Source: https://www.ndcourts.gov/legal-resources/rules/ndsupctadminr/41
Timestamp: 2019-12-05 20:09:25
Document Index: 500905152

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 29', '§ 14', '§ 14', '§ 50', '§ 14', '§ 25', '§ 25']

North Dakota Court System - Administrative Rule 41 - ACCESS TO COURT RECORDS
Administrative Rule 41 - ACCESS TO COURT RECORDS
Effective Date: 8/1/2017
"Court record," regardless of the form, includes:
any document, information, or other thing that is collected, received, or maintained by court personnel in connection with a judicial proceeding;
any index, calendar, docket, register of actions, official record of the proceedings, order, decree, judgment, minute, and any information in a case management system created by or prepared by court personnel that is related to a judicial proceeding; and
information maintained by court personnel pertaining to the administration of the court or clerk of court office and not associated with any particular case.
"Court record" does not include:
other records maintained by the public official who also serves as clerk of court;
information gathered, maintained or stored by a governmental agency or other entity to which the court has access but which is not part of the court record as defined in this rule; and
a record that has been disposed of under court records management rules.
"Public access" means that the public may inspect and obtain a copy of the information in a court record, except as excluded under Section 5.
"Remote access" means the ability to electronically search, inspect, or copy information in a court record without the need to physically visit the court facility where the court record is maintained.
"Bulk distribution" means the distribution of all, or a significant subset, of the information in court records, as is and without modification or compilation.
"Compiled information" means information that is derived from the selection, aggregation or reformulation by the court of some of the information from more than one individual court record.
"Electronic form" means information in a court record that exists as:
electronic representations of text or graphic documents;
an electronic image, including a video image, of a document, exhibit or other thing;
data in the fields or files of an electronic database; or
an audio or video recording, analog or digital, of an event or notes in an electronic file from which a transcript of an event can be prepared.
Court records are accessible to the public except as prohibited by this rule.
There must be a publicly accessible indication of the existence of information in a court record to which access has been prohibited, which indication may not disclose the nature of the information protected.
A court may not adopt a more restrictive access policy or otherwise restrict access beyond that provided for in this rule, nor provide greater access than that provided for in this rule or as governed by N.D. Sup. Ct. Admin. R. 40 with respect to recordings of trial court proceedings.
Court records in a court facility must be available for public access during normal business hours. Court records in electronic form to which the court allows remote access will be available for access subject to technical systems availability.
Upon receiving a request for access to a court record, the clerk of court must respond as promptly as practical. If a request cannot be granted promptly, or at all, an explanation must be given to the requestor as soon as possible. The requestor has a right to at least the following information: the nature of any problem preventing access and the specific statute, federal law, or court or administrative rule that is the basis of the denial. The explanation must be in writing if desired by the requestor.
The clerk of court is not required to search within a court record for specific information that may be sought by a requestor.
Access to Court Records Filed Before March 1, 2009. Court records filed before the adoption of N.D.R.Ct. 3.4 may contain protected information listed under N.D.R.Ct. 3.4(a). This rule does not require the review and redaction of protected information from a court record that was filed before the adoption of N.D.R.Ct. 3.4 on March 1, 2009.
Fees for Access. The court may charge a fee for access to court records in electronic form, for remote access, for bulk distribution or for compiled information. To the extent that public access to information is provided exclusively through a vendor, the court will ensure that any fee imposed by the vendor for the cost of providing access is reasonable.
Access to Court Records at Court Facility.
Public Access Terminal. A terminal will be available at each county courthouse for public access to court records stored statewide in the Odyssey system.
Request for Access to Other Records. Any person desiring public access to a court record that is not available on the public access terminal must make an oral or written request to the clerk of court. If the request is oral, the clerk may require a written request if the clerk determines that the disclosure of the record is questionable or the request is so involved or lengthy as to need further definition. The request must clearly identify the record requested so that the clerk can locate the record without doing extensive research. Continuing requests for a document not yet in existence may not be considered.
Response to Request. The clerk of court is not required to allow access to more than ten files per day per requestor but may do so in the exercise of the clerk's discretion if the access will not disrupt the clerk's primary function. If the request for access and inspection is granted, the clerk may set reasonable time and manner of inspection requirements that ensure timely access while protecting the integrity of the records and preserving the affected office from undue disruption. The inspection area must be within full view of court personnel whenever possible. The person inspecting the records may not leave the court facility until the records are returned and examined for completeness.
