to my witness’ declaration and make that testimony accessible with a click.

The Eastern District promotes this feature by saying: “Hyperlinks are very helpful to the judges because it make it much easier to review documents in support of a filing.”

This would seem to be a no-brainer — whatever makes things easier for the court is well worth doing.

The training manual says filers can link to:

The only catch is filers must verify their hyperlinks work, as broken links don’t do anyone much good.

Litigators constantly strive to get their point across. A big part of that is making things simple. In the Eastern District at least, there’s now no need for clerks and judges to hunt down your client’s testimony. They can get there simply by clicking on a hyperlink in your brief. 

The next step hopefully will enable filers to link case citations with case text.

While this would seem to create more production work on the front-end, it should give judges more time to focus on what counts: your evidence; your arguments. It seems like a great leap forward.

Article originally appeared on Michael Atkins (http://seattletrademarklawyer.com/).
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