From litigation-legal-uk
Build or update a chronology from declared document sources and uploads — dated events extracted, de-duped, and tagged by significance per the matter theory. Use when the user asks to build a chronology or timeline from a production or matter file, says "chron from the disclosure" or "what happened when", or needs a working, statement-of-facts, or witness-specific timeline.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/litigation-legal-uk:chronology [slug] [--format=working|sof|witness-[name]][slug] [--format=working|sof|witness-[name]]The summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
1. Load `~/.claude/plugins/config/uk-legal-plugins/litigation-legal-uk/matters/[slug]/matter.md` → theory, pivot fact, key facts.
~/.claude/plugins/config/uk-legal-plugins/litigation-legal-uk/matters/[slug]/matter.md → theory, pivot fact, key facts.~/.claude/plugins/config/uk-legal-plugins/litigation-legal-uk/CLAUDE.md → Document storage sources, default matter folder pattern.~/.claude/plugins/config/uk-legal-plugins/litigation-legal-uk/CLAUDE.md.~/.claude/plugins/config/uk-legal-plugins/litigation-legal-uk/matters/[slug]/chronology.md (or format variant per flag).Before working with a set of litigation documents, ask: "Were any of these documents obtained through disclosure in legal proceedings?" If yes:
Confirm: "This use is within the proceedings in which the documents were disclosed, or I have permission / consent, or the documents are now public." If not confirmed, flag it: "⚠️ Disclosed documents may have use restrictions. Confirm this use is permitted before proceeding."
Facts happen in order. The chronology is the spine every narrative hangs on — the statement of facts in a skeleton argument or written submissions, reserve memos, settlement memos, witness preparation, cross-examination prep. Building a chron by hand is slow; AI is good at structured extraction. The catch: garbage-in, garbage-out. This skill pulls from the sources the configuration declares and from whatever the user uploads.
This skill serves two practice settings. Pick a default from the user's ## Role in the plugin's configuration CLAUDE.md; the user can override per-run with a flag.
--matter mode (default for in-house litigation counsel). Matter-history-focused. Reads the matter's case theory and key facts from matter.md, pulls from declared document-storage sources (Google Drive, SharePoint, Gmail, iManage, CLM — whatever the ## Landscape section of CLAUDE.md declares), and treats history.md as the running internal log (decisions, preservation notices, reserve memos — intentionally not in the chronology). Output is matter-centric: what happened across the dispute, tagged for advocacy use.--documents mode (default for firm solicitor / paralegal). Production-document-focused. Reads the case theory from the configuration, then extracts from a disclosure export, a custodial file set, or a Bates-numbered or page-referenced production. Output is production-centric: what the documents show, with document references, tagged per the case theory.Both modes converge on the same output structure (timeline, 🔴/🟡/⚪ significance tags, gaps, SoF variant). The difference is the source profile and the significance frame.
If ## Role is solo or other, default to --matter but mention both modes on the first run and let the user pick.
The same event is significant in different ways depending on whether the practitioner is proving a claim or disproving it. Read ## Side in the practice profile (and the per-matter posture if the matter overrides the default):
Note the applied framing at the top of the output: Significance tags applied from [claimant / defendant] perspective. When producing a Statement of Facts variant, use the side default unless the user specifies otherwise.
Common:
## Landscape for document sources; firm solicitor: ## Case theory and ## Document review for disclosure platform + custodians), ## Outputs for the work-product header, ## Decision posture for the privilege-flagging rule.chronology.md for this matter, if it exists.--matter mode also reads:
~/.claude/plugins/config/uk-legal-plugins/litigation-legal-uk/matters/[slug]/matter.md → case theory, key facts, pivot fact (for significance tagging), key dates.--documents mode also reads:
Conflicts gate — unbypassable (--matter mode). Before building the chronology, check ~/.claude/plugins/config/uk-legal-plugins/litigation-legal-uk/matters/_log.yaml for the matter slug. If the matter is not in _log.yaml, refuse and route:
"I don't see [matter slug] in the matter log. Run
/litigation-legal-uk:matter-intakefirst so the conflicts check runs and the matter workspace is set up. I won't build a chronology on a matter that hasn't been intaken — the conflicts check is the gate."
Do not proceed on an unintaken matter. Intake is what runs conflicts and writes the _log.yaml row this skill reads from. --documents mode (running against an ad-hoc document set without a matter slug) is exempt from the gate, but its outputs should be treated as pre-matter research and not filed as if matter work product.
Chronology work pulls from documents. Documents are often subject to legal professional privilege (LPP) — legal advice privilege or litigation privilege — or are commercially confidential. In-house matter files often attract LPP by default; disclosure productions, especially rolling productions or common-interest productions, often contain privileged or unreviewed material. Extracting content from a privileged document into a chronology that later gets shared can risk waiver, depending on who receives it and the applicable doctrine. Waiver analysis is fact-specific — get solicitor/barrister sign-off before distributing.
The skill will not extract until the user picks a privilege posture:
Before I extract: how have the sources been privilege-screened?
