Current through July 1, 2026 · Last verified July 13, 2026
In one sentenceTrial Rule 63 sets out what happens when the judge who handled a trial or hearing becomes unavailable before the case is finished, including how the Indiana Supreme Court appoints, qualifies, and pays a judge pro tempore to take over.
(A)Disability and unavailability after the trial or hearing. The judge who presides at the trial of a cause or a hearing at which evidence is received shall, if available, hear motions and make all decisions and rulings required to be made by the court relating to the evidence and the conduct of the trial or hearing after the trial or hearing is concluded. If the judge before whom the trial or hearing was held is not available by reason of death, sickness, absence or unwillingness to act, then any other judge regularly sitting in the judicial circuit or assigned to the cause may perform any of the duties to be performed by the court; but if he is satisfied that he cannot perform those duties because he did not preside at the trial or for any other reason, he may in his discretion grant a new trial or new hearing, in whole or in part. The unavailability of any such trial or hearing judge shall be determined and shown by a court order made by the successor judge at any time.
(B)Judge pro tempore in case of disability, unavailability, or neglect.
(1)When a judge of a court submits a verified petition and supporting proof to the Supreme Court stating that the judge is or will be unable to perform the duties of the office because of disability or other basis (e.g., order to military active duty), the Supreme Court shall promptly consider the petition.
(2)When a person submits a verified petition to the Supreme Court stating that a judge of a court (a) is unable to perform the duties of the office because of disability or (b) has failed, refused, or neglected to perform these duties, the Supreme Court shall issue an order to the judge, accompanied by the petition, requiring the judge to show cause as to why a judge pro tempore should not be appointed to perform the duties of the office. The order shall set a date for response and indicate that the judge may request a hearing. The order may include a date for such a hearing on or after the date set for response. The order shall be served at least ten (10) days before the date set for response.
(3)If the Supreme Court is satisfied that a petition submitted under subsection (1) or (2) should be granted, it shall appoint a full-time judge pro tempore to perform the duties of the office until (a) the term of the office is ended, (b) the office becomes vacant, or (c) the judge’s ability to resume those duties is established.
(4)A judge who seeks to resume the duties of the office shall submit a verified petition and supporting proof to the Supreme Court. The judge may request a hearing on the petition.
(5)The Supreme Court may order a judge who has submitted a petition under subsection (1) to demonstrate that the judge is or remains unable to perform the duties of the office.
(C)Qualifications and authority of a judge pro tempore. Any judge appointed under this or any other rule or law shall be an attorney in good standing at the bar of the Supreme Court of this state. In the event the Supreme Court of the state shall appoint a judge pro tempore under these provisions, a duly certified copy of the order and judgment of appointment of such judge pro tempore, attested by the chief justice, shall be issued to the person so appointed. If the person so appointed consents to serve, he shall be qualified as other judges are qualified. A certified copy of the order and judgment of appointment shall be filed with the clerk of the named court and entered in the appropriate records of said court. The person so appointed and qualified as a judge pro tempore shall perform the duties of the regular judge of the court, but always shall be subject to the con- tinuing jurisdiction of the Supreme Court. In the event any judge pro tempore, appointed under the provisions of this rule shall fail to qualify and assume the duties of the regular judge of such court, or in the event such judge pro tempore fails to conduct the business of the court as provided by law, the clerk of the court shall notify the Supreme Court in writing of this fact. Upon the receipt of such notification, the Supreme Court may take such action in the premises, in order to further the administration of justice, as such court may deem to be necessary and just.
(D)Compensation of judge pro tempore. A judge pro tempore appointed by the Supreme Court under this rule receives a salary com- puted at the same rate as the regular judge commencing from the date of qualification. A judge pro tempore appointed locally must be paid $25 for each day or parts of days actually served. The judge pro tempore must be paid out of the respective county, city, or town gen- eral fund, without an appropriation, upon allowance by the board of county commissioners of the county or council of the city or town in which the court is located. If appointed locally, the judge pro tempore must present a claim to the board of county commissioners specifying the number of days or parts of days actually served, which claim must be verified by the clerk of the court and the board must allow the claim. If appointed by the Supreme Court, the judge pro tempore must present a claim to the board with a copy of the appointment from the Supreme Court, a statement showing the date of qualification verified by the clerk, and a request for payment in the same manner thereafter as a regular judge, and thereafter the judge pro tempore must be paid in the same manner as a regular judge. The appointment of a judge pro tempore does not diminish in any manner the compensation of any regular judge so long as such regular judge continues in office.
(E)Judge pro tempore when judge is unable to attend. A judge who is unable to attend and preside at his court for any cause may appoint in writing a judge pro tempore to conduct the business of this court during his absence. The written appointment shall be entered in the records of the court. When duly sworn, or without being sworn if he is a judge of a court of this state, the judge pro tempore shall have the same authority during the period of his appointment as the judge he replaces. A judge appointed under this provision must meet the qualifications prescribed in subdivision (C) of this rule. Such judge shall be allowed the sum of $25.00 for each day or part thereof actually served, per diem as provided in Rule 79(P) and in the manner provided by subdivision (D) of this rule. In his absence or when he shall be unable to make such appointment, the appointment may be made by the clerk of his court, or the deputy clerk assigned to his court or in his absence by any available county officer.
