The records that hold up in family court — and the ones that hurt your case. A practical, printable companion to the documentation chapter of Family Court Solutions. The goal is not "more documentation." The goal is the right documentation, organized so a stranger can see your case the way you see it.
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1. Communications between the parents
The foundational evidence in essentially every high-conflict case. Move everything to documented channels and keep originals intact.
Text messages
Why: judges trust contemporaneous written records far more than testimony about what was said.
Full thread exports, not screenshots. Use a third-party app (iMazing, SMS Backup & Restore) or your phone's built-in export. Save as PDF and CSV.
Preserve metadata: timestamps, sender, full conversation context. Cropped screenshots can be challenged.
Back up monthly. Phones get lost, broken, or wiped.
Save in dated folders (e.g., texts-2025-Q1.pdf).
Emails
Why: emails are usually the cleanest, most admissible record in your file.
Keep originals in your inbox. Don't delete, even if you don't reply.
Forward to a dedicated case-only email address as a backup.
Export periodically as PDF (Print → Save as PDF works fine).
Never delete email threads, including the ones you regret sending.
Co-parenting app records
Why: these apps are designed for court admissibility. Use the features.
Use the app for every meaningful interaction. If it's not in the app, it didn't happen.
Export the official court report monthly (most apps offer this).
Save tone-monitor scores if your app provides them.
Keep a copy of any expense submissions and reimbursement records.
2. Schedule & exchanges
One of the most persuasive evidence sets in family court — and one of the most under-maintained. A year of consistent exchange records, dryly presented, can carry an entire hearing.
Exchange log
Why: patterns of lateness, no-shows, and refusals are pattern evidence. One incident is excusable; thirty is a record.
Date, time scheduled, time actually arrived, who was present, where it happened.
Note any issues (late, no-show, refused exchange, child not ready, etc.).
Update it within 24 hours, not days later.
Spreadsheet format is fine; even a paper notebook works.
Schedule modifications
Why: who proposes changes, and how often, tells the court a story.
Save every request to swap, cancel, or modify time.
Save your responses and the outcome.
Track which parent typically initiates changes and which typically accommodates.
Missed time
Why: courts care a great deal about parental time that was lost — especially when withheld by one parent.
Document every cancelled or missed visit, who cancelled, the stated reason, and any pattern.
Note time withheld in violation of the order specifically.
Preserve any messages where the other parent acknowledges the cancellation.
3. Third-party records
Records created by neutral third parties carry more weight than anything you create yourself. Build these into your file deliberately.
Medical & therapy
Why: pediatricians and therapists are neutral witnesses with contemporaneous records.
Pediatrician visit summaries. Note which parent attended.
A judge will not read 800 pages of unsorted records. Your attorney will not find the right text the night before trial. Organization is part of the documentation.
Master chronological index
Why: this is the working document that lets your attorney find anything on demand.
A single spreadsheet (or document) sorted by date.
Each row: date, one-line description, reference to the source file.
Update weekly. Don't try to reconstruct it before trial.
Source folder structure
Why: keep originals intact; never edit a source record.
Top-level folders by source: /texts/, /emails/, /medical/, /school/, /financial/, etc.
Subfolders by year or quarter.
Never crop screenshots in a way that loses context.
Back up to cloud storage. Then back up the cloud storage.
Topic files for recurring issues
Why: when an issue keeps coming up, you want a dedicated, build-ready exhibit folder.
If exchanges are a recurring issue: /exchange-issues/ with the master timeline of incidents.
If medication is a recurring issue: /medication/ with the timeline and the corresponding records.
Cross-reference back to the chronological master index.
Update as new incidents occur.
8. What not to put in the file
Some "evidence" is worse than no evidence. These categories actively hurt your case — even when they feel like they should help.
Long emotional emails to your ex
Why: anything you wrote in fury at 11pm will be read aloud at trial by opposing counsel.
Three-paragraph self-justifications.
Anything written while drinking.
Anything you sent during a manic stretch of preparing your case.
Anything you'd be embarrassed for the judge to read word-for-word.
Social media commentary about your ex
Why: everything is discoverable. Cryptic captions and supportive friend comments will be screenshotted in the worst possible context.
Subtweets, vague Instagram captions, "some people don't deserve their kids" posts.
Shared memes about narcissists or divorce.
Comments your friends or family make on your posts about the case.
Best practice: stop posting about anything case-related, full stop.
Recordings made in violation of your state's law
Why: illegal recordings get excluded, get you sanctioned, and in some states get you criminally charged.
One-party-consent vs. all-party-consent rules vary by state — know yours.
Recording in violation of a protective order is its own offense.
Recording the children almost never plays well, regardless of legality.
Always consult your attorney before recording anything.
Hearsay from your supportive network
Why: your sister's opinion of your ex is not admissible and looks like you don't have real evidence.
Friends' and family members' opinions about your ex.
Reports of what mutual friends "told you" the other parent said.
Your network's amateur psychological analyses.
Save these people for emotional support. Save the actual fact witnesses (teachers, doctors, neighbors) for the case.
Endless analysis of your ex's psychology
Why: it isn't admissible, it makes you look obsessed, and it distracts from the documented conduct that is admissible.
30-page documents analyzing narcissistic patterns with citations.
Detailed personality breakdowns based on online quizzes.
Amateur diagnoses.
Document conduct, not psychology. Let the conduct speak for itself.
Want the full documentation chapter?
This checklist is a summary. Family Court Solutions covers the full strategy — including the documentation chapter, organization templates, and the case-building framework. The companion Mastery Workbook walks you through 100 exercises to build your case file.