Cook County process serving rule change webinar
InfoTrack’s Jeff Karotkin and Lydia Malone answered questions from legal professionals about how a Jan. 1, 2025 update to Illinois’ process serving rules would affect serves in Cook County.

 

On Tuesday, Dec. 17, 2024, more than 280 legal professionals with business in Chicagoland joined InfoTrack for an informative, free webinar on the impact of the upcoming change to the rules regarding original process service in Cook County.

After the presentation, InfoTrack vice president of business development Jeff Karotkin (a former president of the National Association of Professional Process Servers) fielded a number of questions from the audience about the practical implications of this new amendment to 735 ILCS 5/2 202 Sec. 2-202.

Several questions about InfoTrack ServeIT, which allows law firms to order and track process serves online through local servers, were answered by InfoTrack process serving specialist Lydia Malone.

A transcript of select questions and answers from this Q&A session is provided below.

 

So, this new [process serving] law only [applies to] Cook County cases?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

Yes. The new law [735 ILCS 5/2 202 Sec. 2-202] applies to any county that’s over 3 million [residents]. In Illinois, there’s only one. It’s Cook [County].

The amended statute only applies to Cook County, which means you are free to choose a private process server or anybody who’s authorized to serve, in any county now, where you didn’t have that option in Cook [County] before.

 

Previously, private process servers did not need to be licensed private detectives. Are we still able to use a non-detective private process server?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

Yeah, nothing changes there. So the statute was specific as to anybody that was defined everybody, including detectives that were authorized to serve process. Nothing changed in the statute. So, you can use anybody that you had been using who was duly authorized by statute.

 

Aside from Cook County, which other [Illinois] counties will allow us to skip service by sheriff?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

You can skip service by sheriff, come January 1st, 2025, in any [Illinois] county.

 

Is there a copy of the order eliminating the need to point process server? Do we still need to get an order every time that we need an alias summons?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

Yeah. So that’s a two-part order. So the judge—I believe it was [Circuit] Judge [E. Kenneth] Wright—issued the order eliminating the necessity to appoint, or essentially rescinding any standing order or or appointment order that might already exist.

That was sent out in an email to a colleague of ours. We can get our hands on it and make it available to you.

And the second part of that question, yeah, nothing changes. You still need to handle alias summons as the way you always did, as far as getting an order.

 

Will the special process servers know to deduct $5 from their fee? What if they don’t? Won’t they just raise their fee $5?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

Yeah. So, there are two associations, a detective association and a process server association in Illinois who have been actively communicating with the membership of their groups to let them know what they shall do. It says they “shall” deduct.

Well, I can’t answer the second part, “What will they actually do?” Because we’re not them. They may or may not show that on their invoice, but, you know, if I were them, I would.

And I can’t answer what do you do if they don’t. I would imagine maybe you go, know, talk to the sheriff’s office or something. I don’t know.
It doesn’t say anything in the new statute [about] what happens if [process servers] don’t.

 

Will process servers be able to file the proof of service or proof of non-service?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

Yes. Nothing changes there. They can file their proof for non-service declaration.

 

What guardrails, if any, have been put into place to prevent the recurrence of the problems known as “sewer service” with private servers, which led to the enactment of the law requiring the sheriff that gets the first crack at service?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

So, the amended statute doesn’t speak to that issue at all. So any guardrails that exist now for private process servers, I would imagine, would continue to exist.

If for whatever reason, you know, there was a server who who, was committing acts like that, I would imagine there [are] criminal or civil remedies, just like there might be now.

 

Is it called an alias summons costing $6, but a regular summons was free here?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

Ideally, we would have had communication from [Tyler Technologies], that is the host of the [Illinois] eFiling portal, or the clerk on this prior to this session.
We expected to, but we didn’t get it.

We expect that there will be a new line item [in the Additional/Court Fees section of each EFSP’s eFiling workflow] that says just “summons” when you’re filing your case. And you indicate how many [documents] you are uploading that you need issued, and then that will drive the fee.

