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Pennsylvania Courts Launch New Interactive Magisterial District Court Map. The Pennsylvania Courts, in partnership with the Pennsylvania State Data Center, have developed a new interactive tool that allows the public to visualize the boundaries of all 509 magisterial district courts in Pennsylvania. Read More
The Pennsylvania Judiciary Web Portal provides the public with access to various aspects of court information, including appellate courts, common pleas courts and magisterial district court docket sheets; common pleas courts and magisterial district court calendars; and PAePay.
If your problem relates to a Pennsylvania court case, please provide its unique alpha-numeric docket number. All Magisterial District Court docket numbers begin with ‘MJ’ and follow a similar format (Examples: MJ-51301-TR-0009999-2017, MJ-51301-NT-0008888-2017).
Pennsylvania’s Unified Judicial System is one of North America’s oldest, growing from a collection of part-time, local courts prior to 1700 to today’s statewide, automated court system. The judiciary’s entry-level courts are located in more than 500 magisterial districts and in municipal courts in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.
The Unified Judicial System of Pennsylvania. Opinions Search court opinions and postings; Cases of Public Interest Find information on cases; Court of Judicial Discipline New postings; Docket Sheets Search, view and print court docket sheets; Pay ...
The Unified Judicial System provides forms for citizens, the judiciary and law enforcement. Included on this page are forms for filing civil complaints, private criminal complaints and notices of settlement when cases are privately resolved.
Pennsylvania's Unified Judicial System provides comprehensive public access to court records online and upon request. Access aggregate numerical data from all courts including caseload statistics, collections information and interactive data dashboards.
The Courts of Common Pleas are organized into 60 judicial districts and are the trial courts of Pennsylvania. Major civil and criminal cases are heard in these courts. Learn more.
The court administrator is responsible for the prompt and proper disposition of the business of all courts and leads the Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts (AOPC). A detailed list of the court administrator’s and AOPC’s responsibilities may be found in the Pennsylvania Rules of Judicial Administration 501-506.
The Secure Calendar Schedule option provides access to search, view and print case events scheduled in the Criminal Courts of Common Pleas and Magisterial District Courts. The secure version provides additional search options, not available to the public, to find case scheduling information.