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By codearranger
Draft, format, and file civil pleadings, motions, and proposed orders for New York courts (Supreme, County, Civil, Housing, District, City, Family, Justice) under the CPLR, NYCRR uniform rules, and NYSCEF/UCMS/CCEF e-filing systems, with built-in fact-checking, deadline computation, and pro-se workflows.
npx claudepluginhub codearranger/claude-legal --plugin ny-court-docsBased on adoption, maintenance, documentation, and repository signals. Not a security audit or endorsement.
Use when drafting or filing in Bronx County Supreme Court (the 12th Judicial District). Triggers include 'Bronx County Supreme Court', '851 Grand Concourse', 'Bronx Civil Court', 'Bronx IAS Part', 'Bronx County NYSCEF', 'Bronx Commercial Division', 'Bronx personal-injury part'. Covers Bronx County's distinct civil practice — particularly high-volume personal-injury actions and the historic reputation for plaintiff-favorable jury verdicts — plus IAS Part routing and the 851 Grand Concourse courthouse.
Use when drafting or filing in an upstate City Court — the limited-jurisdiction civil layer outside the City of New York established under the **Uniform City Court Act (UCCA)** with procedural rules at **22 NYCRR Part 210**. Triggers include 'Buffalo City Court', 'Rochester City Court', 'Syracuse City Court', 'Albany City Court', 'Yonkers City Court', 'White Plains City Court', 'New Rochelle City Court', 'Mount Vernon City Court', 'Niagara Falls City Court', 'Schenectady City Court', 'Utica City Court', 'Troy City Court', 'Binghamton City Court', 'Auburn City Court', 'Watertown City Court', 'Glen Cove City Court', 'Long Beach City Court', 'Newburgh City Court', 'UCCA', 'Uniform City Court Act', '22 NYCRR Part 210', 'upstate City Court'. Covers the ~60 City Courts with civil jurisdiction up to **$15,000**, small claims up to $5,000 (varies by city; some go to $3,000), housing parts where they exist (Buffalo, Rochester, Yonkers, White Plains, others), and the variable e-filing rollout (NYSCEF is mandatory in several upstate City Courts and expanding). NOT for NYC Civil Court (separate court under Civil Court Act § 110 — see `ny-nyc-civil-court`); not for Town & Village Justice Courts (UJCA — see `ny-justice-courts`); not for Long Island District Courts (UDCA — see `ny-nassau-dc` and `ny-suffolk-dc`).
Use when drafting or filing a commercial-litigation action under New York law — breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, business torts, fraud, account stated, UCC commercial disputes, business-divorce / shareholder oppression, judicial dissolution. Triggers include '22 NYCRR 202.70 Commercial Division', 'Commercial Division Rules', 'CPLR 3016(b) fraud particularity', 'NY CPLR 213(2) 6-year contract SOL', 'NY GOL 5-1401 choice-of-law $250,000', 'GOL 5-1402 forum selection', 'BCL 1104-a oppression', 'BCL 720 fiduciary duty', 'LLC Law 702 dissolution', 'Faithless Servant Doctrine', 'NY Comm Div discovery limits', 'Commercial Division 25- page brief', 'BCL 624 books and records', 'breach of fiduciary duty NY', 'business divorce NY', 'NY judicial dissolution', 'account stated NY', 'guaranty action NY'. Covers the NY commercial litigation environment — the Commercial Division at 22 NYCRR § 202.70 (separate procedural rule set with county-by-county monetary thresholds and the proportionality-in-discovery rule unique to the Comm Div), the substantive frameworks (Business Corporation Law fiduciary duty and dissolution remedies, LLC Law analog, the Faithless Servant Doctrine, pre-judgment interest at the statutory 9% rate under CPLR 5004), the heightened fraud-pleading particularity requirement at CPLR 3016(b), and the choice-of-law and forum-selection benefits NY provides under General Obligations Law §§ 5-1401 and 5-1402 (the "$250,000 threshold" that makes NY a destination forum for commercial disputes).
