Vol. 76, No. 12, December
2003
Online Legal Forms for Wisconsin Practitioners
This guide provides an overview of online forms useful to Wisconsin
practitioners, focusing on those forms produced by a readily verifiable,
reliable source, and available for free or at low cost.
by Kira L. Zaporski
A simple Google search for "Wisconsin legal forms" returns dozens of
Web sites offering legal, business, or general forms. Forms can be
broadly categorized as either government-drafted or attorney-drafted.
Forms produced by government or quasi-governmental entities may be
mandatory, such as the Wisconsin Court System's Circuit Court forms, or
voluntary. Unlike traditionally published form treatises or form sets,
online forms tend to be murkier in origin, especially those drafted by
attorneys. As with any Internet resource, users need to consider the
source of the form and make their own evaluation as to whether the
form's content is reliable and appropriate for their purposes.
Kira L.
Zaporski, U.W. 1993, is a faculty member and the legal
reference and electronic resources librarian at Loyola University Law
School in Chicago. She is a member of the State Bar of Wisconsin and the
Law Librarians Association of Wisconsin (LLAW). This column is part of
the LLAW project to inform Wisconsin lawyers about conducting efficient,
effective research.
Forms often are made available online as marketing tools by
businesses selling legal services to the public, or as a way to interest
other lawyers in purchasing practice-related products. Some privately
run legal Web sites offer a collection of free forms along with a
separate collection of forms available for a charge. A recent review of
many such sites indicated that the free forms often are just copies of
the state court forms or other government forms that are already
available for free on government Web sites. Users should obtain court or
other government forms directly from the government Web site to ensure a
current and unaltered version of the form.
The most common file format for online forms is a "static" PDF
document. PDF, which stands for "portable document format," is a
universal file format that ensures an exact reproduction of the
document. PDF preserves the fonts, images, graphics, and layout of the
original document, regardless of the application and platform used to
create that original. It is essentially like taking a photograph of the
original document. Microsoft Word, Corel WordPerfect, and HTML are less
commonly used formats for online forms. Users willing to pay for the
convenience also can purchase automated forms systems, such as those
built with HotDocs software. Automated forms systems are particularly
useful in practice areas like probate or tax, where the same client
information may be used repeatedly in different documents.
PDF forms can be static or fillable. A static PDF form is the easiest
type of file to create from an existing document. It can be read by any
online user with the free, and ubiquitous, Adobe Acrobat software, and
it guarantees an accurate reproduction of the original form. A fillable
PDF form allows the user to type information directly into selected
portions of the form. The completed "filled" form is then printed. In
contrast, the user of a static PDF form must first print the form and
then enter the content by hand or typewriter, just as you would with a
traditional paper form. The convenience of having static forms available
online is primarily in being able to access a current copy of the form
at any time.
The following listing of sources for online forms is not intended to
be exclusive. Inclusion on the list is not a guarantee of the accuracy,
currency, or applicability of any form. This information is provided
solely as a service to readers. Selecting and completing forms requires
that you accurately identify your legal issue and have knowledge of that
issue and of all laws governing that issue.
Wisconsin State/Local Court Forms
Wisconsin
State Law Library (WSLL)
Format: Varies depending on the forms; most in PDF with some
Word and HTML.
Comments: Probably the most comprehensive compilation of
Wisconsin-specific forms is on this Web site. In addition to linking to
many of the resources described elsewhere in this guide, the State Law
Library site also includes a very useful listing of "forms by topic."
Most of the forms linked to through the WSLL site are free, or offered
at a very low cost.
Wisconsin
Court System's Circuit Court Forms
Format: Available in PDF; some also are available in
Microsoft Word. Word forms are identified with a ".doc" extension and
may be downloaded, text entered into the appropriate fields, and the
form printed.
Comments: The official site of the Wisconsin state courts
provides the standard, statewide forms required by all Wisconsin circuit
courts for civil, criminal, family, guardianship, juvenile, mental
commitment, probate, and small claims cases. The mandatory court forms
cannot be modified. Users may attach additional pages of information as
needed. Circuit court forms also may be searched online by number,
name, category, or keyword. The forms are updated intermittently, with
the latest revision date indicated on each form. Standard court forms
also are available in any county clerk of circuit court office. To
determine whether other states provide similar standard forms, contact
the state law library of that state. The Minnesota State Law Library
provides a collection of links to other state law libraries at
www.lawlibrary.state.mn.us/osll.html.
Wisconsin County
Forms
(This compilation of links to the forms pages of various county Web
sites is provided through the WSLL site.)
Format: Varies, depending on the county and the type of
form. Some are offered in PDF or HTML format. Other counties list the
available forms on their Web sites, but the forms must be ordered
through the mail.
