SUPREME COURT OF WISCONSIN |
FILED APR
1, 1998 Marilyn
L. Graves Clerk
of Supreme Court Madison,
WI |
|
In the Matter of the Amendment of Supreme Court Rules: SCR Chapter 72 –- Retention and Maintenance of Court Records |
ORDER No. 97-03 |
|
The court held a public hearing January 13, 1998 on the petition of the Wisconsin Court Records Management Committee seeking the amendment of the Supreme Court Rules, chapter 72, providing periods of time for the maintenance and retention of court records, including those maintained as official or original information on electronic or optical storage systems. The court has considered the petition, the presentations at the public hearing, and the materials filed in this matter.
IT IS ORDERED that, effective the date of this order, chapter 72 of the Supreme Court Rules is amended as follows.
SECTION 1. 72.01 (6) of the supreme court rules is amended to read:
(6)
Lien claims. A statutory lien filed for services performed or materials
provided: until satisfaction, expiration or entry of judgment, whichever occurs
first, except as provided in subs. (6ag) and (6b).
SECTION
2. 72.01 (6ag) and (6b) of the supreme court rules are created to read:
(6ag)
Construction liens. A statutory lien claim filed with the clerk of circuit
court for services performed or materials provided for improvements, as defined
in s. 779.01 (2) (a), stats.: 2 years after the date of filing the lien claim
with the clerk of court if no action is brought and no summons and complaint
are filed.
(6b)
Condominium liens. A statement of condominium lien filed with the clerk of
circuit court under s. 703.16 (4), stats., for unpaid assessments, including
interest and actual costs of collection: 3 years after the date of filing the
statement of condominium lien with the clerk of court if no action is brought
to foreclose the lien.
SECTION
3. 72.01 (11), (12), (13), (14), (15), (16) and (17) of the supreme court rules
are amended to read:
(11)
Family case files. All papers deposited with the clerk of courts in every
proceeding commenced under chapter ch. 767 of the statutes
, stats.: 50 30 years after entry of judgment of divorce
or entry of final order, except that after 30 years, for any case file for
which support or maintenance payments are continuing to be made, 7 years after
final payment or after order terminating maintenance is filed.
(12)
Family court record. A history and index of proceedings kept in book or card
form books, on cards or in electronic or optical format: 50 30
years after entry of judgment of divorce or entry of final order, except
that after 30 years, for any court record for which related support or
maintenance payments are continuing to be made, 7 years after final payment or
after order terminating maintenance is filed.
(13)
Family court minute record. A brief statement of in-court proceedings commenced
under chapter ch. 767 of the statutes , stats.,
generally maintained in the case file: 50 30 years after entry of
judgment of divorce or entry of final order, except that after 30 years, for
any court minutes for which related support or maintenance payments are
continuing to be made, 7 years after final payment or after order terminating
maintenance is filed.
(14)
Family maintenance and support payment records. Record of family maintenance
and child support payments received by the clerk of circuit court: 50 30
years after entry of judgment of divorce or entry of final order, except
that after 30 years, for any payment records for which related support or
maintenance payments are continuing to be made, 7 years after final payment or
after order terminating maintenance is filed.
(15)
Felony case files. All papers deposited with the clerk of courts in every
proceeding commenced under chapter ch. 968 of the statutes
, stats., for felony offenses and all papers filed with the clerk of
courts for the commitment of an inmate under ch. 980, stats.: 50 years
after entry of final judgment; for Class A felonies, 75 years after entry of
final judgment.
(16)
Felony court record. A history and index of criminal proceedings kept in book
or card form books, on cards or in electronic or optical format,
including court records regarding the commitment of an inmate: 50 years
after entry of final judgment; for Class A felonies, 75 years after final
judgment.
(17)
Felony minute record. A brief statement of in-court proceedings in a felony
action, generally maintained in the case file, including minute records
regarding the commitment of an inmate: 50 years after entry of final
judgment; for Class A felonies, 75 years after final judgment.
SECTION
4. 72.01 (21), (22) and (23) of the supreme court rules are repealed.
SECTION
5. 72.01 (24) and (24a) of the supreme court rules are amended to read:
(24)
Traffic forfeiture, conservation forfeiture and ordinance violation case files.
All papers deposited with the clerk of circuit court in every proceeding
commenced under chapters chs. 29, 30, 48, 66, 125, 167, 343, 345,
and 350 and 938 of the statutes , stats.: 6 years
after entry of final judgment.
(24a)
Traffic forfeiture, conservation forfeiture and ordinance violation court
record. A history and index of proceedings kept in book or card form books,
on cards or in electronic or optical format: 6 years after entry of final
judgment.