Subject-matter bundle for New York consumer-debt defense. Triggers include 'defending a debt-collection lawsuit in New York', 'NYC Civil Court debt case', 'sued for credit card debt in NY', 'consumer-credit complaint defense', 'CPLR 213(a) 3-year SOL', 'Consumer Credit Fairness Act', 'CCFA 2022 New York', 'CPLR 3015(e)', '22 NYCRR § 202.27-a', 'GBL § 349 deceptive practices', 'NY GBL § 600 collection agency', 'Midland Funding', 'debt buyer', 'chain of title', 'sewer service', 'CPLR 4544 small-print contracts', 'FDCPA in New York', 'Reg F'. Covers FDCPA + Regulation F, the 2022 Consumer Credit Fairness Act (L 2021, ch 593, eff. April 7, 2022) — including the 3-year SOL on consumer- credit at CPLR 213(a), the CPLR 3015(e) heightened-pleading rule, the 22 NYCRR § 202.27-a heightened default-judgment evidence rule, and the CPLR 308(six) additional-mailing rule — plus N.Y. GBL § 600 et seq. (collection-agency licensing in NYC and certain counties), N.Y. GBL § 349 (deceptive acts), CPLR 4544 small-print contracts, chain of title under N.Y. UCC Article 9, fact-pattern triage, and RFP/RFA banks.
Use when filing in a New York **Supreme Court** Civil Term other than the five flagship counties (New York, Kings, Bronx, Nassau, Queens). Triggers include 'Suffolk County Supreme Court', 'Westchester County Supreme Court', 'Erie County Supreme Court', 'Monroe County Supreme Court', 'Onondaga County Supreme Court', 'Richmond County Supreme Court' (Staten Island), 'Rockland Supreme', 'Albany Supreme', 'Orange Supreme', 'Dutchess Supreme', 'Saratoga Supreme', 'Oneida Supreme', 'Niagara Supreme', 'Onondaga Supreme'. Now narrowly scoped to **Supreme Court Civil Term** only — the long-tail roll-up of upstate Supreme Courts plus Richmond. For other civil-court layers use the dedicated skills: `ny-nyc-civil-court` (NYC Civil Court $50k cap, 5 boroughs), `ny-nyc-housing-court` (RPAPL Art 7 summary proceedings in NYC), `ny-nassau-dc` / `ny-suffolk-dc` (Long Island UDCA District Courts $15k cap), `ny-city-courts` (upstate UCCA City Courts $15k cap), `ny-justice-courts` (Town & Village UJCA Justice Courts $3k cap).
Comprehensive skill pack with 66 specialized skills for full-stack developers: 12 language experts (Python, TypeScript, Go, Rust, C++, Swift, Kotlin, C#, PHP, Java, SQL, JavaScript), 10 backend frameworks, 6 frontend/mobile, plus infrastructure, DevOps, security, and testing. Features progressive disclosure architecture for 50% faster loading.
Harness-native ECC plugin for engineering teams - 64 agents, 262 skills, 84 legacy command shims, reusable hooks, rules, MCP conventions, and operator workflows for Claude Code plus adjacent agent harnesses
Core skills library for Claude Code: TDD, debugging, collaboration patterns, and proven techniques
Ultra-compressed communication mode. Cuts ~75% of tokens while keeping full technical accuracy by speaking like a caveman.
Draft and format pleadings, declarations, motions, notices, and proposed orders for Indiana courts. Applies Indiana Trial Rule 5(E) statewide formatting; includes Marion Superior Court and Lake Superior Court specifics plus a county-courts roll-up; supports pro se workflows. Architected as matter-neutral civil-procedure skills (Ind. Trial R. civil rules, Ind. Evid. R. evidence rules, fees and costs, local rules, citation format per the Indiana Citation Manual) plus subject-matter bundles. Two subject-matter bundles ship: in-consumer-debt (FDCPA / Reg F / IUCCC / DCSA / chain-of-title doctrine) and in-family-law (paternity at IC 31-14 — the JP case-type backbone, dissolution at IC 31-15 under Indiana's equitable-distribution regime, child support at IC 31-16 with the Indiana Child Support Guidelines court rule, custody and parenting time at IC 31-17 with the Indiana Parenting Time Guidelines court rule, adoption at IC 31-19, UCCJEA at IC 31-21, DCS / CHINS / TPR / delinquency at IC 31-25 / 31-30 / 31-32 / 31-34 / 31-35 / 31-37, protection orders at IC 34-26-5). The in-family-court venue skill covers Indiana's family-law topology — no separate Family Court trial court; large counties (Marion, Lake, Allen, Vanderburgh, Hamilton, St. Joseph) have dedicated Juvenile Divisions; smaller counties (like Bartholomew) consolidate family-law jurisdiction in the Circuit Court. Follows a thin-skill architecture: SKILL.md bodies describe procedural frameworks and point at the references corpus for current statutory text, dollar thresholds, day counts, and section subsections rather than embedding them. All workflows are skills (no slash commands) so the agent invokes them automatically from natural-language requests.