Response by Court. If a clerk of court determines there is a question about whether a record may be disclosed, or if a written request is made under Section 6(b) for a ruling by the court after the clerk denies or grants an access request, the clerk must refer the request to the court for determination. The court must use the standards listed in Section 6 to determine whether to grant or deny the access request.
Remote Access to Court Records.
In General. The following information in court records must be made remotely accessible to the public if it exists in electronic form, unless public access is restricted under this rule:
litigant/party indexes to cases filed with the court;
listings of new case filings, including the names of the parties;
register of actions showing what documents have been filed in a case;
calendars or dockets of court proceedings, including the case number and caption, date and time of hearing, and location of hearing; and
reports specifically developed for electronic transfer approved by the state court administrator and reports generated in the normal course of business, if the report does not contain information that is excluded from public access under Section 5 or 6.
The Supreme Court may adopt and implement policies to regulate remote access to court records. These policies must be posted publicly on the Court's website.
Attorneys licensed in North Dakota may apply to obtain remote access to court records stored in the Odyssey system.
A record of a closed criminal case for which there is no conviction may not be remotely accessed through a name search except by an attorney granted remote access to the Odyssey system.
Requests for Bulk Distribution of Court Records.
Bulk distribution of information in the court record is permitted for court records that are publicly accessible under Section 3(a).
A request for bulk distribution of information not publicly accessible can be made to the court for scholarly, journalistic, political, governmental, research, evaluation or statistical purposes when the identification of specific individuals is ancillary to the purpose of the inquiry. Prior to the release of information under this subsection the requestor must comply with the provisions of Section 6.
A court may allow a party to a bulk distribution agreement access to birth date, street address, and social security number information if the party certifies that it will use the data for legitimate purposes as permitted by law.
Access to Compiled Information From Court Records.
Any member of the public may request compiled information that consists solely of information that is publicly accessible and that is not already in an existing report. The court may compile and provide the information if it determines, in its discretion, that providing the information meets criteria established by the court, that the resources are available to compile the information and that it is an appropriate use of public resources. The court may delegate to its staff or the clerk of court the authority to make the initial determination to provide compiled information.
Requesting compiled restricted information.
Compiled information that includes information to which public access has been restricted may be requested by any member of the public only for scholarly, journalistic, political, governmental, research, evaluation, or statistical purposes.
identify what information is sought,
describe the purpose for requesting the information and explain how the information will benefit the public interest or public education, and
explain provisions for the secure protection of any information requested to which public access is restricted or prohibited.
The court may grant the request and compile the information if it determines that doing so meets criteria established by the court and is consistent with the purposes of this rule, the resources are available to compile the information, and that it is an appropriate use of public resources.
If the request is granted, the court may require the requestor to sign a declaration that:
the data will not be sold or otherwise distributed, directly or indirectly, to third parties, except for journalistic purposes;
the information will not be used directly or indirectly to sell a product or service to an individual or the general public, except for journalistic purposes; and
there will be no copying or duplication of information or data provided other than for the stated scholarly, journalistic, political, governmental, research, evaluation, or statistical purpose.
information that is not accessible to the public under federal law;
information that is not accessible to the public under state law, court rule, case law or court order, including:
affidavits or sworn testimony and records of proceedings in support of the issuance of a search or arrest warrant pending the return of the warrant;
information in a complaint and associated arrest or search warrant to the extent confidentiality is ordered by the court under N.D.C.C. §§ 29-05-32 or 29-29-22;
documents filed with the court for in-camera examination pending disclosure;
case information and documents in Child Relinquishment to Identified Adoptive Parent cases brought under N.D.C.C. ch. 14-15.1;
domestic violence protection order files and disorderly conduct restraining order files when the restraining order is sought due to domestic violence, except for orders of the court;
documents in domestic violence protection order and disorderly conduct restraining order cases in which the initial petition was dismissed summarily by the court without a contested hearing;
names of qualified or summoned jurors and contents of jury qualification forms if disclosure is prohibited or restricted by order of the court;
records of voir dire of jurors, unless disclosure is permitted by court order or rule;
records of deferred impositions of sentences or pretrial diversions resulting in dismissal;
records of a case in which the magistrate finds no probable cause for the issuance of a complaint;
unless exempted from redaction by N.D.R.Ct. 3.4(c), protected information:
except for the last four digits, social security numbers, taxpayer identification numbers, and financial account numbers,
except for the year, birth dates, and
except for the initials, the name of an individual known to be a minor, unless the minor is a party, and there is no statute, regulation, or rule mandating nondisclosure;
judge and court personnel work material, including personal calendars, communications from law clerks, bench memoranda, notes, work in progress, draft documents and non-finalized documents;
party, witness and crime victim contact information gathered and recorded by the court for administrative purposes, including telephone numbers and e-mail, street and postal addresses;
the name of a patron of the North Dakota Legal Self Help Center or information sufficient to identify a patron or the subject about which a patron requested information;
The property and debt listing of the parties to a divorce as provided by N.D.C.C. § 14-05-24.3.