A. All sources cleared — you've already screened these. I extract without privilege flags. Output is disclosure-ready posture; still marked work product.
B. Mixed or not yet screened — I extract and tag every entry with a
privflag:ok(sourced from clearly non-privileged material),flag(sourced from potentially privileged material — legal advice privilege, litigation privilege, common interest), orreview(source unclear). Flagged entries are visually marked in the output, and the Statement-of-Facts variant filters them out by default.C. Abort — screen first — pause the skill. Screen the sources. Return and re-run.
Record the choice in the chronology header as privilege_posture: A-cleared | B-mixed | C-aborted. If B or C, record the rationale briefly.
Why a gate and not just a warning: a warning gets read once and forgotten. A gate forces the posture decision into the record, which means every chronology file carries its own provenance — anyone reading it later knows whether entries were derived from privilege-screened material.
--matter mode:
G:/Legal/Matters/acme-v-us-2026).Document storage table in CLAUDE.md, filtered to ones this matter might touch (e.g., Gmail archive for sender-side communications, SharePoint legal folder).--documents mode:
For each source with readable files:
If the skill can't access a declared source, name it explicitly in the output's Gaps section rather than silently proceeding.
No silent supplement. If source coverage for an era of the matter is thin — fewer documents than expected for a claimed time window, a custodian whose mailbox isn't accessible, a production that hasn't landed — report what was found and stop. Do NOT fill gaps from web search, public record search, or model knowledge about the matter without asking. Say: "Sources returned [N] events for [period / custodian]. Coverage appears thin. Options: (1) point me at additional sources (document reference, folder, mailbox), (2) try a different MCP connector if configured, (3) search the web for public-record events in this window — results will be tagged [web search — verify] and should be checked against a primary source before relying, or (4) stop here and note the gap. Which would you like?" A solicitor or barrister decides whether to accept lower-confidence sources; the skill does not decide for them.
Source attribution. Tag every chronology entry with where the event came from: the file path, document reference, MCP connector, or declared document-storage source for events extracted from retrieved documents (already captured in the Sources column). For any event or date that cannot be traced to a retrieved document — e.g., a fact recalled from model training data, a public-record event found via web search — tag it inline: [web search — verify], [model knowledge — verify], or [user provided] where the user stated the fact in-session. Entries tagged verify carry higher fabrication risk than document-sourced entries and should be checked first. Never strip or collapse the tags — they are counsel's fastest signal about which entries to verify before pulling them into a skeleton argument or SoF.
Tagging reaches every section that states a legal conclusion, deadline, or computed date — not just timeline entries. The timeline is sourced from documents. The Gaps section, the Key events section, the Theory tie lines, and any statement of limitation periods, tolling events, filing deadlines, disclosure cutoffs, or privilege determinations are legal analysis the skill writes from model knowledge unless sourced. Every such statement carries a provenance tag: [computed from: <rule cited with tag>], [model knowledge — verify], [user provided], or a research-connector tag if retrieved in this session. A limitation window with no tag defaults to [model knowledge — verify]. A "key event" line that characterises a fact's legal significance is analysis and needs the tag. The rule is simple: if it's an assertion about the law, not an assertion about what a document says, it must carry the same provenance tag the timeline entries do. When no research connector is reachable and the skill is computing deadlines or citing rules, record it in the Sources: line of the reviewer note — do not emit a standalone banner.
For each document, identify dated events:
[date] [sender] told [recipient] [subject/content][date] [attendees] met about [topic] (per calendar entry or notes)[date] [decision-maker] decided [what] (per memorialising doc)[date] [party] filed / served [claim form / particulars of claim / defence / application][date] [thing happened] (contract signed, product launched, regulator acted, event crossed a threshold)One event per document usually. Occasionally zero (undated or no event established). Sometimes multiple (meeting summary covering several decisions).
Privilege flag per entry (only when privilege_posture == B-mixed). Three-state rule — never silently decide a subjective privilege test isn't met:
priv: ok — source is confidently non-privileged (filed documents, regulatory correspondence without legal advice, public documents, counterparty communications without our counsel). Used only when there's no plausible privilege theory.priv: flag — source is confidently or likely privileged (communications with external solicitors or barristers, legal advice communications, litigation privilege documents, common-interest material). Default for anything uncertain — if the dominant-purpose call is close, or litigation contemplation is borderline, or the content is mixed, it goes here, not in ok.priv: review — source unclear on its face, but the skill could not make the call at all (no sender/recipient metadata, unreadable, etc.).When priv: flag or priv: review, add [SME VERIFY: privilege status] inline so the solicitor sees it during review. Under-flagging waives LPP (one-way door); over-flagging is corrected by counsel in review (two-way door). Prefer the recoverable error.
The same event surfaces in multiple documents: a meeting is on three calendars and produces a summary email — that's one event with four sources, not four events. Merge. The merged entry cites all sources.
