Deadline & Source Companion for Litigators

Never miss a deadline. Cite any case fact in one tap.

Limindle reads your case file, extracts every statute-of-limitations and court deadline using deterministic rules, and shows you the exact passage behind each one. You verify. You confirm. You walk into court ready.

On the list. We’ll reach out when your jurisdiction goes live.
Early access · litigators & solo firms · no spam, ever
29%of malpractice claims
are calendar errors
1 tapfrom any deadline
to its source page
0deadlines computed
by guesswork
How it works

Three steps from a messy PDF to a court-ready calendar

01 — Extract

Upload the case file

Drop in a complaint, summons, or notice. Limindle pulls every triggering date, party, and cause of action — and quotes the exact passage it found each in.

02 — Compute

Deadlines, by rule not guess

Limitation periods and court dates are calculated by deterministic rules against a lawyer-vetted table. The AI reads the document; it never invents the legal math.

03 — Confirm

You review, then relax

Every date links to its source. You confirm what’s real, and Limindle reminds you at 30, 14, 7, and 1 days out — on every matter, automatically.

Built for the era of AI sanctions.

By early 2026, courts had logged over 1,200 filings with fabricated AI citations — and started handing out sanctions. Limindle is built the opposite way: it shows its work and lets you verify every claim before it ever counts.

The safety rule:
The AI is allowed to be wrong about what the document says — you catch it on review.

The AI is never the thing that computes a legal deadline. That’s deterministic code on a vetted rules table.

Reviewed by you. Never autonomous.
Who it's for

For the lawyer who is personally on the hook for the date

Personal injury Civil litigation Employment Solo & small firms Plaintiff-side

Big firms have docketing departments. Solos and small firms have a calendar and a prayer. Limindle is the docketing department that fits in a browser tab.

One missed deadline is a malpractice claim. This is not.

Join the early-access list. Tell us your jurisdiction and practice area — we’re onboarding design partners now.

Join the waitlist →