Comments: Content varies depending on the county.
Municipal
Courts
(Links to all Wisconsin municipal court Web sites are provided
through the WSLL site.)
Format: A handful of municipal courts have made their court
forms available online in PDF or HTML.
Comments: Municipal court sites often include other forms
related to the daily business of the municipality and its citizens. A
few of the municipal courts with forms online include Kenosha at
www.kenosha.org/departments/court/, Milwaukee at
www.ci.mil.wi.us/citygov/court/forms.html, and Green Bay at
www.ci.green-bay.wi.us/cgi-bin/w3-msql/forms/forms.html.
Wisconsin Federal Court Forms
Western
District of Wisconsin
Format: PDF
Comments: Includes attorney admission forms, forms for
commencing an action in the U.S. District Court-Western District of
Wisconsin, subpoenas, and appeal forms.
Eastern
District of Wisconsin
Format: PDF
Comments: Includes attorney admission forms, civil forms,
forms for commencing an action in the U.S. District Court-Eastern
District of Wisconsin, subpoenas, and pro se forms.
Seventh Circuit
Court of Appeals
Format: Mainly PDF, a few HTML
Comments: This site provides a few of the forms relevant to
practice in the Seventh Circuit, including attorney admission forms and
disclosure statements.
U.S.
Bankruptcy Courts
Format: PDF
Comments: Official bankruptcy forms for the federal
bankruptcy courts, including the U.S. Bankruptcy Courts for the Eastern
and Western Districts of Wisconsin.
Wisconsin State Government Agency Forms
Many forms produced by Wisconsin state government agencies are
available online, the vast majority at no charge. The www.wisconsin.gov
Web site has a "subject directory" link on its home page; click on this
link and scroll alphabetically to "forms" to see a listing of the types
of forms available on the site. The following list identifies some of
the groups of forms offered.
Department of
Administration Forms
Format: PDF, Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel
Comments: This page compiles a variety of forms,
instructions, and applications for agencies under the direction of the
Wisconsin Department of Administration. Includes applications related to
gaming, state employment, and banking services; budget forms and
manuals; and forms for the Bureau of Housing, facilities and
construction, environmental impact, property and liability, records
maintenance, and worker's compensation.
Business
Forms
Format: Varies, mainly PDF with some Word
Comments: This page consolidates links to State of Wisconsin
business-related forms. Includes forms for business organization, taxes,
unemployment insurance, and worker's compensation. Site also features a
business "wizard," an online program that uses a simple question and
answer format to identify permit, license, tax, and employment
requirements specific to the user's business.
Employment-related
Forms
Format: Mostly PDF
Comments: The Department of Workforce Development has a
useful Internet forms repository, which allows for sorting forms by form
number, title, division, revision date, and other criteria. Forms
provide purpose descriptions and contact information for questions about
content. Topics include employment, housing, and public accommodation
discrimination; equal rights; family or medical leave; labor standards;
medical release authorization; unemployment insurance; and worker's
compensation. Some forms are available in Spanish.
Financial
Forms
Format: Mainly PDF, many in fillable PDF
Comments: The Department of Financial Institutions Web site
provides domestic and foreign corporate forms (including those for
nonprofits, limited partnerships and limited liability partnerships, and
limited liability companies), banking applications, corporation forms,
credit union applications, mortgage banking and brokering applications,
savings institutions applications, securities and franchise
applications, UCC forms, and Wisconsin consumer act registration forms.
Also includes licensed financial services application forms.
Health
and Family Services Forms
Format: PDF
Comments: The Department of Health and Family Services site
arranges forms in alphabetical lists and allows keyword
searching. Some forms are available in Spanish. Topics include
adoption, advance directives, background information disclosure, child
welfare, community-based residential facilities, corporate guardianship,
day care, EMT applications, foster care and foster homes, kinship
care, living wills, power of attorney, WIC program, and more.
Tax
Forms
Format: PDF, many offered in both static and fillable
PDF
Comments: The Wisconsin Department of Revenue provides state
tax forms and form-specific instructions, in addition to offering online
filing. Federal tax forms and instructions are available at
www.irs.ustreas.gov/formspubs/index.html.
Transportation and
Vehicle-related Forms
Format: PDF
Comments: The Department of Transportation site arranges its
forms in broad categories. Topics include driver licensing, vehicle
registration, vehicle title applications, name change/correction of
titles, license plates, lemon-law notice, special parking privileges,
traffic accident reporting, vehicle/driver record information,
withholding name/address from records requests, dealer complaints,
dealer licensing, bills of sale, motor carriers, oversize/overweight
permits, outdoor advertising license and sign installation
applications/permits, applications/permits to construct a driveway,
programs for local government, safety and consumer protection, state
patrol, and rustic road designation.
