Rule 5.Service and Filing of Pleadings, Documents, and Other Papers
Current through July 1, 2026 · Last verified July 13, 2026
In one sentenceRule 5 spells out who must be served with pleadings, motions, and other papers filed after the complaint, how that service and the court filing itself must be carried out, and how the clerk distributes signed orders.
(A)Service: When Required. Unless otherwise provided by these rules or an order of the court, each party and special judge, if any, must be served with:
(1)every order required by its terms to be served;
(2)every pleading subsequent to the original complaint;
(3)every written motion except one which may be heard ex parte;
(4)every brief submitted to the trial court;
(5)every paper relating to discovery required to be served upon a party; and
(6)every written notice, appearance, demand, offer of judgment, designation of record on appeal, or similar paper. No service need be made on parties in default for failure to appear, except that pleadings asserting new or additional claims for relief against them shall be served upon them in the manner provided by service of summons in Rule 4.
(B)Service: How made. Whenever a party is represented by an attorney of record, service must be made upon such attorney unless service upon the party is ordered by the court. Service upon the attorney or party must be made by delivering or mailing a copy of the papers to the last known address, or where service is by electronic means approved by the Indiana Office of Judicial Admin- istration (IOJA) a copy of the documents to the fax number or email address set out in the appearance form or correction as required by Rule 3.1(E).
(1)Delivery. Delivery of a copy within this rule means
(a)offering or tendering it to the attorney or party and stating the nature of the papers being served. Refusal to accept an offered or tendered document is a waiver of any objec- tion to the sufficiency or adequacy of service of that document;
(b)leaving it at his office with a clerk or other person in charge thereof, or if there is no one in charge, leaving it in a conspicuous place therein; or
(c)if the office is closed, by leaving it at his dwelling house or usual place of abode with some person of suitable age and discretion then residing therein; or,
(d)leaving it at some other suitable place, selected by the attorney upon whom service is being made, pursuant to duly promulgated local rule.
(2)Service by Mail. If service is made by mail, the papers must be deposited in the United States mail or third- party commercial carrier by which a receipt may be requested and obtained addressed to the person on whom they are being served, with postage prepaid. Service is deemed complete upon mailing. Proof of service of all papers permitted to be mailed may be made by written acknowledgment of service, by affidavit of the person who mailed the papers, or by cer- tificate of service. It is the duty of attorneys when entering their appearance in a cause or when filing pleadings or papers therein, to have noted in the Chronological Case Summary or said pleadings or papers so filed the address and telephone number of their office. Service by delivery or by mail at such address is deemed sufficient and complete.
(3)Service by electronic means.
(a)Electronic service from the Clerk. The Clerk may transmit notice of rulings, orders, or judgments required by Trial Rule 72(D) by electronic means approved by IOJA to parties represented by attorneys and to unrepresented parties who have supplied the Court with an e-mail address for service. The transmission may include a link to or copy of the ruling, order, or judgment.
(b)Electronic service from other parties. A party who has consented to service by electronic means approved by IOJA may be served by transmitting a link to or copy of the document. Discovery documents must also be served in accordance with Trial Rule 26(A.1).
(c)Completion of electronic service. Service by electronic means approved by IOJA shall be deemed complete upon transmission. Service that occurs on a Saturday, Sunday, a legal holiday, or a day the court or agency in which the matter is pending is closed, or after 5:00 p.m. local time of the recipient shall be deemed complete the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, a legal holiday, or a day the court or agency in which the matter is pending is not closed.
(C)Certificate of Service. Any person tendering a document for filing must include a certificate of service, listing the parties served, and specifying the date and means of service. The certificate of service must be placed at the end of the document and must not be separately filed. The separate filing of a certificate of service, however, must not be grounds for rejecting a document for filing. A court that receives documents without a certificate of service must require prompt filing of a separate certificate of service.
(1)Except as provided in subdivision (D)(2), all pleadings and papers after the complaint that are required to be served upon a party must be filed with the court either before service or within a reasonable period of time thereafter.
