Case Chronology Template for Litigation

Case Chronology Template for Litigation

A detailed case chronology template for organizing litigation timelines. Includes source tracking, dispute flags, and formatting best practices.

A case chronology is a sequential timeline of every event relevant to a legal matter. In litigation, it is one of the first documents you build and one of the last you stop updating. A well-maintained chronology becomes the spine of your case — guiding discovery, shaping depositions, anchoring motions, and organizing trial presentation.

This template provides a ready-to-use framework with multiple format options depending on the complexity of your case.

Case Chronology Header

CASE CHRONOLOGY

Case:           [Plaintiff(s)] v. [Defendant(s)]
Case Number:    [Court file number]
Jurisdiction:   [Court, county/district, state]
Prepared By:    [Name and title]
Last Updated:   [MM/DD/YYYY]
Version:        [e.g., 3.2 — helps track iterations]

Standard Chronology Format

The standard format works well for most cases. Each row captures one event with full source attribution.

DateTimeEvent DescriptionSourceExhibitDisputed?Notes
03/01/2023Parties execute commercial lease for Suite 400, 1200 Main St., Denver, CO. 5-year term, $24,000/month.Lease AgreementP-1No
06/15/20242:14 PMR. Chen (Apex CFO) sends email to J. Martinez (Greenfield property mgr.) reporting HVAC failure in Suite 400.Email, Chen to MartinezD-3Yes — Greenfield denies receiptCritical to constructive eviction defense
06/16/20249:00 AMMartinez responds to Chen acknowledging receipt and stating "we will send someone this week."Email, Martinez to ChenD-4NoContradicts Greenfield's position on D-3
07/03/2024Chen sends follow-up email re: HVAC still not repaired.Chen depo testimony, 30:8-31:2Not producedYes — email not found in discoveryFlag for motion to compel
09/20/2024Independent HVAC contractor inspects Suite 400. Report concludes system is "original 2009 installation, not replaced."Inspection report, ABC MechanicalD-7NoDirectly contradicts broker's representation
01/01/2025Apex ceases rent payments.Rent ledgerP-2No
03/15/2025Greenfield serves 10-day demand for payment.Demand letterP-3No
04/02/2025Greenfield files breach-of-contract complaint.Court docketNo

Column Definitions

  • Date: Use MM/DD/YYYY format consistently. If the exact date is unknown, note it (e.g., "June 2024 (exact date unknown)").
  • Time: Include when relevant — especially for incidents, communications, and events where sequence within a single day matters.
  • Event Description: One to three sentences. Be factual, not argumentative. Use specific names, titles, and amounts.
  • Source: The document, testimony, or record that establishes the event. Always attribute.
  • Exhibit: The exhibit number if the source has been marked as an exhibit. If not yet in evidence, note "Not produced" or "Pending."
  • Disputed?: Flag whether the opposing party contests that the event occurred or occurred as described. This is critical for trial preparation.
  • Notes: Internal annotations — relevance to a particular claim, follow-up needed, or connections to other events.

Detailed Chronology Format

For complex cases with multiple parties, threads, or overlapping events, use a more detailed format with additional columns.

DateCategoryEvent DescriptionActor(s)SourceExhibitClaim RelevanceDisputed?Priority
03/01/2023ContractLease executionGreenfield, ApexSigned leaseP-1Breach (P), Habitability (D)NoHigh
06/15/2024HVACChen emails Martinez re: HVAC failureChenEmailD-3Constructive eviction (D)YesCritical
01/01/2025PaymentApex stops paying rentApexRent ledgerP-2Breach (P)NoHigh

Category Examples

Use consistent categories to enable filtering and sorting:

  • Contract — formation, amendments, execution
  • Communication — emails, letters, calls, meetings
  • Performance — payments, deliveries, services rendered
  • Breach — alleged violations
  • Dispute — complaints, demands, threats
  • Litigation — filings, hearings, orders
  • Discovery — requests, responses, depositions
  • Expert — inspections, reports, opinions
  • Settlement — offers, mediations, agreements

Building the Chronology: Step by Step

Step 1: Gather All Source Materials

Before entering a single event, collect:

  • The complaint and answer
  • All contracts and agreements
  • Correspondence (email, letters, text messages)
  • Internal company documents (memos, board minutes)
  • Medical records (PI cases)
  • Financial records (commercial disputes)
  • Deposition transcripts
  • Expert reports
  • Court filings and orders

Step 2: Create Events from Each Source

Work through each source document and extract every factual event with a date. One document may yield multiple chronology entries.

Example: A single deposition transcript might produce:

DateEventSource
06/15/2024Chen emailed Martinez re: HVACChen Depo, 10:5
07/03/2024Chen sent follow-up emailChen Depo, 30:8
10/2024Apex board discussed rent withholdingChen Depo, 19:3

Step 3: Merge and Deduplicate

Multiple sources may describe the same event. Merge them into a single entry and list all sources.

06/15/2024 — Chen emails Martinez re: HVAC failure. Sources: Email (Ex. D-3); Chen Depo 10:5-11:11; Martinez Depo 45:2-46:8.

Step 4: Flag Disputes and Gaps

Mark any event where the parties disagree about what happened. Also identify gaps — periods where you expect events occurred but have no documentation. These gaps suggest discovery targets.

Step 5: Maintain and Update

The chronology is a living document. Update it after every deposition, document production, and court event. Include the version number and date in the header.

Specialized Chronology Considerations

Personal Injury Cases

Add columns for medical treatment and symptoms. Track the chain from injury through treatment through recovery.

DateEventProviderTreatmentSymptoms ReportedSource
05/10/2025MVC at intersection of 5th and MainPolice report
05/10/2025ER visit, Denver GeneralDr. PatelX-ray, cervical collarNeck pain, headacheER records
05/15/2025Follow-up with PCPDr. NguyenMRI orderedPersistent neck pain, numbness in left armOffice notes

Criminal Cases

Track the timeline from the alleged offense through arrest, arraignment, and each court appearance. Include a separate column for evidence custodian to track chain of custody.

Family Law Cases

Include columns for children affected, financial events (asset transfers, account openings/closings), and custody-related events.

Formatting Best Practices

  1. Consistent date format. Pick MM/DD/YYYY or YYYY-MM-DD and stick with it throughout.
  2. One event per row. Do not combine multiple events in a single entry, even if they occurred on the same day.
  3. Active voice. Write "Chen sent email to Martinez" not "Email was sent."
  4. No legal conclusions. Write "Apex stopped paying rent" not "Apex breached the lease." Facts only.
  5. Sortable structure. If using a spreadsheet, ensure the date column is formatted as a date field so you can sort chronologically.

Build Chronologies Faster with NotuDocs

Constructing a case chronology from scattered documents, transcripts, and notes is painstaking work. NotuDocs can process your case review conversations and source materials, automatically extracting dated events and organizing them into a structured, source-attributed timeline — saving your team hours of manual assembly.

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