RulesofCivilProcedure.com Civil Procedure · Every State

Rule 59.Motion to correct error

Current through July 1, 2026 · Last verified July 13, 2026

In one sentenceTrial Rule 59 governs Indiana’s motion to correct error, a mostly optional post-judgment motion asking the trial court to fix its own mistakes before an appeal, spelling out when it is required, its deadlines and content, the relief a court can grant, and one carve-out for juvenile placement orders.

Full Text of Rule 59

Text sizeJump to: (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) (F) (G) (H) (I) (J) (K)

(A) Motion to correct error--When mandatory. A Motion to Correct Error is not a prerequisite for appeal, except when a party seeks to address:
(1) Newly discovered material evidence, including alleged jury misconduct, capable of pro- duction within thirty (30) days of final judgment which, with reasonable diligence, could not have been discovered and produced at trial; or
(2) A claim that a jury verdict is excessive or inadequate. All other issues and grounds for appeal appropriately preserved during trial may be initially addressed in the appellate brief.
(B) Filing of motion. The motion to correct error, if any, may be made by the trial court, or by any party.
(C) Time for filing: The motion to correct error, if any, must be filed not later than thirty (30) days after the entry of a final judgment is noted in the Chronological Case Summary. The time at which the court is deemed to have ruled on the motion is set forth in T.R. 53.3.
(D) Errors raised by motion to correct error, and content of motion. Where used, a motion to correct error need only address those errors found in Trial Rule 59 (A)(1) and (2). Any error raised however shall be stated in specific rather than general terms and shall be accompanied by a statement of facts and grounds upon which the error is based. The error claimed is not required to be stated under, or in the language of the bases for the motion allowed by this rule, by statute, or by other law.
(E) Statement in opposition to motion to correct error. Following the filing of a motion to correct error, a party who opposes the motion may file a statement in opposition to the motion to correct error not later than fifteen [15] days after service of the motion. The statement in opposition may assert grounds which show that the final judgment or appealable final order should remain unchanged, or the statement in opposition may present other grounds which show that the party filing the statement in opposition is entitled to other relief.
(F) Motion to correct error granted. Any modification or setting aside of a final judgment or an appealable final order following the filing of a Motion to Correct Error shall be an appealable final judgment or order.
(G) Cross errors. If a motion to correct error is denied, the party who prevailed on that motion may, in the appellate brief and without having filed a statement in opposition to the motion to correct error in the trial court, defend against the motion to correct error on any ground and may first assert grounds for relief therein, including grounds falling within sections (A)(1) and (2) of this rule. In addition, if a Notice of Appeal rather than a motion to correct error is filed by a party, the opposing party may raise any grounds as cross-errors and also may raise any reas- ons to affirm the judgment directly in the appellate brief, including those grounds for which a motion to correct error is required when directly appealing a judgment under Sections (A)(1) and (2) of this rule.
(H) Motion to correct error based on evidence outside the record.
(1) When a motion to correct error is based upon evidence outside the record, the motion shall be supported by affidavits showing the truth of the grounds set out in the motion and the affidavits shall be served with the motion.
(2) If a party opposes a motion to correct error made under this subdivision, that party has fif- teen [15] days after service of the moving party’s affidavits and motion, in which to file oppos- ing affidavits.
(3) If a party opposes a motion to correct error made under this subdivision, that party has fif- teen [15] days after service of the moving party’s affidavits and motion, in which to file its own motion to correct errors under this subdivision, and in which to assert relevant matters which relate to the kind of relief sought by the party first moving to correct error under this subdivision.
(4) No reply affidavits, motions, or other papers from the party first moving to correct errors are contemplated under this subdivision.
(I) Costs in the event a new trial is ordered. The trial court, in granting a new trial, may place costs upon the party who applied for the new trial, or a portion of the costs, or it may place costs abiding the event of the suit, or it may place all costs or a portion of the costs on either or all parties as justice and equity in the case may require after the trial court has taken into consideration the causes which made the new trial necessary.
(J) Relief granted on motion to correct error. The court, if it determines that prejudicial or harmful error has been committed, shall take such action as will cure the error, including without limitation the following with respect to all or some of the parties and all or some of the errors:
(1) Grant a new trial;
(2) Enter final judgment;
(3) Alter, amend, modify or correct judgment;
(4) Amend or correct the findings or judgment as provided in Rule 52(B);
(5) In the case of excessive or inadequate damages, enter final judgment on the evidence for the amount of the proper damages, grant a new trial, or grant a new trial subject to additur or remittitur;
(6) Grant any other appropriate relief, or make relief subject to condition; or
(7) In reviewing the evidence, the court shall grant a new trial if it determines that the ver- dict of a non-advisory jury is against the weight of the evidence; and shall enter judgment, subject to the provisions herein, if the court determines that the verdict of a non-advisory jury is clearly erroneous as contrary to or not supported by the evidence, or if the court determines that the findings and judgment upon issues tried without a jury or with an advisory jury are against the weight of the evidence. In its order correcting error the court shall direct final judgment to be entered or shall correct the error without a new trial unless such relief is shown to be impracticable or unfair to any of the parties or is otherwise improper; and if a new trial is required it shall be limited only to those parties and issues affected by the error unless such relief is shown to be impracticable or unfair. If corrective relief is granted, the court shall specify the general reasons therefor. When a new trial is granted because the verdict, findings or judgment do not accord with the evidence, the court shall make special findings of fact upon each material issue or element of the claim or defense upon which a new trial is granted. Such finding shall indicate whether the decision is against the weight of the evidence or whether it is clearly erroneous as con- trary to or not supported by the evidence; if the decision is found to be against the weight of the evidence, the findings shall relate the supporting and opposing evidence to each issue upon which a new trial is granted; if the decision is found to be clearly erroneous as contrary to or not supported by the evidence, the findings shall show why judgment was not entered upon the evidence.
(K) Orders regarding services, programs, or placement of children alleged to be delinquents or alleged to be in need of services. No motion to correct error is allowed concerning orders or decrees issued pursuant to Indi- ana Code sections 31-34-4-7(e), 31-34-19-6.1(e), 31-37-5-8(f), or 31-37-18-9(b). Appeals of such orders and decrees shall proceed as prescribed by Indiana Appellate Rule 14.1.