Draft and format pleadings, declarations, motions, notices of motion, and proposed orders for California superior courts. Applies California Rules of Court 2.100-2.119 statewide formatting; includes Los Angeles Superior Court (LASC — Stanley Mosk Courthouse) and San Francisco Superior Court (SFSC — Civic Center Courthouse, Dept. 302 law-and-motion) specifics plus a county-courts roll-up for the most-populous counties (Orange, San Diego, Riverside, San Bernardino, Santa Clara, Alameda, Sacramento, Contra Costa, Fresno, Kern); supports pro se ('In Pro Per') workflows. Architected as matter-neutral civil-procedure skills (CCP civil rules with the 35-special-interrogatory cap and the 45-day jurisdictional motion-to-compel-further deadline, CEC evidence rules including § 1271 business-records foundation, fees and costs under CCP §§ 1032/1033.5 and § 1717 reciprocal attorney's fees, local rules for LASC + SFSC + populous counties, citation format per the California Style Manual, CRC 8.1115 unpublished-opinion rule, deadline arithmetic under CCP §§ 12/12a/12c with Govt. Code § 6700 holidays, hearings under the CRC 3.1308 tentative-ruling regime, the CCP § 1005(b) 16-court-day motion-notice framework, summary judgment under CCP § 437c) plus subject-matter bundles. The first subject-matter bundle, ca-consumer-debt, covers FDCPA / Reg F (federal), the Rosenthal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (Cal. Civ. Code §§ 1788-1788.33 — reaches both first-party and third-party collectors), the Fair Debt Buying Practices Act (Cal. Civ. Code §§ 1788.50-1788.66 — heightened pleading + documentation for debt buyers), the California Debt Collection Licensing Act (Cal. Fin. Code §§ 100000-100027 — DFPI licensure since 2022), the Unfair Competition Law (Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code §§ 17200-17210), the Consumers Legal Remedies Act (Cal. Civ. Code §§ 1750-1784), chain-of-title doctrine under Cal. Comm. Code Art. 9, fact-pattern triage, and synthetic example filings. All workflows are skills (no slash commands) so the agent invokes them automatically from natural-language requests.
Draft and format pleadings, declarations, motions, notices, and proposed orders for Ohio courts. Applies Ohio Civ. R. 10 + per-court local rules statewide formatting; includes Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas (Cleveland) and Franklin County Court of Common Pleas (Columbus) specifics plus a county-courts roll-up, with verbatim local rules for Cuyahoga and Delaware Common Pleas; supports pro se workflows. Architected as matter-neutral civil-procedure skills (Ohio Civ. R. civil rules, Ohio Evid. R. evidence rules, fees and costs, local rules, citation format per the Ohio Manual of Citations) plus five subject-matter bundles: oh-consumer-debt (FDCPA / Reg F / Ohio CSPA / chain-of-title), oh-family-law (R.C. 3105/3109/3119 equitable-distribution + income-shares), oh-personal-injury (R.C. 2315 comparative fault + damages caps + OPLA + R.C. 2744 immunity), oh-employment (R.C. 4112 discrimination as amended by the 2021 Uniformity Act + workers' comp + whistleblower), and oh-commercial-disputes (OUTSA trade secrets + R.C. 1706 LLC Act + arbitration + business torts). All workflows are skills (no slash commands) so the agent invokes them automatically from natural-language requests.
Draft and format pleadings, declarations, motions, notes for hearing, and proposed orders for Oregon circuit courts. Applies UTCR 2.010 statewide formatting; includes Multnomah County Circuit Court (Portland) and Washington County Circuit Court (Hillsboro) specifics plus a county-court roll-up for the other most-populous counties (Clackamas, Lane, Marion, Jackson, Deschutes, Linn, Benton, Yamhill, Polk, Douglas); supports pro se workflows. Architected as matter-neutral civil-procedure skills (ORCP civil rules, OEC evidence rules, ORS 20 fees and costs, local SLR rules, citation format per the Oregon Appellate Courts Style Manual, online sources, discovery, first-30-days response, hearings, filing packets, post-judgment, fact-checking, deadlines under ORCP 10 + ORS 187.010 holidays) plus subject-matter bundles that plug into the procedural skills. The first subject-matter bundle, or-consumer-debt, covers FDCPA, Reg F, ORS 697 (Collection Agency Registration), the Oregon Unlawful Trade Practices Act (UTPA, ORS 646.605 et seq.), chain-of-title doctrine, fact-pattern triage, and synthetic example filings for debt-buyer defense. The architecture leaves clean slots for future bundles (landlord-tenant under ORS 90, family, personal injury, etc.). All workflows are skills (no slash commands) so the agent invokes them automatically from natural-language requests.