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
Trial Rule 63 deals with an ordinary but important gap: the judge who heard the evidence is not always the judge who finishes handling the case. Subdivision (A) sets the default — the judge who presided at trial or a hearing should, if available, be the one who rules on later motions and decisions tied to that evidence and that proceeding. If that judge is unavailable because of death, sickness, absence, or unwillingness to act, another judge regularly sitting in the circuit, or one assigned to the case, can step in and handle most of those duties. If the substitute judge decides they cannot rule on a matter without having presided at the original trial or hearing, or for any other reason, they may use their discretion to grant a new trial or hearing, in whole or in part. The successor judge documents that the original judge is unavailable through a court order, which can be entered at any time.
Subdivision (B) covers a different scenario: a judge who cannot perform the duties of the office at all, not just for one case. A judge who is or will become unable to serve — because of disability, military orders, or a similar reason — can petition the Supreme Court directly, with supporting proof, and the Court promptly considers it. Anyone else can also petition the Supreme Court, alleging that a judge is disabled or has failed, refused, or neglected to perform the job; that triggers a show-cause order to the judge, with at least ten days’ notice and an optional hearing. If the Supreme Court is satisfied that relief is warranted, it appoints a full-time judge pro tempore, who serves until the term ends, the office becomes vacant, or the original judge’s ability to return is established. A judge who wants to resume duties files a verified petition of their own, with proof, and may request a hearing; the Supreme Court can also require an already-petitioning judge to keep demonstrating continued inability to serve.
Subdivision (C) sets one qualification for any judge appointed under this rule or any other: the person has to be an attorney in good standing before the Indiana Supreme Court. Once appointed, qualified, and on file with the clerk, a judge pro tempore exercises the full authority of the regular judge, subject to the Supreme Court’s continuing oversight; if that person fails to qualify or fails to conduct the court’s business as required, the clerk notifies the Supreme Court, which can act as needed. Subdivision (D) sets pay: a Supreme Court-appointed judge pro tempore earns the same salary as the regular judge starting from the date of qualification, paid through the same claims process a regular judge would use, while a locally appointed judge pro tempore under subdivision (E) is paid $25 for each day or part of a day served, out of the county, city, or town general fund, without the office ever losing the compensation due the regular judge while that judge remains in office.
Subdivision (E) gives judges a more informal option for short absences: a judge who cannot attend court for any reason can appoint, in writing entered in the court’s records, a judge pro tempore to run the court while away. That appointee has the same authority as the regular judge for the length of the appointment, must meet the same attorney-in-good-standing qualification, and is paid the same $25-per-day rate. If the judge is unable to make that appointment personally, the court’s clerk, an assigned deputy clerk, or, if neither is available, any available county officer can make it instead.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens if the judge who presided at my trial cannot rule on post-trial motions?
Under Trial Rule 63(A), if that judge is unavailable because of death, sickness, absence, or unwillingness to act, another judge regularly sitting in the circuit or assigned to the case can handle most remaining duties. If that judge decides they cannot rule on a matter without having presided at the original proceeding, they can use their discretion to grant a new trial or hearing.
Can a judge who did not hear my case still decide my post-trial motions?
Generally yes. A regularly sitting or assigned judge can perform the duties the original judge would have handled, though the substitute may grant a new trial or hearing in whole or in part if they conclude they cannot properly rule without having presided.
How does someone get a judge pro tempore appointed by the Indiana Supreme Court?
A judge who is or will be unable to serve can petition the Supreme Court directly with supporting proof. Anyone else can also petition, alleging that a judge is disabled or has failed, refused, or neglected to perform the job, which triggers a show-cause order to the judge with at least ten days’ notice.
What qualifications does a judge pro tempore need in Indiana?
An attorney in good standing at the bar of the Indiana Supreme Court, whether appointed by the Supreme Court or appointed locally under subdivision (E).
How much does a judge pro tempore get paid?
A judge pro tempore appointed by the Supreme Court is paid at the same salary rate as the regular judge, starting from the date of qualification. A locally appointed judge pro tempore is paid $25 for each day or part of a day served, out of the county, city, or town general fund.
Can a judge choose their own substitute for a short absence?
Yes. Under subdivision (E), a judge who cannot attend court for any reason can appoint a judge pro tempore in writing, entered in the court’s records, to handle the court’s business during the absence.
Does appointing a substitute judge reduce the regular judge’s pay?
No. Trial Rule 63 preserves the regular judge’s compensation for as long as that judge remains in office, regardless of any judge pro tempore appointment.
Source & verification. The rule text is reproduced verbatim from the
official Indiana Rules of Trial Procedure (T.R. 63). 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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