Seals of the Court of Appeals and Superior Court
District of Columbia Courts

DC Superior Court E-Filing

eFiling provides the court with an efficient and cost-effective way to receive filings and transmit orders. It also provides lawyers, their clients and self-represented parties with easy and inexpensive access to court filings.

* eFiling is required in most Civil Actions Branch, Criminal Division, criminal Domestic Violence Unit, Probate and Tax Division cases. Parties represented by counsel must eFile, unless specifically excluded by Administrative Order (organizations that hold a 501(c)(3) IRS tax status).

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Civil Division

For Civil Actions Cases only, effective May 4, 2015 parties represented by counsel are required to eFile certain Complaints pursuant to Administrative Order 15-03. Parties represented by counsel are required to eFile and eServe all subsequent filings for Civil I and Civil II case types. Parties are not allowed to eFile or eServe Judge in Chambers filings or required to eFile Affidavits of Service of Process. Pro se parties are not required to eFile or eServe. See Administrative Orders 06-17 and 05-04. Law schools and legal services organizations who provide direct civil legal services to low-income and underserved litigants listed in the Attachment to Administrative Order 07-14 are exempt from mandatory e-filing.

Effective Monday, August 13, 2018 voluntary eFiling enters into effect in the Landlord and Tenant and Small Claims and Conciliation Branches. Mandatory eFiling will start for all lawyers practicing in these branches beginning Sunday, October 14, 2018. Self-represented parties are not required to file documents electronically, but may do so if they choose. See Administrative Order 18-08.

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Family Court

For case types in the following Branches: Neglect and Abuse, Juvenile and Domestic Relations. Administrative Order 12-10 governs the eFiling process. As directed by the Administrative Order, Sup. Ct. Civil Rule 5 “Service and Filing of pleadings and other papers” subsections (b)(2)(D) and (3), (d) and (e)(2) govern the eFiling procedures consistent with the Family Court rules and governing statutes of the Family Court.

Probate Division

eFiling is a method of submitting filings and transmitting orders to the court. It also provides lawyers, their clients, and self-represented parties with access to filings made in the following Probate Division case types: ADM (Large Decedents’ Estates); SEB (Small Decedents’ Estates); FEP (Foreign Decedents’ Estates); INT (Intervention Proceedings); IDD (Interventions-Developmental Disability); FOI (Foreign Intervention Proceedings); CON (Former Law Conservatorships); GDN (Guardianship of Minors’ Estates); TRP (Trusts); NRT (Notice of Revocable Trusts); DIS (Disclaimers); LIT (Major Litigation); PBM (Probate Miscellaneous); and WIL (Wills).

On November 1, 2013, all documents submitted in Probate Division cases are to be eFiled by mandatory eFilers and by parties who are not mandatory eFilers but chose to register in a particular case for eFiling. Mandatory eFilers include: all attorneys (whether serving as counsel, fiduciary, or otherwise), all members of the Fiduciary Panel, Examiner Panel, and Visitor Panel, and all participants in the Non-Lawyer Guardianship Pilot Project.

All mandatory eFilers must register for eFiling as soon as possible but no later than September 23, 2013. See Registration Information, below.

Note that the following filings are excluded from eFiling and must be filed in paper: Wills and codicils; Initial pleadings that open a Probate Division case (all subsequent filings of proofs of service should be eFiled); Petitions to Re-Open the Administration of an Estate and Requests for Extension of Personal Representative’s Appointment in a closed case; Bonds; Verifications and Certificates of Notice when additional court costs are due; Sealed documents and documents for which a request to be placed under seal has been filed, but not motions to seal; Personal Identification Information (Form 26) forms, generally filed with the initial pleading that opens a Probate Division case; Filings that require payment of court costs that vary in amount or deposits into the Estate Deposit Account; Inventories and accounts and supporting documents containing financial information; Exhibits or other documents that are real objects, such as x-ray film or blueprints, or that otherwise may not be viewed comprehensively in an electronic format; and Matters reviewed by the Office of the Register of Wills and forwarded to the Judge in Chambers, such as Petitions for a General Proceeding seeking appointment of an emergency guardian or health care guardian, subpoenas for medical records, and applications requesting that the filer be granted permission to proceed in forma pauperis in a particular case.

Further information may also be obtained at CaseFileXpress.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a single filing apply to more than one case?

Because of the case management system, if cases are not officially consolidated with other cases by court order, any document applying in several cases must be filed in each case. If a case is consolidated with others by court order, then a document can be filed in the lead case. The comments field on the eFiling screen must be used to specify to what other cases the document applies. It will then be accepted (or rejected) by the clerk in the lead case and a docket entry that it was filed will be made in each of the other cases with which it is consolidated. The entry will also state the case number of the lead case where the document was filed and can be viewed on a public access system.

Can I serve discovery electronically?

Yes. You may serve discovery documents electronically on counsel through the system. Pursuant to Rule Promulgation Order 07-04, effective September 4, 2007, Certificates Regarding Discovery need not be filed when discovery is served. Instead, a Certificate Regarding Discovery that has occurred in the case must be filed as an attachment with any of the following three filings: (1) a motion regarding discovery; (2) an opposition to a dispositive motion based on the need for discovery; and (3) a motion to extend Scheduling Order dates. SCR Civil 5(d). If Certificates Regarding Discovery are already in the Court record, the Certificate Regarding Discovery may incorporate those certificates by reference and also list any additional discovery, if any, that has occurred. Discovery is not served on the court unless it is necessary to a motion regarding the same.

Do I have to submit envelopes and mailing labels?

You do not need to send chambers envelopes or mailing labels for individuals who are being eServed. You do need to send envelopes and mailing labels to the judge’s chambers if there is a pro se party or parties in the case. Mailing labels or service envelopes should be provided to the chambers of the case judge with the submission identified by case name and number.

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Services

Register at CaseFileXpress or contact at 877-433-4533.

Title Download
CFX eFiling Training Presentation Download
Step-by-Steps for eFiling Download
Administrative Orders
Title Download
Order 15-05: Filings by Nonprofit Organizations in the Probate Division. Download
Order 13-15: eFiling in the Probate Division Download
Order 13-15: eFiling in the Probate Division - Attachment A: Probate eFiling Procedures Download
Order 13-15: eFiling in the Probate Division - Attachment B: Probate eFiling Notice of Registration Download
Order 12-10: eFiling in the Neglect and Abuse, Juvenile and Domestic Relations Branches of the Family Court Download
eFiling in Tax Division Download
Exemption from Electronic Filing Download
eFiling Family-Juvenile Cases Download
Mandatory e-filing for Civil II Cases Download
eFiling With IJIS Implementation Download