Current through July 1, 2026 · Last verified July 13, 2026
In one sentenceTrial Rule 53 lets a court appoint a court-appointed neutral — an attorney, a senior judge, or another qualified person — to investigate, hold hearings, or manage part of a case, and spells out how the neutral is chosen and how the neutral’s report reaches the court.
(A)Appointment and compensation. Each trial court may appoint a court-appointed neutral in a case pending therein if: (1) All parties consent to appointment of a court-appointed neutral; or (2) If all parties do not con- sent, the court, after giving notice to the parties and an opportunity to be heard finds it prob- able that appointment of a court-appointed neutral will materially assist the court in resolving the case in a just and timely manner; the anticipated costs associated with the appointment of a court-appointed neutral are proportionate to the value of the case; and the anticipated costs associated with the appointment of a court-appointed neutral will not be unduly burdensome to any party. As used in these rules the term “court-appointed neutral” includes without limitation an attorney, a senior judge, a referee, an auditor, an examiner, a commissioner, an assessor, or any attorney or non-attorney who has special skills or training appropriate to perform the tasks that may be required. If an attorney, the court-appointed neutral must be an attorney licensed and in good standing in the State of Indiana. Selection of the court-appointed neutral may be by agreement of the parties or selected by the court. The compensation to be allowed to a court-appointed neutral must be reasonable.
(B)Reference. The order of reference may also direct the court-appointed neutral to only report upon par- ticular issues, perform particular acts, receive and report evidence only, or fix the time and place for beginning and closing hearings, or the filing of the court-appointed neutral’s report.
(C)Powers. Subject to the specifications and limitations stated in the order of reference, the court-appoin- ted neutral has the power to regulate all proceedings before the court-appointed neutral, and to take all measures necessary or proper for the efficient performance of the duties assigned under the order.
(1)Meetings. When a reference is made, the clerk must furnish the court-appointed neutral with a copy of the order of reference. Upon receipt thereof unless the order of reference otherwise provides, the court-appointed neutral must set a time and place for the first meeting of the parties or their attorneys to be held within twenty days after the date of the order of ref- erence and notify the parties or their attorneys. It is the duty of the court-appointed neutral to proceed with all reasonable diligence. Either party, on notice to the parties and court- appointed neutral, may apply to the court for an order requiring the court-appointed neutral to speed the proceedings and to make the report. If a party fails to appear at the time and place appointed, the court-appointed neutral may proceed ex parte or, in the court-appoin- ted neutral's discretion, adjourn the proceedings to a future day, giving notice to the absent party of the adjournment.
(2)Witnesses. The court-appointed neutral may examine witnesses, including the parties to the action, under oath. The court-appointed neutral may permit the parties to examine witnesses under oath and may place reasonable limits on the examination of witnesses by the parties. The parties may procure the attendance of witnesses before the court-appointed neutral by the issuance and service of subpoenas as provided in Rule 45. If without adequate excuse a wit- ness fails to appear or give evidence, the witness may be punished as for a contempt and be subjected to the consequences, penalties, and remedies provided in Rules 37 and 45.
(3)Evidence and statement of accounts. The court-appointed neutral may require the production of evidence on all matters embraced in the order of reference, including the production of records and documents of all kinds, including electronic media. The court-appointed neutral may rule upon the admiss- ibility of evidence unless otherwise directed by the order of reference and has the authority to place witnesses under oath. If a party so requests, the court-appointed neutral must make a record of the evidence offered and excluded in the same manner, and subject to the same limitations, as provided for a court sitting without a jury. When matters of accounting are in issue before the court-appointed neutral, the court-appointed neutral may prescribe the form in which the amounts must be submitted and in any proper case may require or receive in evidence a statement by a certified public accountant who is called as a witness. Upon objection of a party to any of the items thus submitted or upon a showing that the form of statement is insufficient, the court-appointed neutral may require a different form of state- ment to be furnished, or the accounts or specific items thereof to be provided by oral exam- ination of the accounting parties or upon written interrogatories or in such other manner as directed.
(1)Contents and filing. The court-appointed neutral must prepare a report upon the matters submitted by the order of reference and, if required by request of any party or the court prior to hearing or the tak- ing of evidence to make findings of fact, the court-appointed neutral must set them forth in the report. The court-appointed neutral must file the report with the clerk of the court.
(2)In nonjury actions. Within ten days after being served with notice of the filing of the report any party may serve written objections upon the other parties. Application to the court for action upon the report and upon objections must be by motion and upon notice as prescribed in Rules 5 and 6. The court after hearing may adopt the report or may reject it in whole or in part or may receive further evidence or may re-commit it with instructions.
(3)In jury actions. In an action to be tried by a jury the court-appointed neutral must not be directed to report the evidence. The findings upon the issues submitted to the court-appointed neutral are admissible as evidence of the matters found and may be read to the jury, subject to the rul- ing of the court upon any objections in point of law which may be made to the report.
