Clerk-Opened or Attorney-Opened. Hard Error or Soft Warning. The Platform Adapts.
Federal district courts handle Social Security case opening with fundamentally different models — case assignment, validation strictness, privacy rules, and service targets all vary by court. These two courts illustrate the range.
VAED
Eastern District of Virginia
NYSD
Southern District of New York
What's Different Between Courts
Both courts handle Social Security case openings — but their models are fundamentally different.
Some courts use a clerk-opened model where the case number is deferred until after clerk review. Others let attorneys open cases directly, with an instant case number on submission. Validation behavior also diverges: one court treats category mismatches as soft warnings that let the filing proceed, while another raises hard errors that block submission entirely. Privacy handling, service of process, and post-submission status all follow court-specific rules — each governed by configuration.
Side-by-Side Comparison
How two district courts handle the same Social Security case opening.
| Capability | VAED | NYSD |
|---|---|---|
| Case-opening model | Clerk-opened (deferred case number, status: Pending Clerk Review) | Attorney-opened (instant case number, status: Filed) |
| Case type validation | Soft warning — filing proceeds even if case type mismatch detected | Hard error — blocks submission unless the case type matches an allowed Social Security category |
| Privacy handling | Explicit restricted PDF upload required; Social Security case type triggers privacy prompt | Automatic case-wide restriction — all Social Security filings receive sealed-document classification |
| Service of process | Traditional summons with multiple targets: SSA Commissioner, local US Attorney, Attorney General | Electronic notification to pre-configured recipients: local US Attorney and SSA Regional Counsel |
| Filing fee | Standard civil filing fee with standard payment integration | Standard civil filing fee with automatic fee-waiver motion linking for Social Security cases |
Case-opening model
Clerk-opened (deferred case number, status: Pending Clerk Review)
Attorney-opened (instant case number, status: Filed)
Case type validation
Soft warning — filing proceeds even if case type mismatch detected
Hard error — blocks submission unless the case type matches an allowed Social Security category
Privacy handling
Explicit restricted PDF upload required; Social Security case type triggers privacy prompt
Automatic case-wide restriction — all Social Security filings receive sealed-document classification
Service of process
Traditional summons with multiple targets: SSA Commissioner, local US Attorney, Attorney General
Electronic notification to pre-configured recipients: local US Attorney and SSA Regional Counsel
Filing fee
Standard civil filing fee with standard payment integration
Standard civil filing fee with automatic fee-waiver motion linking for Social Security cases
Filing Wizard Walkthrough
Step through the Social Security case opening wizard. Each step adapts to the court's governed configuration.
Case Type Selection
Select Social Security case category
Step 1 Screenshot
VAED vs NYSD
Case Type Validation
Soft warning at VAED (filing proceeds) vs. hard error at NYSD (blocks submission unless category matches)
Step 2 Screenshot
VAED vs NYSD
Party Information
Plaintiff and agency defendant details
Step 3 Screenshot
VAED vs NYSD
Privacy Handling
VAED: case type triggers explicit restricted PDF upload prompt. NYSD: automatic case-wide sealed-document classification
Step 4 Screenshot
VAED vs NYSD
Service of Process
VAED: traditional summons to multiple government targets. NYSD: electronic notification to pre-configured recipients
Step 5 Screenshot
VAED vs NYSD
Fee & Payment
Standard civil filing fee — direct payment (VAED) vs. auto-linked fee-waiver motion option (NYSD)
Step 6 Screenshot
VAED vs NYSD
Review & Submit
VAED: status set to 'Pending Clerk Review' with deferred case number. NYSD: instant case number and 'Filed' status
Step 7 Screenshot
VAED vs NYSD
Configuration, Not Code
Every behavioral difference shown above is driven by governed configuration — not code branches.
Case opening models, validation strictness, privacy rules, service of process requirements, and post-submission workflows are all expressed as configuration. When a court changes its local rules, the platform adapts without a code release.
See Social Security Configuration in Action
Walk through a live demo of Social Security case opening with your court's local rules rendered as governed configuration.