Amendment History

This rule’s current text took effect July 15, 2021. For the full history of earlier amendments and adoption orders, see the Indiana Office of Court Services.

Plain-English Summary

Trial Rule 59 governs Indiana’s motion to correct error — a request that goes back to the same judge who handled the case, asking that judge to fix a mistake before anyone appeals to a higher court. For most claims of trial-court error, filing this motion is optional: a party who has properly preserved an issue during the case can go straight to the Court of Appeals and raise it directly in the appellate brief. The motion becomes mandatory only for two specific situations — newly discovered evidence (including alleged juror misconduct) that could not have been found and produced at trial with reasonable diligence and that can still be produced within thirty days of final judgment, and a claim that a jury’s verdict was excessive or inadequate. Either the trial court itself or any party may raise the motion, and it must be filed no later than thirty days after entry of final judgment is noted in the case’s Chronological Case Summary. Whatever error a party raises has to be spelled out specifically, with the facts and grounds behind it, rather than described in general terms or in language borrowed from the rule itself.

Once a motion to correct error is filed, the opposing side has fifteen days after service to file a statement in opposition, arguing either that the judgment should stand or that it is entitled to different relief of its own. If granting the motion means modifying or setting aside the final judgment, that new ruling itself becomes an appealable order. Losing the motion does not close off an opponent’s arguments, either: a party who defeated a motion to correct error in the trial court can still defend the judgment on any ground, or raise entirely new grounds — including the newly-discovered-evidence and excessive-damages grounds that would otherwise require its own motion — once the case reaches the appellate brief. That same cross-error option is available even when the opposing party skipped the motion to correct error altogether and went straight to a notice of appeal. A motion built on facts outside the trial record needs supporting affidavits filed with the motion, and the other side then has fifteen days to respond with its own opposing affidavits or its own motion to correct error addressing related relief.

