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Rule 81.1.Procedures for Cases Involving Family or Household Members

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

In one sentenceTrial Rule 81.1 lets an Indiana court coordinate several cases that involve the same family or household — divorce, paternity, guardianship, and similar matters — under Family Procedures, with rules on notice, objecting to that designation, and protecting confidential records.

Full Text of Rule 81.1

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

(A) Definitions.
(1) An individual is a "family or household member" of another person if the individual:
(a) is or was a spouse of the other person;
(b) is or was living as if a spouse or a domestic partner of the other person, this determ- ination to be based upon:
(i) the duration of the relationship;
(ii) the frequency of contact;
(iii) the financial interdependence;
(iv) whether the two (2) individuals are or previously were raising children together;
(v) whether the two (2) individuals are or previously have engaged in tasks directed toward maintaining a common household; and,
(vi) such other factors as the court may consider relevant.
(c) has a child in common with the other person;
(d) is related by blood or adoption to the other person;
(e) has or previously had an established legal relationship:
(i) as a guardian of the other person;
(ii) as a ward of the other person;
(iii) as a custodian of the other person;
(iv) as a foster parent of the other person; or,
(v) in a capacity with respect to the other person similar to those listed in clauses (i) through (v).
(2) “Family Procedures” entails coordination of proceedings and processes, and information sharing among cases in a court or courts involving family or household members.
(B) Type of Cases. Courts using Family Procedures for a case may exercise jurisdiction over other cases involving the same family or a household member of the family. An individual case to which Family Procedures is being applied may maintain its separate integrity and separate docket number, but may be given a common case number if multiple cases are being heard before one judge. Guardianship (GU) cases may be heard with other cases but may not be con- solidated into a common case number and must maintain their “GU” case type designation. Subject to applicable rules and statutes, the individual cases may all be transferred to one judge or may remain in the separate courts in which they were originally filed.
(C) Notice. A court intending to use Family Procedures for a case must enter an order notifying all parties of the court’s intention and, within thirty (30) days after a case is selected, the court shall provide each party with a list of all cases that have been selected to be heard using Fam- ily Procedures.
(D) Designation by Court of Intent to Use Family Procedures and Change of Judge for Cause. Within fifteen (15) days after notice is sent that a case has been selected to be heard using Family Procedures, a party may object for cause to the designation or selection of a party’s case. Once notice is sent to the parties that a case has been selected to be heard using Family Pro- cedures, no motion for change of venue from the judge may be granted except to the extent permitted by Indiana Trial Rule 76. A motion for change of venue from the judge in any mat- ter being heard in a court using Family Procedures, or any future cases joined in the court after the initial selection of cases, shall be granted only for cause. If a special judge is appoin- ted, all current and future cases in the court proceeding may be assigned to the special judge.
(E) Concurrent Hearings. A court using Family Procedures may, in the court's discretion, set concurrent hearings on related cases, take evidence on the related cases at these hearings, and rule on the admiss- ibility of evidence for each case separately as needed to adequately preserve the record for appeal.
(F) Judicial Notice. Indiana Evidence Rule 201 shall govern the taking of judicial notice in courts using Family Pro- cedures.
(G) Court Records Excluded from Public Access. In a Court using Family Procedures, each party shall have access to all records in cases joined under this Rule, with the exception of Court Records excluded from Public Access pursuant to the Rules on Access to Court Records. A party may seek access to such confidential records from another case joined under this Rule in accordance with Rule 9 of the Rules on Access to Court Records. Records excluded from Public Access shall retain their confidential status and the court using Family Procedures shall direct that confidential records not be included in the public record of the proceedings.
(H) Consolidation of Certain Cases. When juvenile paternity cases involving multiple children of the same two parents have been created pursuant to Administrative Rule 1(B)(4)(c), the court shall consolidate all those related cases into a single juvenile paternity case for the shared children. All children of the same two parents should be combined into the first filed case. Orders regarding the consolidation must be entered into each of the cases. The orders should include a requirement that after the con- solidation date, all filings, orders, and hearings shall be filed within the primary case and all of the secondary cases will be closed.

Amendment History

This rule’s current text took effect January 1, 2024. For the full history of earlier amendments and adoption orders, see the Indiana Office of Court Services.

