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- | ====== What is a Docket? Your Ultimate Guide to Court Records ====== | + | |
- | **LEGAL DISCLAIMER: | + | |
- | ===== What is a Docket? A 30-Second Summary ===== | + | |
- | Imagine you're trying to piece together the story of a long, complicated cross-country road trip. You wouldn' | + | |
- | A court **docket** is not a single, dense legal document. Instead, it is the official table of contents and timeline for everything that happens in a lawsuit or criminal case. It’s a running list, maintained by the [[court_clerk]], | + | |
- | * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance: | + | |
- | * A **docket** is the official, chronological list of all events, filings, and documents in a legal case, serving as its official record. | + | |
- | * For an ordinary person, the **docket** provides a transparent window into the justice system, allowing you to track a case's progress and understand exactly what is happening without needing a law degree. | + | |
- | * | + | |
- | ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of the Docket ===== | + | |
- | ==== The Story of the Docket: A Historical Journey ==== | + | |
- | The concept of a **docket** is as old as organized courts themselves. In its earliest form, it was nothing more than a physical ledger book, a " | + | |
- | For centuries, this system remained largely unchanged. To check a **docket**, you had to physically travel to the specific courthouse, request the docket book from the clerk, and decipher the often-cryptic handwritten entries. This created a significant barrier to public access and made tracking litigation a difficult and expensive task. | + | |
- | The true revolution came with the digital age. In the late 1980s, the U.S. Judiciary began experimenting with an electronic access system. This project evolved into **PACER (Public Access to Court Electronic Records)**. Launched in the 1990s and expanded since, PACER transformed the federal **docket** from a physical object in a single courthouse into a centralized, | + | |
- | State courts soon followed suit, developing their own electronic filing and **docket** management systems. While the journey from dusty ledgers to digital databases has been long, its purpose remains unchanged: to provide a clear, official, and chronological record of the administration of justice. | + | |
- | ==== The Law on the Books: Statutes and Codes ==== | + | |
- | The requirement for a court to maintain a **docket** isn't just a good idea; it's the law. The primary sources for this rule in the federal system are the procedural rulebooks that govern how courts operate. | + | |
- | The most important of these is the **[[federal_rules_of_civil_procedure]] (FRCP)**. Specifically, | + | |
- | > "(a) Civil Docket. | + | |
- | > (1) In General. The clerk must keep a record known as the ‘civil docket’... The clerk must enter each civil action in the docket. Actions must be assigned consecutive file numbers. The file number of | + |