South Carolina Exhibit Stamps
Professional exhibit labeling for South Carolina Circuit Courts
- South Carolina plaintiffs mark exhibits with P-1, P-2..., and defendants use D-1, D-2....
- South Carolina's primary exhibit rule is SCRCP Rule 26, SCRCP Rule 16.
- South Carolina courts e-file through South Carolina eFiling (built on Tyler Odyssey), with a maximum file size of 25 MB.
- Exhibits are typically exchanged per scheduling order (commonly 10 days before trial) in South Carolina courts.
- Charleston County is one of South Carolina's largest civil dockets.
- Statewide e-filing runs on tyler technologies' odyssey platform, mandatory for attorneys in all 16 circuits.
- Business court pilot program handles complex commercial cases in select circuits, including charleston, greenville, and richland.
- ExhibitPrep generates court-compliant South Carolina exhibit stamps entirely in the browser, with files never leaving the user's device.
Stamping a full exhibit set by hand takes hours. ExhibitPrep applies South Carolina-compliant labels in minutes — preview free, pay only to download.
Opens the tool set up for South Carolina — plaintiff: Prefix: "P-", Numbers starting at 1; defendant: Prefix: "D-", Numbers starting at 1.
Quick Reference
Key Requirements for South Carolina
- Statewide e-filing runs on Tyler Technologies' Odyssey platform, mandatory for attorneys in all 16 circuits
- Business Court Pilot Program handles complex commercial cases in select circuits, including Charleston, Greenville, and Richland
- SCRCP Rule 16 scheduling orders set exhibit and witness list deadlines circuit-by-circuit
- Charleston County (Ninth Circuit) is the state's busiest coastal civil docket
- Richland County (Fifth Circuit, Columbia) covers the state capital and carries a heavy government-litigation caseload
Major County Rules
Charleston County
Ninth Circuit -- Charleston-area courts, a Business Court Pilot Program site for complex commercial disputes.
Richland County
Fifth Circuit -- Columbia-area courts serving the state capital, also a Business Court Pilot Program site.
Greenville County
Thirteenth Circuit -- Upstate courts, South Carolina's largest county by population and another Business Court Pilot Program site.
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Typical South Carolina Exhibit Timeline
SCRCP Rule 26 governs discovery scope; SCRCP Rule 16 covers the pretrial/scheduling conference where exhibit and witness lists are typically ordered. South Carolina circuit courts are numbered 1 through 16, and the assigned circuit's scheduling order -- not a single statewide date -- controls when exhibits must be exchanged.
South Carolina Exhibit FAQs
What court handles complex commercial exhibits in South Carolina?
The Business Court Pilot Program, which operates in select circuits including Charleston, Greenville, and Richland counties, is designed for complex commercial cases and assigns them to judges experienced with business litigation and voluminous exhibit sets.
Is there one statewide deadline for exchanging exhibits in South Carolina?
No. SCRCP Rule 16 puts exhibit and witness list deadlines in each case's scheduling order, set by the assigned circuit judge. Ten days before trial is common, but always check the scheduling order for your specific circuit rather than assuming a fixed statewide date.
What e-filing platform do South Carolina circuit courts use?
South Carolina's statewide e-filing system runs on Tyler Technologies' Odyssey platform and is mandatory for attorneys across all 16 judicial circuits, with a 25 MB per-document limit.
How many judicial circuits does South Carolina have?
Sixteen. Each circuit covers one or more counties and sets its own scheduling-order practices for exhibit exchange, so procedures in Charleston County (Ninth Circuit) can differ in timing from Richland County (Fifth Circuit) even though both apply the same SCRCP rules.
Related
Last updated: 2026-07. Always verify current requirements with your court.