Plain-English Summary

Trial Rule 81.1 gives Indiana courts a way to manage several cases touching the same family together, instead of letting each one proceed on its own before a different judge. The rule calls this coordinated approach Family Procedures — coordinating proceedings and sharing information among cases in a court, or courts, that involve the same family or household members. Section A defines who counts as a family or household member for this purpose: a current or former spouse; someone who lives, or lived, with the person as a spouse or domestic partner, measured by factors like how long the relationship lasted, how often the two were in contact, whether they depended on each other financially, whether they raised children together, and whether they shared household tasks; someone who shares a child with the person; a relative by blood or adoption; or someone tied to the person through a guardianship, ward, custodial, foster-care, or similar relationship.

When a court uses Family Procedures, it can exercise jurisdiction over other pending cases that involve the same family or a household member. Each case keeps its own docket number, though the court can assign a shared case number when several of them are being heard by the same judge. Guardianship cases are treated differently — they can be heard alongside the others, but they can’t be folded into a shared case number and must keep their own guardianship case-type designation. Before a court starts using Family Procedures for a case, it has to enter an order telling all the parties, and within thirty days after a case is selected, it has to give every party a list of every case that’s been selected. A party who wants to challenge the designation has fifteen days after that notice to object for cause. Once notice goes out, a change of venue from the judge is granted only to the extent Indiana Trial Rule 76 allows, and any later request for a different judge in a Family Procedures matter is granted only for cause; if a special judge takes over, that judge can end up handling every case in the group, current and future.

Because the underlying cases stay procedurally separate even while they’re coordinated, the rule builds in some practical safeguards. A court can schedule concurrent hearings on related cases and take evidence at them, but it has to rule on what evidence is admissible in each case separately, so the record stays clean for any appeal. Judicial notice in these cases works the same as it does everywhere else, under Indiana Evidence Rule 201. Each party gets access to the records in every case joined together, except for records that are excluded from public access under Indiana’s Rules on Access to Court Records — those keep their confidential status, and the court has to keep them out of the public record of the coordinated proceeding. Finally, the rule requires courts to consolidate juvenile paternity cases that involve multiple children of the same two parents into a single case built around the first-filed matter, so that later filings, orders, and hearings happen in one place instead of being scattered across several case numbers.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean if my case is being handled under Family Procedures?

It means the court has decided to coordinate your case with other pending cases involving your family or a household member, sharing information among them and, where the rule allows, having one judge hear them together.

Who counts as a family or household member under Trial Rule 81.1?

The rule covers a current or former spouse; someone who lives or lived with the person as a spouse or domestic partner, judged by factors such as how long the relationship lasted and whether the two raised children or shared a household; someone who has a child with the person; a relative by blood or adoption; and someone connected through a guardianship, custody, ward, or foster-care relationship.

Will my case be merged with someone else’s if the court uses Family Procedures?

Not entirely. Each case keeps its own docket number and separate identity. The court can give related cases a shared case number when one judge is hearing them together, but a guardianship case can never be folded into a shared number — it keeps its own guardianship case-type designation.

How will I find out if my case has been selected for Family Procedures?

The court must enter an order notifying all the parties, and within thirty days after a case is selected, it must send every party a list of all the cases chosen to be heard using Family Procedures.

Can I object to having my case designated for Family Procedures?

Yes. A party has fifteen days after the notice is sent to object for cause to the designation or selection.

Can I still request a different judge after Family Procedures notice goes out?

Only for cause, and only to the extent Trial Rule 76 allows. Once notice has been sent that a case is being heard using Family Procedures, the ordinary right to a change of judge no longer applies in the same way.

Who can see the records from my other family cases once they’re joined?

Each party gets access to the records in every joined case, with one exception: records excluded from public access under Indiana’s Rules on Access to Court Records keep their confidential status, and the court has to keep them separate from the public record of the coordinated proceeding.

Source & verification. The rule text is reproduced verbatim from the official Indiana Rules of Trial Procedure (T.R. 81.1). 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: Indiana Trial Rule 81.1Family Procedures Indiana courtscoordinating family court cases Indianawhat is a family or household member Indianaconsolidating paternity cases Indianachange of judge family procedures Indianaguardianship case combined with divorce case Indiana