(4)Stipulation as to findings. The effect of a master’s report is the same whether or not the parties have consented to the reference; but, when the parties stipulate that a master’s findings of fact shall be final, only questions of law arising upon the report shall thereafter be considered.
(5)Draft report. Before filing the report a court-appointed neutral may submit a draft thereof to counsel for all parties for the purpose of receiving their suggestions. The court may also request interim report(s) from the court-appointed neutral at any time.
(F)Particular laws not affected. Nothing in this rule shall affect laws providing for the appointment and duties of probate commissioners; and nothing shall prevent any probate or other similar court from appointing a master under this rule.
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
A court-appointed neutral is Indiana’s current name for what used to be called a master — someone a court brings in, apart from the judge, to help move a case forward. Under Trial Rule 53, a court can appoint one in two ways: every party can agree to it, or, if they don’t all agree, the court can appoint one anyway after giving notice and a chance to be heard, but only if the court finds that the appointment will meaningfully help resolve the case in a just and timely way, that the expected cost fits the size of the case, and that the cost won’t fall too heavily on any one party. The rule casts a wide net over who can serve: an attorney, a senior judge, a referee, an auditor, an examiner, a commissioner, an assessor, or anyone else with skills or training suited to the assignment. An attorney serving in the role has to be licensed and in good standing in Indiana. The parties can agree on who fills the role, or the court can pick, and whatever the neutral is paid has to be reasonable.
The order appointing the neutral, called the order of reference, can narrow the assignment — limiting the neutral to reporting on specific issues, performing specific tasks, taking and reporting evidence without deciding anything, or working within a set schedule for hearings and for filing a report. Within whatever boundaries that order sets, the neutral can run the proceedings and take the steps needed to get the job done.
Once appointed, the neutral has real tools to work with. The clerk sends the neutral a copy of the order of reference, and the neutral must set the first meeting with the parties within twenty days, unless the order says otherwise, and then move the case along without needless delay; either party can go back to the court and ask it to push the neutral to speed things up. The neutral can put witnesses under oath, question them, let the parties do the same within reasonable limits, and use subpoenas under Trial Rule 45 to compel witnesses to appear — a witness who won’t show up or won’t testify faces the same contempt consequences that apply under Trial Rule 37 and Trial Rule 45. The neutral can also demand documents and records, rule on what evidence comes in, and, if a party asks, keep a record of the evidence offered and excluded the way a judge would in a bench trial. When the assignment touches accounting, the neutral can set the form for submitting figures and can call for a certified public accountant’s statement.
When the work is done, the neutral files a written report with the court clerk, including findings of fact if a party or the court asked for them before the evidence was taken. In a case without a jury, any party has ten days after being notified of the filing to object in writing, and the court can then adopt the report, reject all or part of it, hear more evidence, or send the matter back to the neutral with instructions. In a jury case, the neutral doesn’t report the evidence itself — only the findings on the issues submitted, which come in as evidence and can be read to the jury, subject to whatever legal objections a party raises. If the parties agree in advance that the neutral’s factual findings will be final, only legal questions about the report remain open once it’s filed. Before filing, the neutral can circulate a draft report to counsel for feedback, and the court can ask for interim reports along the way.
Trial Rule 53 doesn’t reach into probate practice — it leaves the separate laws governing probate commissioners untouched, and it doesn’t stop a probate or similar court from using this rule to appoint its own neutral instead.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a court-appointed neutral under Indiana Trial Rule 53?
A court-appointed neutral is a person a trial court brings into a case — apart from the judge — to help with tasks like taking evidence, holding hearings, or reporting on specific issues. The rule allows an attorney, a senior judge, a referee, an auditor, an examiner, a commissioner, an assessor, or anyone else with the right skills or training to serve. An attorney taking the role must be licensed and in good standing in Indiana.
Can a court appoint a neutral if one side objects?
Yes, but only after giving the parties notice and a chance to be heard. Before appointing a neutral over an objection, the court must find that the appointment will meaningfully help resolve the case in a just and timely way, that the expected cost is proportionate to the value of the case, and that the cost won’t be an unfair burden on any party.
Who chooses the court-appointed neutral?
Either the parties agree on who serves, or the court selects the neutral itself.
How is the neutral paid?
Trial Rule 53 requires only that the compensation be reasonable; it doesn’t set a fixed rate or fee schedule.
What happens if a party doesn’t show up to a meeting the neutral has scheduled?
The neutral can proceed without that party, or, at the neutral’s discretion, adjourn the proceeding to a later day and give the absent party notice of the new date.
Can the neutral’s report become final and unreviewable?
Not on facts and law both. If the parties stipulate that the neutral’s findings of fact are final, only questions of law raised by the report can still be considered by the court afterward.
Does Trial Rule 53 apply in probate cases?
Yes, alongside the separate laws governing probate commissioners. The rule doesn’t affect those laws, and it doesn’t stop a probate or similar court from appointing its own neutral under this rule instead.
Source & verification. The rule text is reproduced verbatim from the
official Indiana Rules of Trial Procedure (T.R. 53). 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
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