This rule does not preclude access to court records by the following persons in the following situations:
federal, state, and local officials, or their agents, examining a court record in the exercise of their official duties and powers;
parties to an action and their attorneys examining the court file of the action, unless restricted by order of the court, but parties and attorneys may not access judge and court personnel work material in the court file.
A member of the public may request the court to allow access to information excluded under Section 5 as provided in Section 6.
Request to Prohibit Access.
A request to the court to prohibit public access to information in a court record may be made by any party to a case, by the individual about whom information is present in the court record, or on the court's own motion on notice as provided in Section 6(c).
The court must decide whether there are sufficient grounds to overcome the presumption of openness of court records and prohibit access according to applicable constitutional, statutory and case law.
In deciding whether to prohibit access the court must consider that the presumption of openness may only be overcome by an overriding interest. The court must articulate this interest along with specific findings sufficient to allow a reviewing court to determine whether the closure order was properly entered.
The closure of the records must be no broader than necessary to protect the articulated interest. The court must consider reasonable alternatives to closure, such as redaction or partial closure, and the court must make findings adequate to support the closure. The court may not deny access only on the ground that the record contains confidential or closed information.
In restricting access the court must use the least restrictive means that will achieve the purposes of this rule and the needs of the requestor.
If a victim requests, all victim contact information in a criminal court record must be redacted;
If the court concludes, after conducting the balancing analysis and making findings as required by paragraphs (1) through (5), that the interest of justice will be served, it may prohibit public Internet access to an individual defendant's electronic court record in a criminal case:
if the charges against the defendant are dismissed; or
if the defendant is acquitted.
Request to Obtain Access.
A request to obtain access to information in a court record to which access is prohibited under Section 4(a), 5 or 6(a) may be made to the court by any member of the public or on the court's own motion on notice as provided in Section 6(c).
In deciding whether to allow access, the court must consider whether there are sufficient grounds to overcome the presumption of openness of court records and continue to prohibit access under applicable constitutional, statutory and case law. In deciding this the court must consider the standards outlined in Section 6(a).
The request must be made by a written motion to the court.
The requestor must give notice to all parties in the case.
The court may require notice to be given by the requestor or another party to any individuals or entities identified in the information that is the subject of the request. When the request is for access to information to which access was previously prohibited under Section 6(a), the court must provide notice to the individual or entity that requested that access be prohibited.
If the court contracts with a vendor to provide information technology support to gather, store, or make accessible court records, the contract will require the vendor to comply with the intent and provisions of this rule. For purposes of this section, "vendor" includes a state, county or local governmental agency that provides information technology services to a court.
By contract the vendor will be required to notify the court of any requests for compiled information or bulk distribution of information, including the vendor's requests for such information for its own use.
Adopted on an emergency basis effective October 1, 1996; Amended and adopted effective November 12, 1997; March 1, 2001; July 1, 2006; March 1, 2009; March 15, 2009; March 1, 2010; March 1, 2012; March 1, 2015; March 1, 2016; October 1, 2016; March 1, 2017; May 1, 2017; August 1, 2017.
Appendix amended effective August 1, 2001, to reflect the name change of State Bar Board to State Board of Law Examiners. Appendix amended effective August 1, 2017, to add a reference to N.D.C.C. § 14-05-24.3 and to remove a reference to § 50-06-05.1.
Section 2(c) was amended, effective March 1, 2017, to clarify that the public may have access to information in a court record except when access is excluded under Section 5.
Section 3(a)(1) was amended, effective October 1, 2016, to reference N.D.R. Sup. Ct. Admin. R. 40, which governs access to recordings of trial court proceedings.