Draft and format pleadings, declarations, motions, notices, and proposed orders for Colorado courts. Applies C.R.C.P. 10 + Chief Justice Directive 11-01 statewide formatting (uniform 1-inch margins, double-spaced text, 12-point font, the two-block Colorado caption with the case-number / division / courtroom box); includes Denver District Court (2nd Judicial District) and Arapahoe County District Court (18th Judicial District) specifics plus a roll-up for the other most-populous counties (Jefferson, El Paso, Adams, Boulder, Larimer, Douglas, Weld, Pueblo, Mesa, Broomfield); supports pro se / self-represented workflows including CCEFS Pro Se and the JDF (Judicial Department Forms) catalog. Architected as matter-neutral civil-procedure skills (C.R.C.P. civil rules with the 21-day answer window and C.R.C.P. 121 § 1-15 motion-practice timing, CRE evidence rules, fees and costs under C.R.S. art. 16 of title 13, local rules and Chief Justice Directives, citation format per the Colorado Appellate Court conventions, deadline arithmetic under C.R.C.P. 6 with C.R.S. § 24-11-101 holidays including Frances Xavier Cabrini Day and Juneteenth, hearings under the Cisco Webex statewide remote-appearance protocol, post-judgment under C.R.C.P. 59/60 and the C.R.S. § 13-54.5 garnishment regime) plus subject-matter bundles. Two subject-matter bundles ship: (1) co-consumer-debt covering FDCPA, Reg F, the Colorado Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (CFDCPA — C.R.S. art. 16 of title 5, recodified from Title 12 in 2022), the Colorado Consumer Protection Act (CCPA — C.R.S. art. 1 of title 6 with treble damages and mandatory fees), the Uniform Consumer Credit Code (UCCC — C.R.S. art. 1-9 of title 5), Colorado collection-agency licensure under the AG's Collection Agency Board, chain-of-title doctrine under Colorado UCC Article 9 (C.R.S. art. 9 of title 4), the 6-year SOL under C.R.S. § 13-80-103.5(1)(a), fact-pattern triage, and synthetic example filings; and (2) co-family-law covering the Uniform Dissolution of Marriage Act (UDMA — C.R.S. art. 10 of title 14), the 91-day residency and 91-day waiting-period requirements under C.R.S. § 14-10-106, dissolution / legal separation / declaration of invalidity (annulment) under C.R.S. § 14-10-111, the C.R.C.P. 16.2 mandatory financial-disclosure regime including the Sworn Financial Statement (JDF 1111), allocation of parental responsibilities under C.R.S. § 14-10-124 (replaces 'custody' terminology), the C.R.S. § 14-10-115 income-shares child-support guideline with the 93-overnight rule and statewide online worksheet (JDF 1820 E), maintenance under the C.R.S. § 14-10-114 guideline framework as amended in 2014 and 2024, common-law marriage under People v. Lucero and In re Marriage of Hogsett & Neale, and post-decree modification under C.R.S. § 14-10-122. All workflows are skills (no slash commands) so the agent invokes them automatically from natural-language requests.
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UI/UX design intelligence. 67 styles, 161 palettes, 57 font pairings, 25 charts, 15 stacks (React, Next.js, Vue, Svelte, Astro, SwiftUI, React Native, Flutter, Tailwind, shadcn/ui, Nuxt, Jetpack Compose). Actions: plan, build, create, design, implement, review, fix, improve, optimize, enhance, refactor, check UI/UX code. Projects: website, landing page, dashboard, admin panel, e-commerce, SaaS, portfolio, blog, mobile app. Elements: button, modal, navbar, sidebar, card, table, form, chart. Styles: glassmorphism, claymorphism, minimalism, brutalism, neumorphism, bento grid, dark mode, responsive, skeuomorphism, flat design. Topics: color palette, accessibility, animation, layout, typography, font pairing, spacing, hover, shadow, gradient.
Frontend design skill for UI/UX implementation