Kan. R. Rel. Ect. 24
Comments
[1] Rule 24 applies to information contained in a filing, not to information contained in an oral communication, whether made in a court proceeding or otherwise.
[2] If use of a person's initials is unwieldy, parties in a district court case may consider using other options such as a first name with the first initial of the last name, a generic descriptor such as "child 1," or a pseudonym in lieu of a name.
[3] Rule 24(b)(11) includes "the physical address of an individual's residence" in the definition of personally identifiable information. However, if an exception in Rule 24(c) applies, this information is no longer considered to be personally identifiable information. If a party is required by law to include the physical address of an individual's residence, then it may be provided under Rule 24(c)(7). For example, if a document will be served by leaving a copy at a person's dwelling, see K.S.A. 60-205(b)(2)(B)(ii) or K.S.A. 61- 3003(d), or by mailing the document to a person's last known address, see K.S.A. 60- 205(b)(2)(C) or K.S.A. 61-3003(c), then providing the physical address is required by law to perfect service. In that situation, the physical address is needed and will not be considered personally identifiable information because it meets the exception of Rule 24(c)(7).
[4] Under Rule 24(c)(4), "necessary" means information essential for the document to make sense or for the proper processing of the document or information requested on a Judicial Council form. Examples include information necessary to establish the court's personal or subject matter jurisdiction, to process a protective order, to serve a filed document on another party, or to issue and execute a subpoena.