
How Does LawToolBox Ensure Court Rule Stay Current?
By Austin Bess (with contributions from our rule-set team) At LawToolBox, accurate and current court rules are the core of our product integrity and the basis

LawToolBox today announced it is collaborating with DocuSign, the pioneer and global standard for Digital Transaction Management (DTM) and eSignature, to deliver an integrated solution for Microsoft Office 365 and SharePoint to help law firms and legal departments go fully digital…

LawToolBox spotlighted in Microsoft’s National Entrepreneurship Week
LawToolBox is EXCITED to be spotlighted in Microsoft’s National Entrepreneurship Week in NY Feb 20-24. We’re especially thrilled to be included with great companies like Dell Spanning, Yelp, LinkedIn, Square, Wix, and Dunn & Bradstreet..

Microsoft spotlights LawToolBox with Dell Spanning and Barracuda in eGuide
LawToolBox365 enables legal professionals to manage deadlines without ever leaving their Outlook inbox. Regulated industries like law, finance, healthcare, and pharmaceuticals can also take advantage of the Office 365 add-in…

Microsoft Features LawToolBox365 as an App for Legal
Purpose built software such as LawToolBox365—an add-in for Office 365 that automatically calculates state and federal court deadlines according to each court’s rules—helps legal professionals manage deadlines straight from their Outlook inbox…

On December 1, 2016, important amendments to FRCP and FRAP become effective. We automated rule changes online & in calendars without every leaving Outlook Inbox.

LawToolBox Summary of FRCP and FRAP Amendments (effective Dec 1 2016)
On December 1, 2016, important amendments to FRCP and FRAP become effective. These amendments include: (1) eliminating language adding 3-days for eService and thus shortening deadlines that are calculated from the date a legal document has been served electronically; (2) clarifying that when a court entertains post-judgment motions that are untimely it does not restart or modify the deadlines related to filing a notice of appeal; and (3) changing the method to determine the maximum length of appellate briefs – subject to local rules – from page length to word count…