(dc) District Court Rule. Rule 79 applies in the district courts except that the requirement of the keeping of final judgments or appealable orders in a minute book in Rule 79(b) is deleted.
Ala. R. Civ. P. 79
Note from the reporter of decisions: The order amending effective October 24, 2008, Rule 3, Rule 4, Rule 5, Rule 6, Rule 11, Rule 55, Rule 58, Rule 59.1, Rule 77, and Rule 79, and adopting effective October 24, 2008, the Committee Comments to Amendment to Rule 3(b) Effective October 24, 2008; Committee Comments to Amendments to Rule 4 Effective October 24, 2008; Committee Comments to Amendments to Rule 5 Effective October 24, 2008; Committee Comments to Amendments to Rule 6 Effective October 24, 2008; Committee Comments to Amendment to Rule 11 Effective October 24, 2008; Committee Comments to Amendment to Rule 55(a) Effective October 24, 2008; Committee Comments to Amendments to Rule 58 Effective October 24, 2008; Committee Comments to Amendment to Rule 59.1 Effective October 24, 2008; Committee Comments to Amendments to Rule 77(d) Effective October 24, 2008; and the Committee Comments to Addition of Rule 79(e) Effective October 24, 2008, is published in that volume of Alabama Reporter that contains Alabama cases from ___ So. 2d.
Committee Comments on 1973 Adoption
Prevailing practice in many circuits on the law side is as follows: Each case is noted in an appearance docket and the civil docket book. All activity with respect to a particular case is noted in the civil docket. Not every act of the court is the basis of a formal order. Every final order is noted in the minute book, a diary of court action by days. On the equity side, all orders of the court are made the basis of a formal order which is retained in the court file. In all other respects the record keeping is the same.
This redraft of Rule 79 is intended to make no change in this system. The rule differs in important particulars from the corresponding federal rule, in order to preserve existing Alabama practices of a consolidated civil docket, and separate offices of the clerk and of the register. All activity is recorded in the civil docket. Any separate orders are kept with the file of the case. Final or appealable orders or orders affecting title are to be placed in a minute book.
The original file of the case stands as the final record. The onerous recording requirements are no longer applicable because of an amendment to §§ 12-20-22 and 12-20-27, Code of Alabama. See Act No. 1510, Regular Session, 1971. This Act is not superseded by these rules.
These rules abolish the distinctions between law and equity. Rule 2. But they preserve the office of the clerk and office of the register of chancery as separate offices. Rule 81(d). Subdivision (f) makes administrative provisions intended to reconcile these two stated principles of the rules. Cases are to be filed with the clerk or the register as would have been proper prior to the adoption of the rules unless the court orders otherwise. If a paper is filed with the wrong office, the remedy is to transfer the file from one office to the other, under the procedure set out in the subdivision. Filing the papers with the wrong office has no effect on the proceedings in the case.
It has been customary in Alabama to copy every paper in the file into a separate permanent record. This is an expensive procedure, which will be of no value under these rules, where each attorney in the case, by virtue of Rule 5(a), has a copy of every paper in the case. Thus the rule does not require this separate record, but instead, as is the practice in federal courts, the original file is the permanent record. This scheme is implemented by subdivision (e), which governs removal of the file from the clerk’s office and thus insures the integrity of the file, and by subdivision (b), which requires a separate record of appealable judgments and orders, and of orders affecting the title to or creating a lien upon real or personal property.
The final sentence of subdivision (d) is in accord with present law. Code of Ala., § 12-20-22.
Committee Comments to October 1, 1995, Amendment to Rule 79
The amendment is technical. No substantive change is intended.
District Court Committee Comments
While the provision for the maintenance of a minute book in Rule 79(b) has been deleted, certainly no harm would attend the maintenance of such a record if the clerk should so desire.
Committee Comments to Addition of Rule 79(e) Effective October 24, 2008
This amendment recognizes that the State Judicial Information System has become a repository for many records previously maintained locally by the clerk.