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Estate Planning Exhibits in Ohio

Complete guide to preparing estate planning exhibits that comply with Ohio court requirements. Learn the correct labeling conventions, exchange deadlines, and e-filing procedures.

Ohio estate planning exhibit facts at a glance
  • Ohio's primary rule governing exhibit preparation is Ohio Civ. R. 16.
  • Plaintiffs in Ohio label exhibits with Numbers (1, 2, 3...).
  • Defendants in Ohio label exhibits with Letters (A, B, C...).
  • Ohio courts require electronic exhibits to be filed through Ohio Courts Network.
  • Exhibits must be exchanged with opposing counsel 7 days before trial (Ohio Civ. R. 16) under Ohio Civ. R. 16.
  • Common estate planning exhibits in Ohio include wills & trusts, asset documentation, beneficiary designations.
  • ExhibitPrep applies Ohio exhibit stamps entirely in the browser, so estate planning case files never leave the user's computer.
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Ohio Exhibit Requirements at a Glance

Plaintiff ExhibitsNumbers (1, 2, 3...)
Defendant ExhibitsLetters (A, B, C...)
Exchange Deadline7 days before trial (Ohio Civ. R. 16)
Primary RuleOhio Civ. R. 16
E-Filing SystemOhio Courts Network

Common Estate Planning Exhibits

Wills & Trusts

Original wills, trust agreements, amendments, codicils. For Ohio e-filing on Ohio Courts Network, keep each file under 5 MB (Franklin County Probate) to 30 MB, depending on county.

Asset Documentation

Property deeds, account statements, valuations

Beneficiary Designations

Life insurance, retirement accounts, POD/TOD forms

Powers of Attorney

Financial POA, healthcare POA, living wills

Family Records

Birth certificates, death certificates, marriage records

Business Interests

Operating agreements, stock certificates, buy-sell agreements

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Ohio-Specific Considerations

  • Most Ohio counties give plaintiffs numbers and defendants letters, but Franklin County reverses the convention: plaintiffs get letters, defendants get numbers.
  • Estate Planning exhibits filed through Ohio Courts Network must stay under 5 MB (Franklin County Probate) to 30 MB, depending on county.
  • Plaintiffs in Ohio mark exhibits with Numbers (1, 2, 3...); defendants use Letters (A, B, C...).
  • Exchange your estate planning exhibit list 7 days before trial (Ohio Civ. R. 16), and confirm any county-level variations with the clerk before trial.

How to Prepare Your Exhibits

1

Gather Your Documents

Collect all documents relevant to your estate planning case. This typically includes wills & trusts, asset documentation, beneficiary designations, and other supporting evidence.

2

Convert to PDF

Convert all documents to PDF format. Ohio courts require electronic exhibits to be filed via Ohio Courts Network. Scan paper documents at 300 DPI.

3

Apply Exhibit Labels

Use ExhibitPrep to add Ohio-compliant exhibit stamps. Plaintiffs use Numbers (1, 2, 3...), defendants use Letters (A, B, C...).

4

Exchange with Opposing Counsel

Exchange your exhibit list and copies with opposing counsel 7 days before trial (Ohio Civ. R. 16) per Ohio Civ. R. 16.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How should I label estate planning exhibits in Ohio?

Use Numbers (1, 2, 3...) for plaintiff exhibits and Letters (A, B, C...) for defense exhibits, per Ohio Civ. R. 16. Most Ohio counties give plaintiffs numbers and defendants letters, but Franklin County reverses the convention: plaintiffs get letters, defendants get numbers. ExhibitPrep's Estate Planning templates apply the right prefix automatically, so you're not re-deriving the local convention on every filing.

When do I have to exchange estate planning exhibits in Ohio?

Ohio sets the exhibit exchange window at 7 days before trial (Ohio Civ. R. 16), though the exact date can shift with your assigned judge's scheduling order. Confirm the deadline in your case's pretrial order before you start stamping, then batch-process the full estate planning production in one ExhibitPrep session once it's locked in.

What e-filing system handles estate planning exhibits in Ohio?

Ohio runs electronic filing through Ohio Courts Network, which caps individual uploads at 5 MB (Franklin County Probate) to 30 MB, depending on county. Export each exhibit as a text-searchable PDF, and split any long wills & trusts into separate files before uploading so a single scanned record doesn't blow past the cap.

What exhibits come up most in a Ohio estate planning case?

Estate Planning matters in Ohio typically turn on wills & trusts, asset documentation, beneficiary designations, plus whatever case-specific records the dispute calls for. Most Ohio counties give plaintiffs numbers and defendants letters, but Franklin County reverses the convention: plaintiffs get letters, defendants get numbers. Stamp them all inside ExhibitPrep using the matching plaintiff or defense template, so every exhibit in the production carries a consistent, court-compliant mark before it goes to opposing counsel.

Can I stamp a large estate planning production for Ohio courts?

Yes. The Day Pass ($14.99) gives you unlimited stamping for 24 hours, which covers hundreds of exhibits in a single estate planning case. Processing runs entirely in your browser, so your Ohio case files never leave your computer. That matters here because Ohio Courts Network's 5 MB (Franklin County Probate) to 30 MB, depending on county cap often forces a large production into dozens of separate uploads.

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