

The COVID-19 pandemic has reshaped the way courts operate in recent years, and Morrissey said that this MDEC electronic system gave courts the ability to work remotely, much more so than a paper-reliant system could have. Morrissey said this digitization process will improve the court data management process, which has traditionally been reliant on paper case files. In addition to simplifying the complaint-filing process for landlords, the pilot will save time for clerks by enabling them to search the system for a case by name rather than having to know the case number. “We have pretty robust QA environments that we test on prior to putting into production,” he said, but as he explained, it is never exactly the same as the production environment.Īs part of this rollout, there are two products: an intermediate user interface for smaller landlords and an e-filing product for larger landlords. For example, the electronic case management system is designed to accept one failure-to-pay-rent complaint filing at a time, but some larger landlords file all their complaints in one day - some adjustment on the part of the vendor corrected this issue, Morrissey said. Prior to the broader rollout, the team will be working out any potential complications, allowing time to stress test the system on a smaller scale. Morrissey expects this to happen within the next couple of months. Should that continue with increased volume, he will recommend rollout to the rest of the state. “I think it’s generally going to be an improvement overall to the landlord-tenant process for everybody,” he said, underlining that the pilot is doing well so far. However, when it was time to add landlord-tenant cases, the pilot was a way to test and address any technical issues within Baltimore County before rolling it out to the next jurisdiction. Landlord-tenant cases were not initially included in the MDEC project because of the way the state’s laws address the volume of filings.

“We’re currently in 22 out of 24 of the jurisdictions in Maryland we’re going to go live in October with the 23rd.” In accordance with Federal and State statutes and the Rules Governing the Courts of the State of Maryland or court order, certain records may not be available for public inspection. Acceptance of the following agreement is required to continue.
#MARYLAND JUDICIARY CASE SEARCH BALTIMORE COUNTY TRIAL#
“That project … is designed to bring a paperless system to all four levels of our courts - both of our appellate courts and both of our trial courts,” said John Morrissey, chief judge of the district court of Maryland and co-chair of the MDEC initiative. Access to these records is governed by the Maryland Rules on Access to Court Records.