The fee for the existing alias summons we expect to stay the same. So in theory, what we think is going to happen, is if you’re filing an alias summons, there’s a $6 fee for that already, plus a $5 fee for the that goes to the sheriff. That’s what we expect to see until they tell us otherwise.

 

If a private person over 18 is serving, do we have to go through [a] private detective first?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

The answer is no. Anybody that’s authorized under the statute now you can use to serve process. Which would include, detectives, process servers with what’s called a perk card, that type of thing. So as long as they’re working with or for an agency or they’re otherwise authorized under the existing statute, you can keep using them.

 

First, it was said that the edit to the statute applied to Cook County, and then it was said that we could skip sheriff service in any county. Which one is it?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

So, the statute prior to it being changed only applied to Cook [County] anyway, because it was the only county that exceeded the exceeded the population limit. Originally, it was 2 million [residents], if I recall correctly. Now it’s 3 [million].

Cook [County]’s the only one that has over 3 [million]. I think they’re, like, 5.22 [million residents] or or whatever the number is. None of the other collar counties have gotten to that threshold yet, so, therefore, that statute didn’t apply to them in the first place.

 

Is there any word regarding waiver of summons and whether the $5 fee can be waived or returned?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

Good question. I don’t know. We can ask for you.

Any questions that we, don’t have a full answer on now, we’ll be jotting those down and, addressing them in the second session in in January. So, again, if you, if you’d like to to hear back on any of those, go ahead and and register for that second session.

 

As a matter of course, will InfoTrack ServeIT always file a copy of the proof of service or non service with the clerk?

Answered by Lydia Malone

So, that is an optional button when you’re ordering service of process through InfoTrack [ServeIT]. You can choose to have us file the proof of service. Generally, we don’t file proof of non-services.

So if we want to explore that more with you, we can. I would say the majority of our clients don’t want us to file a, a proof of non-service due to just the cost of the the filing fee associated with that through InfoTrack.

So generally speaking, we only file the affidavits or or, of of actual service, not non-service. So that is an optional button that you can choose to to order with us.

 

 

If your first attempted service fails, do you need to file a motion for leave to file an alias summons and appoint a special process server? Or are you able to skip that with the new statute?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

Great question. Say, if your first summons has run out of time, yes, you still need an order for nailing a summon. So nothing changes there.
But you do not need a motion in order or to get a standing order to appoint a private process server. So you still do what you’d always do regarding the timeliness of summonses and getting alias summonses when needed.

We don’t need a motion in order and or to get a standing order.

 

What is the exact statute number [pertaining to the Illinois process serving rule change]?

(Answered by audience member)

735 ILCS 5/2 202 Sec. 2-202.

 

I would think there should always be a return of service filed even if service not found is important.

Answered by Lydia Malone

It’s a great thing to point out. Not that the… not that we couldn’t have that filed. Generally speaking, just universally, InfoTrack doesn’t file it automatically.

You could still file it. But I think, some of the feedback we’ve gotten is that generally an additional document would need to be filed along with it. So our customers prefer to utilize that filing fee to get a little bit, more, additional documents filed along with it.

So they prefer to do that manually, but that’s definitely something that could be revisited in additional discussions.

 

Does one need still need to have a private the process of repaying who is not a licensed investigator?

Answered by Jeff Karotkin

What the statute says is there’s a number of entities who are duly authorized to serve process now. None of that changed [in the revision].

 

 

Learn more about the Cook County process serving rule change

The full Dec. 17 webinar answers a number of other critical questions, including:

  • What do I need to do to start ordering from a private process server after Jan. 1?
  • How (and where) do I pay the required $5 fee to the Cook County Sheriff?
  • How do I order online from Chicago-area process servers?

 

You can view a full recording of the Dec. 17 webinar, along with the slides and supplemental materials, on the ‘Ditch the Sheriff’ webinar event page. Or, visit the ‘Ditch the Sheriff Pt. II’ registration page to sign up for our follow-up webinar on Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2025 with Bob Rusch of Windy City Process Servers.

We’ll also be posting updates on our website as we learn more about 2025 Cook County, Illinois process serving rule change.

The post 16 questions (and answers) about the 2025 Cook County process serving rule change appeared first on InfoTrack.