Proposed Orders: Circulate in 3 Working Days, Submit Within 7 — Division CV-E
Summary
When counsel is asked to prepare an order after a hearing, it must be drafted and circulated to opposing counsel within three working days and submitted to the Court within seven days of the hearing.
Applies to
Florida > Fourth Judicial Circuit > Duval County > Division CV-E (Judge Bruce R. Anderson, Jr.)
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7 calendar days after
Submit proposed order to Court
Trigger: Hearing concluded
Div. CV-E Policies & Procedures § XXII
3 business days after
Circulate proposed order
Trigger: Hearing concluded
Div. CV-E Policies & Procedures § XXII
Computed periods follow Fla. R. Gen. Prac. & Jud. Admin. 2.514 — always confirm holiday calendars for the specific court.
Source of truth
"If counsel is asked to prepare an order, the order should be drafted and circulated to opposing counsel within three (3) working days and must be submitted to the Court within seven (7) days of the hearing, with a copy to opposing counsel."
- Source health
- Healthy · checked July 7, 2026
- Effective date
- August 31, 2025
- Last verified
- July 5, 2026Extracted from the official PDF (sha256-archived) — live fetch 2026-07-05
Reviewer note: Verbatim excerpts from the judge's published procedures; 30-day recheck scheduled.
Change history
- July 5, 2026FIRST JUDGE-SPECIFIC RULE CARDS PUBLISHED: 5 verified rules for Judge Bruce R. Anderson, Jr. (Div. CV-E) from his Sept. 2025 Policies & Procedures — including the mandatory AI certificate.
Related rules
Proposed Orders: Word Format via Online Services — Division AO
Division AO requires proposed orders to be submitted in Word format through the 15th Circuit Online Services System. Orders submitted online do not need a date or signature line.
Proposed Orders: Word via E-Portal Only — Never Dual-Submit — Division CV-A
Proposed orders go to the Court in Word format through the e-portal with an explanatory cover letter. Submitting the same order by both e-portal and email risks duplicate entry; with unrepresented parties, counsel must mail copies and file a Notice of Service.
Proposed Orders Within 24 Hours of Ruling — Division AJ
Judge Cheesman requires proposed orders in Word via Online Services within 24 hours of the ruling — no date or signature line, with names and addresses of all copy recipients.
Never Submit Proposed Orders in Advance — Division AD
Judge Goodman rejects proposed orders submitted before the hearing — they "will be rejected unsigned." Orders go in 48–72 hours AFTER the hearing, Word format, complete mailing and email addresses.