Arizona

Criminal Procedure

Rule 1.9 – Motions, Oral Argument, and Proposed Orders

(a)Content. A motion must include a memorandum that states facts, arguments, and authorities pertinent to the motion.
(b)Service of Motion; Response; Reply. The moving party must serve the motion on all other parties. No later than 10 days after service, another party may file and serve a response, and, no later than 3 days after service of a response, the moving party may file and serve a reply. A reply must be directed only to matters raised in a response. If no response is filed, the court may deem the motion submitted on the record.
(c)Length. Unless the court orders otherwise, a motion or response, including a supporting memorandum, may not exceed 11 pages, exclusive of attachments, and a reply may not exceed 6 pages, exclusive of attachments.
(d)Waiver of Requirements. On a party’s request or on its own, the court may waive a requirement specified in this rule, or it may overlook a formal defect in a motion.
(e)Oral Argument. On a party’s request or on its own, the court may set a motion for argument or hearing.
(f)Proposed Orders. A proposed order must be prepared as a separate document and may not be included as part of a motion, stipulation, or other document. There must be at least two lines of text on the signature page of a proposed order. A party must serve the proposed order on the court and all other parties. A party must not file a proposed order, and the court will not docket it, until a judge has reviewed and signed it. Absent a notice of filing, proposed orders will not be part of the record.

Ariz. R. Crim. P. 1.9

Added August 31, 2017, effective January 1, 2018.