Read the pivot fact and key facts from matter.md (--matter mode) or from the configuration's ## Case theory section (--documents mode). Tag each event:
Discipline: a chronology of 300 entries with 300 🔴 tags has no tags. Reserve 🔴 for events that would genuinely move a factfinder. If in doubt, 🟡.
Borderline tagging: when an entry sits between 🔴 and 🟡 (or 🟡 and ⚪), tag at the lower significance and add [SME VERIFY — borderline significance call] inline. Counsel's judgment will override the skill's call. A chronology that confidently over-tags is less useful than one that surfaces its uncertainty.
Default output is the working chronology. Variants on request.
Location: ~/.claude/plugins/config/uk-legal-plugins/litigation-legal-uk/matters/[slug]/chronology.md. Complete, tagged, annotated. The reference doc counsel works from.
[WORK-PRODUCT HEADER — per plugin config ## Outputs — differs by role; see `## Who's using this`]
> **Privilege inheritance.** This chronology is derived from matter documents that may be subject to legal professional privilege (legal advice privilege or litigation privilege), common-interest protection, or both. It inherits the sources' protection status. Distributing it beyond the LPP circle — to business stakeholders outside the engagement, to opposing solicitors, to a regulator — can waive protection over both the chronology and the underlying sources. Store with privileged matter material, mark consistently with house LPP conventions, and make distribution decisions deliberately. The privilege-posture choice captured below is the provenance stamp for any later distribution call.
# Chronology — [Matter Name]
> Significance tags (🔴/🟡/⚪) and privilege flags (🔒) are first-pass reads requiring `[SME VERIFY]` before use in any external work product (skeleton arguments, statements of facts, board memos, external solicitors deliverables).
**Matter:** [slug]
**Mode:** matter | documents
**Built:** [YYYY-MM-DD]
**Sources:** [N] documents across [source types]
**Entries:** [N] ([N] 🔴 / [N] 🟡 / [N] ⚪)
**Pivot fact:** [one sentence]
**Privilege posture:** A-cleared | B-mixed | C-aborted
**Flagged entries:** [N] 🔒 *(only present when posture == B-mixed)*
---
## Timeline
| Date | Event | Tag | 🔒 | Sources |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [YYYY-MM-DD] | [what happened, one sentence] | 🔴/🟡/⚪ | [blank / 🔒-flag / 🔒-review] | [file paths or document references] |
---
## Key events (🔴 only)
[Pulled out, each with a line on why it matters to the theory.]
### [date] — [event title]
- What: [one line]
- Theory tie: [why this matters]
- Sources: [list]
---
## Gaps
**Date ranges with no events:**
[ranges — where are documents for this period?]
**Expected but missing:**
[events we'd expect to see documented but don't — e.g., "contract amendments between 2024-06 and 2025-03 — not produced"]
**Unreadable sources:**
[sources declared in CLAUDE.md but not accessible this run — e.g., "disclosure platform — no MCP connector; export needed"]
---
## Marker discipline
- `[VERIFY: factual assertion — date, attendees, content]` — not yet confirmed against the underlying doc
- `[UNCERTAIN: legal characterisation — e.g., whether an event establishes a regulatory trigger]`
- `[CITE NEEDED: document reference / exhibit]`
- `[SME VERIFY: privilege status | borderline significance call]` — counsel judgment needed
---
## Version
- v[N] built on [date] from [source summary]
- v[N-1] built on [date] (prior, superseded)
Filter to 🔴 and relevant 🟡 only. Present as prose in chronological narrative order — the skeleton for a skeleton argument's or written submissions' fact section. Each paragraph is one event or tightly linked cluster, with document citations in OSCOLA format.
Privilege filter default: when privilege_posture == B-mixed, 🔒-flagged and 🔒-review entries are excluded by default. The SoF variant is intended for eventual external use (skeleton arguments, disclosures, negotiating counterparty) — 🔒 entries don't belong there until counsel confirms privilege status. If the user wants 🔒 entries included anyway, require explicit --include-flagged acknowledgment; capture the acknowledgment in the output header as permanent record.
Filter to events where a named witness is sender, recipient, attendee, or subject. Feeds witness preparation and cross-examination prep, and helps reconstruct what a witness knew when.
If chronology.md exists:
v[N+1]Intentionally separate (in-house --matter mode). history.md is counsel's running log — decisions, updates, procedural milestones, internal strategy notes. chronology.md is the advocacy-facing timeline of facts. They overlap but don't merge:
When counsel wants history events in the chronology, they can paste them. The default is they stay separate.
priv flag captures first-pass classification. Actual privilege determinations are counsel's call per [SME VERIFY] flags.npx claudepluginhub uk-agents/uk-legal-plugins --plugin litigation-legal-ukProvides UI/UX resources: 50+ styles, color palettes, font pairings, guidelines, charts for web/mobile across React, Next.js, Vue, Svelte, Tailwind, React Native, Flutter. Aids planning, building, reviewing interfaces.
Fetches up-to-date documentation from Context7 for libraries and frameworks like React, Next.js, Prisma. Use for setup questions, API references, and code examples.