(2)A deposition, request for discovery, or response to request for discovery under Rules 27, 30, 31, 33, 34 or 36 must not be filed with the court unless:
(a)A motion is filed pursuant to Rule 26(C) or Rule 37 and the original deposition, request for discovery, or response to request for discovery is necessary to enable the court to rule; or
(b)A party desires to use the deposition, request for discovery, or response to request for discovery for evidentiary purposes at trial or in connection with a motion, and the court, either upon its own motion or that of any party, or as a part of any pre-trial order, orders the filing of the original.
(3)Custody of original and Period of Retention:
(a)The original of a deposition shall, subject to the provisions of Trial Rule 30(E), be delivered by the reporter to the party taking it and shall be maintained by that party until filed with the Court pursuant to paragraph (2) or until the later of final judgment, agreed settlement of the litigation or all appellate rights have been exhausted.
(b)The original or any request for discovery or response thereto under Trial Rules 27, 30, 31, 33, 34 and 36 shall be maintained by the party originating the request or response until filed with the Court pursuant to paragraph (2) or until the later of final judgment, agreed settlement or all appellate rights have been exhausted.
(4)In the event it is made to appear to the satisfaction of the Court that the original of a deposition or request for discovery or response thereto cannot be filed with the Court when required, the Court may allow use of a copy instead of the original.
(5)The filing of any deposition shall constitute publication.
(E)Filing With the Court Defined. The filing of pleadings, motions, and other papers with the court as required by these rules shall be made by one of the following methods:
(1)Delivery to the clerk of the court;
(2)Sending by electronic transmission under the procedure adopted pursuant to Admin- istrative Rule 12;
(3)Mailing to the clerk by registered, certified or express mail return receipt requested;
(4)Depositing with any third-party commercial carrier for delivery to the clerk within three
(5)If the court so permits, filing with the judge, in which event the judge shall note thereon the filing date and forthwith transmit them to the office of the clerk; or
(6)Electronic filing, as approved by the Indiana Office of Judicial Administration (IOJA) pur- suant to Trial Rule 87. Filing by registered or certified mail and by third-party commercial carrier shall be complete upon mailing or deposit. Any party filing any paper by any method other than personal delivery to the clerk shall retain proof of filing.
(1)Court Records are accessible to the public, except as provided in the Rules on Access to Court Records.
(2)Any Court Record excluded from Public Access pursuant to the Rules on Access to Court Records must be filed in accordance with Rule 7 of the Rules on Access to Court Records.
(1)Unless otherwise provided by statute or these rules, the clerk shall distribute signed orders to non-defaulting parties for whom an e-mail address has not been provided.
(2)All orders in Trial Rule 69 Proceedings Supplemental, Execution, and Foreclosure Sales shall be distributed for service by the party who submitted the proposed order.
Amendment History
This rule’s current text took effect January 1, 2026. For the full history of earlier amendments and adoption orders, see the Indiana Office of Court Services.
Plain-English Summary
Once a lawsuit is underway, Rule 5 governs the paperwork that moves between the parties and the court after the original complaint. Section A lists what has to be served on every party — and any special judge assigned to the case — going forward: court orders, later pleadings, written motions except ones a judge can rule on without a hearing, trial briefs, discovery papers, and notices, appearances, demands, offers of judgment, and similar filings. A party who has defaulted by failing to appear ordinarily does not need to be served with anything more, with one exception: a later pleading that adds a new claim against that party has to be served on them the way a summons is served under Rule 4.
Section B covers the mechanics of service. When a party has a lawyer of record, papers go to the lawyer, not the party, unless a judge orders service on the party directly. Delivery can mean handing the document over while describing what it is (refusing to accept it does not defeat service — it waives any objection to how the document was served), leaving it at the office with whoever is in charge, leaving it at a home if the office is closed, or dropping it at another spot a local rule allows. Service by mail — U.S. mail or a commercial carrier, postage prepaid — counts as complete the moment the papers are deposited, not when they arrive, and can be proven with a written acknowledgment, an affidavit from whoever mailed it, or a certificate of service. Electronic service runs through methods the Indiana Office of Judicial Administration has approved: the clerk can transmit rulings, orders, and judgments to attorneys and to unrepresented parties who have supplied an email address, and parties who have consented to electronic service can serve each other the same way. Electronic service is complete once transmitted, unless it goes out after 5 p.m., on a weekend, on a legal holiday, or on a day the court is closed — then it counts as served the next day the court is open.