The heart of the rule is the menu of relief a court can order once it finds prejudicial or harmful error: a new trial, entry of final judgment, alteration or correction of the judgment, amendment of findings, or — for a jury verdict found excessive or inadequate — entry of judgment for the correct damages, a new trial, or a new trial conditioned on the parties accepting an increased or reduced damages figure. The rule pushes courts toward fixing errors without a full retrial whenever that is practical and fair, and limits any new trial that is ordered to only the parties and issues the error affected. When a new trial is granted because a verdict or the court’s own findings do not match the evidence, the court has to explain itself with specific findings on each affected issue, stating whether the problem is that the result went against the weight of the evidence or that it was not supported by the evidence at all — two different standards that call for different treatment. A trial court that orders a new trial can also decide who pays for it, weighing what made the new trial necessary. One category of case is carved out entirely: orders about services, programs, or placement for children alleged to be delinquent or in need of services do not go through a motion to correct error at all — those follow a separate appellate procedure instead.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I have to file a motion to correct error before I can appeal a civil judgment in Indiana?

In most cases, no. Trial Rule 59(A) makes the motion optional, and any issue that was properly preserved during the case can go directly into the appellate brief on a notice of appeal. The motion becomes mandatory only when a party wants to raise newly discovered evidence or argue that a jury’s verdict was excessive or inadequate — those two grounds have to go through a motion to correct error first.

What is the difference between a motion to correct error and a notice of appeal?

A motion to correct error stays in the trial court and asks the same judge who handled the case to fix the mistake — order a new trial, amend the judgment, and so on. A notice of appeal instead moves the case to the Court of Appeals for review by different judges. The two are not an either-or choice over time: a party can file a motion to correct error, lose it, and still pursue an appeal afterward, since Trial Rule 59(F) makes a ruling that modifies or sets aside a judgment its own appealable order.

How long do I have to file a motion to correct error in Indiana?

No later than thirty days after entry of final judgment is noted in the case’s Chronological Case Summary, under Trial Rule 59(C). A separate rule, Trial Rule 53.3, addresses when the trial court is deemed to have ruled on a pending motion.

What can a court do if it grants a motion to correct error?

Trial Rule 59(J) gives the court a wide menu: order a new trial, enter final judgment, alter or amend the judgment, correct its findings, or — if a jury verdict was excessive or inadequate — enter judgment for the correct damages, order a new trial, or order a new trial conditioned on the parties accepting an increased or reduced damages figure. The rule favors fixing the error without a full new trial whenever that is practical and fair to the parties.

If I win a motion to correct error, can the other side still raise arguments on appeal?

Yes. Trial Rule 59(G) lets a party who prevailed on a motion to correct error defend the judgment on any ground, and even raise new grounds for relief, once the case reaches the appellate brief — without having filed a statement in opposition in the trial court first.

Does Trial Rule 59 apply to juvenile delinquency or child-in-need-of-services placement orders?

No. Trial Rule 59(K) carves out orders issued under specific Indiana Code sections governing services, programs, or placement for children alleged to be delinquent or in need of services. Those orders are appealed under a separate procedure, Indiana Appellate Rule 14.1, instead of through a motion to correct error.

Can a motion to correct error rely on facts that were not part of the trial record?

Yes, but only if it is supported with affidavits. Trial Rule 59(H) requires a motion based on evidence outside the record to be accompanied by affidavits establishing the grounds it relies on, served together with the motion. The opposing party then has fifteen days after service to file its own opposing affidavits or its own motion to correct error addressing related relief.

Source & verification. The rule text is reproduced verbatim from the official Indiana Rules of Trial Procedure (T.R. 59). 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: motion to correct error indianatrial rule 59 indianado you need a motion to correct error before appealing in indianaindiana motion for new trialexcessive damages motion to correct error indianamotion to correct error deadline indianaindiana notice of appeal versus motion to correct error