Wisconsin Bar Associations
Bar associations often link to other forms sources, as well as offer
some forms specific to local or regional practice.
Professionalism
Standard Form Letters
Format: PDF
Comments: The Milwaukee Bar Association's Professionalism
Committee has drafted standard form letters for areas of the law in
which Wisconsin lawyers may need help in complying with the Supreme
Court Rules.
State Bar of
Wisconsin
Format: PDF and some MS Word
Comments: The State Bar Web site, WisBar, provides links to
the State Circuit Court system's mandatory forms, and to the court's
Truth in Sentencing guidelines and worksheets, available directly at
www.courts.state.wi.us/circuit/Truth_in_Sentencing.htm. The State Bar
site also contains the limited liability legal practice annual
registration form. Also includes lien and bond forms created by a
subcommittee of the Wisconsin Construction and Public Contract Law
Section and real estate forms drafted by the State Bar's Real Property,
Probate & Trust Law Section.
Eastern District of
Wisconsin Bar Association
Format: PDF
Comments: A small collection of pro se, civil, and criminal
forms, such as notice and subpoena forms, as well as attorney admission
forms.
Other Popular Sources for Online Forms
The following list is a sampling of Web sites (listed alphabetically)
that offer fairly comprehensive collections of free forms, although many
are not Wisconsin-specific.
AllLaw
Comments: As part of its legal resources portal, AllLaw
offers free attorney-drafted forms in HTML format. Forms are not
specific to jurisdiction, but may be useful as sources of suggested
language in many practice areas.
Findlaw
Comments: This comprehensive legal portal compiles links to
federal and state court forms Web sites. It also provides a fairly large
collection of attorney-drafted forms, organized by jurisdiction and
topic.
HeirosGamos
Comments: This site compiles extensive links to forms
produced elsewhere. Not Wisconsin-specific, but useful for searching by
topic.
Internet Legal
Resource Guide (ILRG)
Comments: This site advertises itself as the Internet's
largest collection of free legal forms. ILRG's legal "forms archive"
offers an extensive collection of attorney-drafted forms, as well as
links to law firms offering collections of online forms. Format varies,
depending on the source of the form. Additional links to forms available
for a fee.
Law Library
Resource Xchange (LLRX)
Comments: LLRX.com is a free Web journal that compiles and
organizes links to legal news, services, and resources. Popular with law
librarians, LLRX is known for its focus on technology-related issues.
Among its many resources, LLRX includes links to more than 1,400 sources
for state and federal court rules, forms, and dockets. Users can
search by keyword or browse by court type, type of resource,
jurisdiction, or state. Search results indicate whether the forms are
official or unofficial. Also provides links to court rules and dockets,
such as Wisconsin's CCAP, when available.
'Lectric Law
Library
Comments: This site also advertises itself as the Internet's
largest collection of free legal forms. HTML format forms are classified
into two broad categories: Business/General (dealing with subjects like
real estate, corporations, employment, contracts, trusts, and wills) and
Legal Practice (focusing on law practice management, litigation, and
related matters). Offers suggested language in many practice areas, not
specific to jurisdiction. Also offers "premium" forms available for
purchase.
LexisOne
Comments: This site advertises itself as the resource for
small law firms, with more than 6,000 free forms. Free forms are listed
by topic and jurisdiction, and include many forms produced by the state
and federal government. The free forms listed for Wisconsin are mainly
the Wisconsin State Circuit Court forms. The bulk of the forms are
available for a fee, including automated forms using HotDocs software.
You must register with the site to browse or use the free forms; there
is no fee associated with registration.
Washburn
University School of Law
Comments: Washburn University's "Washlaw" site compiles
links to a variety of state and federal government Web sites offering
forms. Also includes links to other forms sites. Most links are to free
forms.
WisconsinForms.com
Comments: This site, produced by Milwaukee-area attorney
Ernesto Romero, compiles links to forms from numerous sources, including
attorney-drafted forms produced by the state and federal government. A
particular emphasis on family law and personal injury practice
resources. Notable for offering many legal forms in Spanish (most for a
fee).
Paper Forms
Of course, paper forms collections are still available and widely
used. The University of Wisconsin and Marquette Law School libraries and
the Wisconsin State Law Library have a wide selection of forms books
covering many practice areas. Office supply stores, financial
institutions, and other businesses also sell paper forms. Some
businesses' Web sites offer information about their forms products but
do not provide access to forms directly from the site.
Wisconsin
Lawyer