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Commonly Asked Questions about Court Procedure Documents

Ontarios court system is based on the fundamental principles of openness and accessibility. In general, most court documents are publicly accessible, unless a statutory provision, common law rule or court order restricts access.
To access records filed with any court in Alberta (the Alberta Court of Justice, the Court of Kings Bench of Alberta, or the Alberta Court of Appeal), you can go to any courthouse in Alberta with your search request.
Pleadings are the originating documents which set out a partys case in a legal proceeding and the facts being relied upon for that case. Pleadings provide the framework for litigation and set out the essential facts which support a cause of action as well as the relief that the party is requesting.
Service may be made as follows: by personally leaving the documents with the Defendant at any location. (Note: You must include the date and address where you served the Defendant in your Affidavit of Service).
Unless the documents require special service, you can serve by email, but there are special rules. You need the permission of the court or of the other party, and you will need to file the email along with your Form 6B: Affidavit of Service.
A commencement document is a statement of claim, an originating application, a counterclaim, a third-party claim, and a claim under the Family Law Act that starts a new proceeding (Form FL-10).
Serve documents by one of these methods: dropping off the document at the persons address for service, mailing the document by regular mail to the persons address for service, mailing the document by registered mail to the persons address for service,