SECTION
6. 72.01 (41), (43) and (44) of the supreme court rules are amended to read:
(41)
(title) Juvenile delinquency, juveniles in need of protection and services
and children in need of protection and services case files. Except as
provided in sub. (24), all All papers deposited with the clerk of
circuit court, register in probate or clerk of court for juvenile matters in
every proceeding commenced under chapter ch. 48 or 938 of
the statutes ,stats.: 10 4 years after the 18th
birthday of the juvenile or child; 8 years after the 18th
birthday of the juvenile or child if he or she was adjudicated delinquent for
committing an act that would be punishable as a Class A or Class B felony if
committed by an adult.
(43)
Juvenile court record. A history and index of proceedings under chapter ch.
48 or 938 of the statutes , stats., kept in book or
card form books, on cards or in electronic or optical format: 10
4 years after the 18th birthday of the juvenile or child;
8 years after the 18th birthday of the juvenile or child if he or she was
adjudicated delinquent for committing an act that would be punishable as a
Class A or Class B felony if committed by an adult.
(44)
Juvenile minute record. A brief statement of in-court proceedings commenced
under chapter ch. 48 or 938 of the statutes stats.,
generally maintained in the case file: 10
4 years after the 18th birthday of the juvenile or child; 8
years after the 18th birthday of the juvenile or child if he or she was
adjudicated delinquent for committing an act that would be punishable as a Class
A or Class B felony if committed by an adult.
SECTION
7. 72.01 (47) of the supreme court rules is amended to read:
(47)
Court reporter notes. Verbatim stenographic or, shorthand,
audio or video notes produced by a court reporter or any other
verbatim record of in-court proceedings: 10 years after the hearing.
SECTION
8. 72.01 (53), (54) and (55) of the supreme court rules are amended to read:
(53)
Juror questionnaires. A form sent to determine eligibility of prospective
jurors: 3 4 years after panel service.
(54)
Jury array. A list of qualified persons selected by jury commissioners
to serve as jurors: 3 4 years after panel service.
(55)
Record of jurors. A record of jurors summoned to serve on juries: 3 4
years after panel service.
SECTION
9. 72.01 (63) of the supreme court rules is created to read:
(63)
Inquest records. Records of an inquest under s. 979.08, stats., including
testimony, evidence, written instructions and findings of probable cause or
verdict: No retention; record is delivered to the coroner or medical examiner
for safekeeping.
SECTION
10. 72.01 (64) of the supreme court rules is created to read:
(64)
Incarcerated person records. Files containing prisoner litigation
correspondence, pleadings and other documents; usually a writ of habeas corpus
or certiorari; that are kept in group files until they are reviewed by a judge
to determine if the action can be filed without the payment of filing fees and
court costs: 5 years after date of
submission. If the action meets the filing criteria as a civil action, it
becomes a civil case and is retained in accordance with sub. (1).
SECTION
11. 72.05 of the supreme court rules is repealed and recreated to read:
72.05
(title) Retention of court records maintained as official or original
information on electronic or optical storage systems.
(1)
In this rule:
(a)
"Accessible" means arranged, identified, indexed and maintained in a
manner that permits the location and retrieval of the information in a readable
format within a reasonable time by use of the proper hardware and software.
(b)
"Accurately reproduce" means that, when displayed on a retrieval
device or reproduced on paper, all information exhibits a high degree of
legibility and readability.
(c)
"Authenticity" means actually and reliably what is claimed and
implies the ability to substantiate what is claimed.
(d)
"Legible" means that, when displayed on a retrieval device or
reproduced on paper, the quality of the letters, numbers or symbols enables the
user to identify them positively and quickly to the exclusion of all other
letters, numbers or symbols.
(e)
"Readable" means that the quality of a group of letters, numbers or
symbols is recognized as words, complete numbers or distinct symbols.
(2)
Court records specified in SCR 72.01 and maintained as official or original
information on electronic or optical storage systems shall be retained in the
custody of the court for the minimum time periods specified in SCR 72.01. The
system maintaining the court records shall meet all of the following
requirements:
(a)
The information retained shall be in a legible and accessible format capable of
accurately reproducing the original, or of sustaining readability, for the time
periods specified in SCR 72.01.
(b)
Operational and technical system procedures shall protect the authenticity,
confidentiality, accuracy and reliability of the information captured and
provide the appropriate level of security to safeguard the integrity of the
electronic or optically imaged information.
(c)
The legibility and readability of a statistically significant sampling of
electronic or optically imaged records shall be verified to ensure, to a 99.5%
degree of confidence, that the information or images are legible and readable.
Original optical images that are not legible or readable shall be flagged and
rescanned for optimum image enhancement. Illegible images shall contain the
scanned notation "best possible image".
