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Rule 44.1.Judicial Notice of Certain Law; Determination of Foreign Law

Last amended July 1, 1970 · Last verified July 1, 2026

In one sentenceRule 44.1 requires courts to take judicial notice of Ohio's own law automatically, but requires a party who wants a court to notice a local ordinance, another jurisdiction's law, or a foreign country's law to give reasonable notice first, with the court -- not the jury -- deciding what that law says.

Full Text of Rule 44.1

Text sizeJump to: (A) (B)

A Judicial notice of certain law
1 Judicial notice shall be taken of the rules of the supreme court of this state and of the decisional, constitutional, and public statutory law of this state.
2 A party who intends to rely on a municipal ordinance, a local rule of court, or an administrative regulation within this state shall give notice in his pleading or other reasonable written notice. The court in taking judicial notice of a municipal ordinance, a local rule of court, or an administrative regulation within this state may inform itself in such manner as it deems proper, and may call upon counsel to aid in obtaining such information. The court's determination shall be treated as a ruling on a question of law and shall be made by the court and not the jury. A court may, however, take judicial notice of its own rules or of a municipal ordinance within the territorial jurisdiction of the court without advance notice in the pleading of a party or other written notice.
3 A party who intends to rely on the decisional, constitutional, public statutory law, rules of court, municipal ordinances, or administrative regulations of any other state, territory, and jurisdiction of the United States shall give notice in his pleading or other reasonable notice. The court in taking judicial notice of the decisional, constitutional, public statutory law, rules of court, municipal ordinances, or administrative regulations of any other state, territory, and jurisdiction of the United States may inform itself in such manner as it deems proper, and may call upon counsel to aid in obtaining such information. The court's determination shall be treated as a ruling on a question of law, and shall be made by the court and not the jury.
B Determination of foreign law
A party who intends to rely on the law of a foreign country shall give notice in his pleadings or other reasonable written notice. The court in determining the law of a foreign country may consider any relevant material or source, including testimony, whether or not submitted by a party. The court's determination shall be treated as a ruling on a question of law and shall be made by the court and not the jury.

Amendment History

Effective Date: July 1, 1970

Plain-English Summary

Division (A) requires courts to take judicial notice of the Ohio Supreme Court's rules and of Ohio's decisional, constitutional, and public statutory law automatically, without any party needing to raise it. A party who wants to rely on a municipal ordinance, a local court rule, or an Ohio administrative regulation must give notice in a pleading or other reasonable written notice, though a court may take judicial notice of its own rules or of an ordinance within its territory without any advance notice. Once notice is given, the court may inform itself in whatever manner it thinks proper and may ask counsel to help gather the information, and the court's determination is treated as a ruling of law made by the court, not a question of fact for the jury. The same notice requirement, and the same law-versus-fact treatment, applies to a party who wants to rely on the decisional, constitutional, statutory, or regulatory law of another state, territory, or U.S. jurisdiction.

Division (B) extends the same framework to foreign-country law: a party who intends to rely on it must give notice in a pleading or other reasonable written notice, and the court may consider any relevant material or source -- including testimony, whether or not any party submitted it -- in determining what that law provides, with the determination again treated as a ruling of law for the court rather than the jury.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a party have to give notice before a court will apply Ohio law?

No. Rule 44.1(A) requires courts to take judicial notice of Ohio's own constitutional, statutory, decisional, and court-rule law automatically, without any party raising it.

What has to happen before a court will consider a local ordinance or another state's law?

A party who wants to rely on it must give notice in a pleading or other reasonable written notice, except that a court may notice its own rules or a local ordinance within its territory without any advance notice at all.

Who decides what foreign or out-of-state law means -- the judge or the jury?

The judge. Rule 44.1 treats the determination of another jurisdiction's law, or a foreign country's law, as a ruling on a question of law made by the court, not an issue of fact for the jury.

Source & verification. The rule text, Effective Date, Amended dates, and Staff Notes are reproduced verbatim from the official Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure (Ohio R. Civ. P. 44.1). Prescribed by the Supreme Court of Ohio (Ohio Constitution, Art. IV, § 5(B)). The plain-English summary is original and written by us. Last verified July 1, 2026. · Official source
Also known as: judicial noticeforeign lawchoice of law notice