Section 3(b)(3) was added, effective March 1, 2016, to clarify that the clerk of court is not required to search within a court record for specific information that may be sought by a requestor.
Section 4(b) was amended, effective March 1, 2017, to allow the Supreme Court to enact and implement policies to regulate remote access to court records and to limit remote access by name search to pre-conviction records in criminal cases. An additional amendment allows attorneys to apply for remote access to public court records stored in the Odyssey system.
Section 5(b)(6) was amended, effective March 1, 2015, to clarify that the restriction on public access to documents in domestic violence protection order and disorderly conduct restraining order cases under this paragraph is limited to cases that were dismissed summarily.
Section 5(b)(10) was added, effective March 1, 2017, to exclude cases in which a magistrate finds no probable cause for the issuance of a complaint from public access.
Section 5(b)(11) was amended, effective March 15, 2009, to list types of protected information open to the public.
The term "financial-account number" in Section 5(b)(11) includes any credit, debit or electronic fund transfer card number, and any other financial account number.
Section 5(b)(11) was amended, effective March 1, 2010, to incorporate the exemptions from redaction contained in N.D.R.Ct. 3.4(b). A document containing protected information that is exempt from redaction under N.D.R.Ct. 3.4(b) is accessible to the public.
Section 5(b)(13) was added, effective March 1, 2016, to exclude party, witness and crime victim contact information gathered and recorded by the court for administrative purposes from public access.
Section 5(b)(14) was added, effective March 1, 2017, to exclude information about patrons of the North Dakota Legal Self Help Center from public access.
Section 5(b)(15) was added, effective August 1, 2017, to state that the property and debt listing of the parties to a divorce is confidential under N.D.C.C. § 14-05-24.3.
Section 6(a)(6) was added, effective May 1, 2017, to require, upon request of the victim, redaction of all victim contact information in a criminal court record. This right is granted by N.D. Const. Art. I, § 25(1)(e). "Victim" is defined in N.D. Const. Art. I, § 25(4).
Section 6(a)(7) was added, effective March 1, 2012, to provide a method for the court to prohibit public Internet access to an electronic case record when charges against a defendant are dismissed or the defendant is acquitted. A request under Section 6(a)(1) is required before the court can act to prohibit access under Section 6(a)(6).
HISTORY: Court Services Administration Committee Minutes of January 26-27, 2017, page 17; August 14, 2015; August 28, 2015, September 23, 2015; Joint Procedure Committee Minutes of April 27, 2017, pages 7-11; September 29-30, 2016, pages 6-9, 28-29; May 12-13, 2016, pages 22-25; January 28-29, 2016, pages 2-7; September 24-25, 2015, pages 15-16, 20-21; April 23-24, 2015, pages 8-10; April 24-25, 2014, page 27; April 28-29, 2011, pages 9-12; September 23-24, 2010, pages 16-20;September 24-25, 2009, pages 8-9; May 21-22, 2009, pages 28-44; January 29-30, 2009, pages 3-4; September 25, 2008, pages 2-6; January 24, 2008, pages 9-12; October 11-12, 2007, pages 28-30; April 26-27, 2007, page 31; September 22-23, 2005, pages 6-16; April 28-29, 2005, pages 22-25; April 29-30, 2004, pages 6-13, January 29-30, 2004, pages 3-8; September 16-17, 2003, pages 2-11; April 24-25, 2003, pages 6-12. Court Technology Committee Minutes of June 18, 2004; March 19, 2004; September 12, 2003; Conference of Chief Justices/Conference of State Court Administrators: Guidelines for Public Access to Court Records.
14-05-24.3 Property and debt listing in a divorce case
N.D.R,Civ.P. 26(c) Protective orders
08/01/2017 View
05/01/2017 08/01/2017 View
03/01/2017 05/01/2017 View
10/01/2016 03/01/2017 View
03/01/2016 10/01/2016 View
03/01/2015 03/01/2016 View
03/01/2012 03/01/2015 View
03/01/2010 03/01/2012 View
03/15/2009 03/01/2010 View
03/01/2009 03/15/2009 View
07/01/2006 03/01/2009 View
03/01/2005 07/01/2006 View
03/01/2001 03/01/2005 View
11/12/1997 03/01/2001 View
10/01/1996 11/11/1997 View