(d)
A suitable technical level of security shall be provided to protect electronic
or optically imaged records that are required to be sealed, impounded or
confidential and procedures shall be implemented to restrict access to only
those persons authorized by statute or court order to access those records.
(e)
Suitable hardware and software shall be provided to retrieve, read and timely
reproduce on paper any record retained on electronic or optical storage
systems.
(f)
Procedures shall be in place and timely implemented for the backup, recovery
and storage of electronically or optically stored records to protect those
records against media destruction or deterioration and information loss.
(g)
For disaster recovery purposes, at least one electronically or optically stored
backup copy of all automated or optically imaged records shall be maintained
using accepted computer backup procedures; backup copies shall be stored in a
separate location under appropriate environmental storage conditions; and a
schedule to regularly update or supplement backup copies as a normal part of
operations shall be implemented.
(h)
At least one set of documentation for the electronic or optical systems that
produced the automated or optically imaged records shall be maintained for the
retention period of those records, and documentation shall be regularly updated
or supplemented when revisions are made.
(i)
Inspection of a statistically significant sampling of electronic or optically
imaged records shall be conducted at least once every 3 years to verify, to a
99.5% degree of confidence, that there has been no degradation of the
electronic medium or of the image quality.
(j)
A media retention and conversion review schedule shall be established to ensure
that electronically or optically stored information is reviewed for data
conversion or recertification at least once every 3 years or more frequently
when necessary to prevent the physical loss of data or technological
obsolescence of the medium.
(k)
Off-line electronic data or records stored on optical disk shall be transferred
to new media or new optical disk and verified prior to the expiration of
one-half of the useful life of the original media or disk as determined by the
manufacturer's certified disk playback stability measured in years.
(L)
Court records electronically or optically stored, including records stored
off-line and on backup media, that are expunged by court order under ss.
938.355 (4m) and 973.015, stats., shall be expunged by sealing or removing the
record, obliterating the index to the record, or otherwise restricting access
to the record.
(3)
Electronically or optically stored records with historical or research value
beyond the retention periods specified in SCR 72.01 shall be protected from
destruction or media deterioration and transferred to the state historical
society of Wisconsin in a computer-industry-accepted standard universal format,
together with technical documentation.
(4)
Records electronically or optically stored that have reached the minimum
retention period specified in SCR 72.01 and that do not have historical or
research value may be destroyed. For the circuit court automation program or
other electronic court data systems and for write-once-read-many-times optical
disk systems, records should be organized and formatted to permit the off-line
disk or optical disk as a whole to be destroyed. For write-once-read-many-times
disks, the destruction or sealing of the specific index reference to the
obsolete record is sufficient.
(5)
A written plan shall be provided to the director of state courts for prior
approval to ensure compliance with this rule before a new electronic or optical
imaging system is implemented and before an existing system is enhanced. The
plan shall indicate all of the following:
(a)
That a feasibility study was conducted and an analysis made of the system's
cost and conversion costs compared to ongoing current costs.
(b)
That a data migration plan has been developed for the retention period of
electronically or optically stored records.
(c)
If the system is an optical imaging system, that the custodian of the record
has executed a statement of intent and purpose indicating all of the following:
1.
The case type of record and years to be reproduced or transferred.
2.
The subsection of SCR 72.01 that pertains to the type of court record being
imaged.
3.
The physical disposition of the original paper records.
4.
If the system is a county system, the county resolution or ordinance
authorizing optical imaging.
5.
The certification of the records as received or created and transferred to
optical disk format in the normal course of business.
(d)
That the statement of intent and purpose was provided to the office of the
director of state courts.
IT
IS FURTHER ORDERED that, effective April 1, 1999 and unless otherwise ordered
by the court prior to that date, 72.01 (24), (24a) and (24m) of the supreme
court rules are amended to read:
(24)
Traffic forfeiture, conservation forfeiture and ordinance violation case files.
All papers deposited with the clerk of circuit court in every proceeding
commenced under chs. 29, 30, 48, 66, 125, 167, 343, 345, 350 and 938, stats.: 6
5 years after entry of final judgment.
(24a)
Traffic forfeiture, conservation forfeiture and ordinance violation court
record. A history and index of proceedings kept in books, on cards or in
electronic or optical format: 6 5 years after entry of final
judgment.
(24m)
Traffic forfeiture, conservation forfeiture and ordinance violation minute
record. A brief statement of in-court proceedings in a forfeiture or ordinance
violation action, generally maintained in the case file: 6 5
years after entry of final judgment.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that notice of these amendments of the Supreme Court Rules shall be given by a single publication of a copy of this order in the official state newspaper and in an official publication of the State Bar of Wisconsin.
Dated at Madison, Wisconsin, this 1st day of April, 1998.
BY THE COURT:
__________________________________
Marilyn L. Graves, Clerk