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Provides drafting and filing guidance for Denver District Court (2nd Judicial District) and Denver County Court, including caption formats, case-number conventions, local rules, and motion-practice norms.
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> **NOT LEGAL ADVICE.** Drafting and filing guidance only. Verify
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NOT LEGAL ADVICE. Drafting and filing guidance only. Verify every step against the current 2nd JD local rules and chambers preferences before filing.
Use this skill in addition to co-statewide-format when the case is
in the Denver District Court or Denver County Court (the 2nd
Judicial District). Denver is unique among Colorado JDs in that the
City and County of Denver is coextensive with one judicial district,
so the 2nd JD covers only Denver County.
Both courts sit primarily at the Lindsey-Flanigan Courthouse, 520 W. Colfax Ave., Denver, CO 80204, though specialty divisions (probate, juvenile) sit at separate facilities.
DISTRICT COURT, CITY AND COUNTY OF DENVER, COLORADO
Lindsey-Flanigan Courthouse
520 W. Colfax Ave.
Denver, CO 80204
Plaintiff(s): MIDLAND CREDIT MANAGEMENT, INC., ▲ COURT USE ONLY ▲
┌───────────────────┐
v. │ Case Number: │
│ 2025CV031234 │
Defendant(s): JANE DOE. │ │
│ Division: 209 │
│ Courtroom: 209 │
└───────────────────┘
ANSWER AND COUNTERCLAIM
For Denver County Court (limited jurisdiction), the heading
substitutes "COUNTY COURT, CITY AND COUNTY OF DENVER, COLORADO" and
the case-number format becomes 2025C0###### (a "C0" prefix).
| Court | Format | Example |
|---|---|---|
| District Court — civil | YYYYCV0##### | 2025CV031234 |
| District Court — domestic relations | YYYYDR0##### | 2025DR031234 |
| District Court — probate | YYYYPR0##### | 2025PR031234 |
| County Court — civil | YYYYC0###### | 2025C0123456 |
| County Court — eviction (FED) | YYYYC0###### (subset) | 2025C0123457 |
| County Court — small claims | YYYYS0###### | 2025S0123456 |
The case number is assigned at filing by CCEFS; do not invent or guess. The "Division" number identifies the chambers (a single judge); the "Courtroom" number identifies the physical room. Division ≠ Courtroom in Denver (unlike many smaller JDs where they often match).
The Denver District Court has 23 active civil divisions. Civil cases are assigned randomly by CCEFS at filing; complex commercial matters may be assigned to a designated commercial calendar under the 2nd JD's Business Court program.
The clerk's office publishes a current judge-and-division roster:
https://www.coloradojudicial.gov/courts/judicial-districts/2nd-judicial-district
Agent behavior: when drafting a notice, scheduling a hearing, or preparing for an appearance, fetch the current division-judge mapping and the assigned judge's chambers-specific practice standards. Many Denver judges publish practice standards that supplement the C.R.C.P. and 2nd JD local rules — these change at judicial rotation and after any new judicial appointment.
Motions in Denver follow the statewide C.R.C.P. 121 § 1-15 timing:
Page limits under C.R.C.P. 121 § 1-15(1)(a):
Many Denver judges' practice standards modify these defaults — e.g., requiring a chambers copy (a paper "judge's copy") for motions exceeding 25 pages, requiring certificates of conferral under C.R.C.P. 121 § 1-15(8), or imposing bench-book deadlines for expert disclosures. Always check the assigned judge's practice standards before filing.
For non-dispositive motions, the moving party must, before filing, confer with all opposing parties to attempt to resolve the dispute and must include a statement at the foot of the motion certifying:
Example certificate language:
CERTIFICATE OF CONFERRAL
(C.R.C.P. 121 § 1-15(8))
Pursuant to C.R.C.P. 121 § 1-15(8), the undersigned conferred with
[opposing counsel / opposing party] on [date] regarding the relief
requested in this Motion. [Opposing counsel] [opposes / does not
oppose / takes no position on] the Motion.
Failure to confer is a frequent ground for summary denial in Denver; the certificate is mandatory for non-dispositive motions, and dispositive motions (Rule 12(b), Rule 56) are excused but should still document any attempts to resolve.
Within ~28 days after the case is at issue, the parties must file a Proposed Case Management Order under C.R.C.P. 16(b). The Denver District Court's practice is:
Failure to comply with C.R.C.P. 16 can result in striking pleadings or sanctions; Denver is known for active case management.
Attorneys must e-file through Colorado Courts E-Filing (CCEFS):
https://www.jbits.courts.state.co.us/efiling/
Pro se filers may either:
The Denver Clerk's Office: (720) 865-8301. Civil division clerk: (720) 865-8410.
Filing fees (district court civil):
A Denver motion packet should travel as:
CCEFS requires each component to be uploaded as a separate PDF with the matching document code.
The 2nd JD operates a Self-Help Center at the Lindsey-Flanigan Courthouse and online: courts staff cannot give legal advice but can help with form selection and procedure. The Colorado Judicial Branch publishes JDF (Judicial Department Forms) for most pro se uses:
https://www.coloradojudicial.gov/self-help
Common JDF forms for civil cases:
co-statewide-formatco-draft-motionco-schedule-hearingco-file-packetco-pro-sereferences/lindsey-flanigan-courthouse.md — facility info,
divisions, parkingreferences/civil-divisions.md — division-to-judge mapping and
judge's practice standards indexreferences/filing-procedures.md — CCEFS workflows, document codes,
service mechanicsreferences/business-court.md — Denver's commercial-case program