Table of Contents
- Essential Links
- eFiling Deadline
- Signature and Formatting Requirements
- Electronic Filing Requirements by the Court
- Dallas County Court Contact Information
- eFiling Tools and Training
Essential Links
eFiling Deadline
Unless a document must be filed by a certain time of day, a document is considered timely filed if it is electronically filed at any time before midnight (in the court’s time zone) on the filing deadline.
Signature and Formatting Requirements
Electronic Signature:
A document can be electronically signed if “/s/” and a name are typed where the signature would appear, or an electronic image or scanned image of the signature is on the document.
Format - T.R.C.P. Rule 21 (f)(8):
A Dallas County eFiled document must:
- be in text-searchable portable document format (PDF);
- be directly converted to PDF rather than scanned, if possible;
- not be locked;
- otherwise comply with the Technology Standards set by the Judicial Committee on Information Technology and approved by the Supreme Court.
Electronic Filing Requirements by the Court
Pursuant to Supreme Court of Texas, Misc. Docket No. 23-9071:
Electronic filing must be done through the electronic filing manager established by the Office of Court Administration and an electronic filing service provider certified by the Office of Court Administration.
The electronic filing manager will send a filing confirmation notice to the filing party.
In Civil Cases - T.R.C.P. 21 (f)(10):
The clerk must send orders, notices, or other communications about the case documents to the parties electronically through an electronic filing service provider certified by the Office of Court Administration or an electronic filing system approved by the Supreme Court. A court seal may be electronic.
The clerk need not send orders, notices, or other documents electronically: (a) when sealed or when access is otherwise restricted by law or court order; or (b) when an unrepresented party has not provided an e-mail address.
In Criminal Cases (Rule 2.7 of the Statewide Rules Governing Electronic Filing in Criminal Cases):
The clerk may electronically send notices and other documents to the parties. A court seal may be electronic.
The clerk must send orders to the parties electronically through an electronic filing service provider certified by the Office of Court Administration or an electronic filing system approved by the Supreme Court. A court seal may be electronic.
The clerk need not send orders electronically: (a) when sealed or when access is otherwise restricted by law or court order; or (b) when an unrepresented party has not provided an e-mail address.
If Civil eFilings are Returned - T.R.C.P. 21 (f)(11):
Non-Conforming Documents. The clerk may not refuse to file a document that fails to conform with this rule. But the clerk may identify the error to be corrected and state a deadline for the party to resubmit the document in a conforming format.
If Criminal eFilings are Returned (Rule 2.6 of the Statewide Rules Governing Electronic Filing in Criminal Cases):
Non-Conforming Documents. The clerk may not refuse a document that fails to conform to these rules. But the clerk may identify the error to be corrected and state a deadline for the party to resubmit the document in a conforming format.
Dallas County Court Contact Information
eFiling Tools and Training
Information on this web page is current as of April 2024. Please consult the District Courts of Dallas County to get the most up-to-date information about electronic filing for the Court.
We’re Ready to Help
Rapid Legal is an approved electronic filing service provider (EFSP) for all Texas and California eFiling courts. For questions and help with eFiling, contact a Rapid Legal account manager to schedule a call or book a demo today.