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- Over 20,000 registered filers in Texas and D.C.
- Used by all public sector filers in D.C. Superior Court including US Attorney General, District of Columbia Housing Authority and the Department of Defense
- Awarded eFiling contract with the Texas Office of the Attorney General
- Web-based, SSL, XML, Microsoft.NET, SQL Server
- Only eFiling provider to the Washington, D.C. Superior Court
- First approved Electronic Filing Service Provider (EFSP) for both Texas State Courts and the Washington, D.C. Superior Courts
- Clients represent 89 of the top 100 U.S. law firms, more than 80% of the largest law firms in Texas and 75 of the top 100 international firms
- 24x7 help desk support
- Firm manager system allowing searches and customized reporting
- Archive of all filings and eServices
- Offer both web-based and in-person training
- CLE accredited training
- HUB, women-owned company
- State of Texas Bar Association Continuing Legal Education accredited training
- State of Texas Certified as Historically Underutilized Business, women-owned company
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Founded in 2002, Case File Xpress is the first Electronic Filing Service Provider (EFSP) approved by TexasOnline to provide eFiling of court documents to Texas Courts. Headquartered in Irving, Texas, our company is committed to providing a high-level of customer support and services.
In a society where the pressure to do more with less increases daily and businesses want—even demand—faster, less costly solutions to run their operations, we at CaseFileXpress strive to offer our clients a time-saving and cost-effective approach that will streamline the firm’s daily operations by providing an electronic service for filing and serving court documents. Currently, CaseFileXpress has over 20,000 registered filers. |
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| eFiling For Texas |
In 1999, the State of Texas 76th Legislature mandated that an “electronic government framework” be created to leverage state and local government investment in new Internet technology. TexasOnline is the direct result of legislation that was passed to determine the optimal solution for eGovernment in Texas.
eFiling for Texas was initiated by the Judicial Committee on Information Technology (known as the JCIT) which was appointed by the Supreme Court of Texas and the Texas Legislature to recommend eFiling rules and to work with TexasOnline to develop an application for a statewide eFiling system.
In 2001, the project was initiated and in 2003, the first TexasOnline eFiled document was submitted to Fort Bend County through CaseFileXpress. By building a shared framework that state and local government could use for eGovernment services, the state could provide the highest quality infrastructure with the least cost and resource impact to government. It would increase reusability and accelerate the delivery of services to the public.
eFiling thus became a collaborative effort amongst the State (Dept. of Information Resources (DIR), the Texas Supreme Court, the JCIT, and the county and district clerks and courts. TexasOnline also requires that each Electronic Filing Service Provider follow technical, functional and security standards. Each service provider must have a service level agreement, be tested and approved before becoming an EFSP.
The courts, legal community, State Bar, and Office of Court Administration initiated this important and necessary automation process to decrease costs and physical space requirements, as well as improve efficiencies, document control, and information flow through the court system. Given a demand by the legal community to improve efficiencies of communication and information flow, the courts have recognized the benefits of providing eFiling services. |
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| eFiling for Washington, DC Superior Court |
The Family Court Act (FCA), D.C. Code, required the DC Superior Court to implement a comprehensive integrated case management system.
The goals of the Integrated Judicial Information System (IJIS) are to:
- Allow timely and accurate transmittal of documents and data received by the courts into the case management system
- Provide the public and the legal community with easy and inexpensive access to the Court
- Implement electronic filing across the Superior Court wherever technology is feasible and consistent with legal requirements.
The Superior Court conducted a successful e-filing pilot in the Civil Division with Civil I cases, and in May of 2005, the pilot ended with the implementation of IJIS. CourtView, the court’s case management system, is the official docket and case file. In February 2007, it became mandatory to eFile Civil II cases. Additional cases types such as Tax, Probate, Landlord Tenant, and Small Claims will be added to eFiling. |
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