Why should we use LawToolBox?
Missed deadlines are the number ONE cause of malpractice claims against attorneys in the US. Using LawToolBox to manage deadlines will protect against this risk. Most law firms manually calculate deadlines and add to calendars one-at-a-time. Instead, they can reduce the risk of a missed deadline by calculating based on court rules with links to authorities.
Will LTB Integration allow my firm to qualify for discounted Malpractice Insurance?
Yes. LEAP provides multiple reminders for the deadlines generated by LawToolBox. When law firms fill out their malpractice insurance application, they can check the box confirming that the attorneys and staff in their law firm have more than one location to see and be reminded of their deadlines, enabling the law firm to qualify for the maximum discounts in malpractice insurance available to them based on practice area, firm size etc.
What rulesets come with my subscription to LEAP?
This link provides a list of LawToolBox rulesets that come with a LEAP subscription. LawToolBox Rulesets Published
Which groups of users need LawToolBox?
- Typical Rules-Based Calendaring Practice Areas:
- Practice areas where there are virtual no deadlines or calendaring
- Business formation
- Trusts and estates
- Mergers and acquisitions
When should rules-based calendaring be used?
If your organization answers YES to any of the below question, you should consider using rules-based calendaring.
- Is the law firm staff manually calculating deadlines from a checklist?
- Are they entering deadline into calendars and sending calendar invites one-at-a-time?
- How does the law firm find out about and implement the court's rule changes?
- Are you getting the maximum discount on your malpractice insurance?
How do I install the Software?
No software is installed anywhere. Activation of the app is via the LEAP Marketplace. See How to Activate LawToolBox section below.
Are there Deadlines for all State and Federal Courts?
Rulesets are available for both state and federal courts (50 states).
Are Court Holidays included in deadline calculations?
The calculation of some deadline must exclude “court days” which are defined as weekends and holidays. In federal court different holidays can apply to deadlines calculated “going forward” in time in contrast to deadlines calculated “going back” in time. Many states and jurisdictions recognize their own holidays. Deadlines that land on weekends or court holidays are rolled off to the next day and display the original due date.
How are deadlines calculated?
Deadlines are calculated in court days or calendar days based on rules of procedure.
Do I need to update deadlines where changes are made by the courts?
No updates to any rules changes will be managed by the LTB team. Users will be notified of rules changes automatically. Notifications will appear within the LEAP notifications centre and on the matter.
What are the key features of LawToolBox?
- LawToolBox combines rules-based calendaring with case specific deadlines and events.
- Rules-based docketing:
When you enter a “trigger date” like the date of trial the software instantly calculates deadlines based on the rules of civil procedure and other statutes (this concept is also described as: deadline calculators, calendaring rules and deadlines, court rules calendaring).
- Deadlines are calculated in court days or calendar days based on rules of procedure.
- Court Holidays:
The calculation of some deadline must exclude “court days” which are defined as weekends and court holidays. In federal court different holidays can apply to deadlines calculated “going forward” in time in contrast to deadlines calculated “going back” in time. Many states and jurisdiction recognize their own holidays.
Deadlines that land on Saturdays/Sundays and court holidays are rolled to the next business day and display the original due date.
- Roll off Weekends & Court Holidays:
When a deadline is calculated in calendar days it can sometime land on a weekend or court holiday, our software then tells it whether to “roll” that deadline forward and backwards to the “next” business day. In some venues like California discovery deadlines roll towards trial, but other deadlines roll away from trial.
- Where mail rules apply, user is asked to select method of service before determining deadline.
- Mail Rule:
This is a common term used to describe that 3 days are added to the deadline when the trigger pleading is served by mail (there are many versions of this that add different numbers of days depending on whether the legal paper was served by fax, electronically, by hand, etc.).
- When a Trial Date, hearing or other date is rescheduled all the deadlines automatically update in calendars.
The typical trial date can be continued on average 2-3 times in a litigation. The software can handle moving deadlines that land in the future to their new date if the attorney says to move the deadline
Can deadlines be edited?
Deadlines calculated by LawToolBox in LEAP are added to the LEAP matter record and the Outlook calendar. Users can edit the deadlines from either location and then add additional team members to those deadlines. All future edits to those deadlines will be visible to all added members.
When rules change, LEAP shows a notification from LawToolBox in the alerts section of LEAP so that an end user can accept, ignore or snooze the alert for a deadline in the matter where the rule change applies.