Wash. R. App. P. 9.6

As amended throough October 10, 2024
Rule RAP 9.6 - Designation of Clerk's Papers and Exhibits
(a) Generally. The party seeking review should, within 30 days after the notice of appeal is filed or discretionary review is granted or 30 days after appointment of counsel, whichever is later, serve on all other parties and file with the trial court clerk a designation of those clerk's papers and exhibits the party wants the trial court clerk to transmit to the appellate court. A copy of the designation shall also be filed with the appellate court clerk. Any party may supplement the designation of clerk's papers and exhibits prior to or with the filing of the party's last brief. Thereafter, a party may supplement the designation only by order of the appellate court, upon motion. Each party is encouraged to designate only clerk's papers and exhibits needed to review the issues presented to the appellate court.
(b)Copies Necessary for Preparation of Designation. On request, the trial court clerk shall provide, via postal mail, electronic mail, or Internet file transfer, copies of all documents in the court file and all exhibits, regardless of format, to the parties. Copies shall be in substantially the same form as the original (e.g., copies of color photographs must be provided in color), except that the clerk may provide photographs of cumbersome exhibits that cannot feasibly be copied, such as large maps or diagrams. The clerk may charge appropriate fees for copies in accordance with applicable law. Nothing in this subsection shall be interpreted to mandate copying of exhibits whose copying is otherwise prohibited by law, such as exhibits protected under RCW 9.68A.180. Nothing in this subsection shall be interpreted to mandate copying of exhibits that consist of physical items that cannot be duplicated, such as firearms, clothing, or drugs.
(c) Designation and Contents.
(1) The clerk's papers shall include, at a minimum:
(A) the notice of appeal or the notice for discretionary review;
(B) the indictment, information, or complaint in a criminal case;
(C) the summons and complaint or case initiating petition in a civil case;
(D) any written order or ruling not attached to the notice of appeal, of which a party seeks review;
(E) the final pretrial order, or the final complaint and answer or other pleadings setting out the issues to be tried if the final pretrial order does not set out those issues;
(F) any written opinion, findings of fact, or conclusions of law;
(G) any jury instruction given or refused that presents an issue on appeal; and
(H) any order sealing documents if sealed documents have been designated;
(I) in a criminal case where a cost bill may be filed, any order concerning the defendant's indigency and current or likely future ability to pay discretionary legal financial obligations.
(2) Each designation or supplement shall specify the full title of the pleading, the date filed, and, in counties where subnumbers are used, the clerk's subnumber.
(3) Each designation of exhibits shall include the trial court clerk's list of exhibits and shall specify the exhibit number and the description of the exhibit to be transmitted.
(d) Format.
(1) Full copies of all designated pleadings shall be included, unless the trial court orders otherwise.
(2) The trial court clerk shall number the papers sequentially from beginning to end, including any supplemental clerk's papers, regardless of which party designated them.
(3) The trial court clerk shall make available a copy of the clerk's papers transmitted to the appellate court to any party, upon payment of the trial court clerk's reasonable expenses. If the trial court clerk generates the clerk's papers in electronic format, the trial court clerk shall make available to any party a copy of the clerk's papers in electronic format, upon payment of the trial court clerk's reasonable expenses.

References

Title 6, Acceptance of Review

Wash. R. App. P. RAP 9.6

Adopted effective 7/1/1976; Amended effective 9/1/1985; 9/1/1990; 9/1/1994; 9/1/1998; 12/24/2002; 12/24/2002; 9/1/2006; 9/1/2010; 9/1/2014; 1/31/2017; amended effective 9/5/2024.