Section C requires a certificate of service on anything filed with the court, listing who was served and how — and that certificate has to sit at the end of the document itself, not as a separate filing, though filing one separately by mistake is not grounds to reject the document. Section D sets the filing deadline: most papers get filed before service or within a reasonable time afterward. Discovery materials are the notable exception — depositions, discovery requests, and responses are not filed with the court as a matter of course. They stay with the party who took the deposition or served the request until a discovery dispute requires the court to see the original, a party wants to use the material as evidence, or the case is otherwise resolved by judgment, settlement, or the close of any appeal. Filing a deposition with the court formally publishes it, folding it into the case record.
Section E lists the accepted ways to file something with the court: handing it to the clerk, sending it by approved electronic transmission, mailing it by registered, certified, or express mail, using a third-party commercial carrier that will deliver it to the clerk within three calendar days, handing it to the judge if the court allows that, or filing it through the electronic filing system the Indiana Office of Judicial Administration has approved. Mail and carrier filings count as complete once sent, and anyone filing by a method other than personal delivery has to keep proof of filing. Section F confirms that court records stay open to the public except where separate rules on access to court records exclude them, and Section G puts the clerk in charge of sending signed orders to non-defaulting parties who have not supplied an email address — except in proceedings supplemental, execution, and foreclosure sale matters, where the party who submitted the proposed order handles distribution.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who has to be served with copies of court papers under Rule 5?
Every party in the case, and any special judge assigned to it, has to be served with orders, pleadings filed after the complaint, written motions (other than ones a judge can decide without a hearing), trial briefs, discovery papers, and notices, appearances, demands, offers of judgment, and similar filings. A party who has defaulted by not appearing usually does not need further service, except for a pleading that adds a new claim against them — that has to be served like a summons.
If the other side has a lawyer, do I serve the lawyer or the party?
Serve the lawyer. Rule 5 requires service on a party’s attorney of record instead of the party once that attorney has appeared in the case, unless a judge specifically orders service on the party.
When is service by mail considered complete under Indiana’s rules?
The moment the papers are deposited in the mail or with a commercial carrier, postage prepaid — not when the other side receives them. You can prove mail service with a written acknowledgment, an affidavit from the person who mailed it, or a certificate of service.
What happens if I send an electronic filing after 5 p.m. or on a weekend?
It still counts as served, but the clock does not start until the next day the court is open. Rule 5 treats electronic service sent after 5 p.m. local time, or on a Saturday, Sunday, legal holiday, or day the court is closed, as complete on the next day that is not one of those.
Do I need to file my depositions and discovery requests with the court?
Generally, no. Depositions and discovery materials stay with the party who took or served them and are not filed with the court unless a discovery motion requires the original for the judge to rule, or a party intends to use the material as evidence at trial or on a motion.
Where does the certificate of service go on a filed document?
At the end of the document itself. Rule 5 requires the certificate of service — listing who was served and the date and method of service — to appear at the end of the paper being filed, not as a separate document.
Can I file a document with the court by mail or courier instead of going to the clerk’s office in person?
Yes. Rule 5 allows filing by mailing to the clerk (registered, certified, or express mail), by a third-party commercial carrier that will deliver to the clerk within three calendar days, or through the court’s approved electronic filing system, in addition to hand delivery. Anyone filing by a method other than personal delivery has to keep proof that the filing was made.
Source & verification. The rule text is reproduced verbatim from the
official Indiana Rules of Trial Procedure (T.R. 5). Prescribed by the Supreme Court of Indiana, under its inherent constitutional rulemaking power (reaffirmed by Ind. Code 34-8-1-1 and 34-8-2-1); originally enacted by the Indiana General Assembly in 1969. The plain-English summary is original and written by us. Last verified July 13, 2026. ·
Official source
Also known as:how to serve court papers in indianaindiana certificate of service requirementselectronic service rules indiana lawsuitdo i have to file depositions with the court indianaserving a lawyer instead of a party indianaindiana trial rule 5 service and filingwhen is mail service complete indiana