Articles Tagged with AOC-G-114

Getting a copy of what was said in court in North Carolina, or what lawyers may refer to as a Transcript of Proceedings or Trial Transcript, largely depends on whether the legal proceeding (courtroom setting) was recorded in the first place. Recording is not automatic across every case type. Superior court criminal jury trials must be recorded by law. Ordinary district court criminal trials generally are not required to be recorded. Civil trials, Juvenile Court, and contested Chapter 50B domestic violence protective order hearings generally must be recorded. Ex parte and emergency Chapter 50B and Chapter 50C hearings are excluded from recording by statute. That said, if a recording exists, a copy may be requested from the clerk of court using the appropriate AOC form.

District court is often not deemed “a court of record,” at least for routine criminal cases involving misdemeanor charges. Some civil trials, Chapter 50B protective order hearings, Chapter 50C proceedings, and certain low-level Class H or I felony guilty pleas in District Court may follow different rules regarding whether an audio recording is made and whether a copy can later be obtained.

District Court Proceeding Can You Get a Copy of What Was Said in Court?
Routine misdemeanor trial Usually no audio recording. No statute requires a verbatim record, though an audio file may exist if the courtroom recorded it anyway. Not likely.
Criminal suppression or evidentiary hearing Usually no audio recording, unless the judge ordered or otherwise authorized recording or a courtroom’s digital system captured it, if one exists.
Class H or I felony guilty or no-contest plea N.C.G.S. 7A-191.1 requires a true, complete, and accurate record of the plea proceeding.
District court criminal judgment and file A written record is part of the legal process. The judgment, charging documents, and docket entries remain official even without an audio recording or transcript by a court reporter.
Contested Chapter 50B hearing after notice or service A civil trial governed by N.C.G.S. 7A-198 is audio-recorded unless the parties consent to waive the recording.
Ex parte or emergency Chapter 50B hearing N.C.G.S. 7A-198(e) expressly provides that the proceeding is not recorded.
Contested Chapter 50C final hearing General civil trial reporting.
Ex parte or emergency Chapter 50C hearing N.C.G.S. 7A-198(e) expressly excludes the hearing from audio-recording.
Other civil district court trial Generally audio-recorded, subject to waiver and the statute’s stated exceptions.
Final civil judgment entered in district court Trial record supporting an appeal to the Court of Appeals.
Recorded non-confidential hearing of any type Request a duplicate audio copy from the clerk using Form AOC-G-114 REQUEST FOR COURT RECORDING.

How to Get a Copy of What Was Said in Court | Requesting the Recording or Transcript

A district court proceeding may have been recorded even when no statute requires it. A judge may order a recording, or a courtroom’s digital equipment may capture the session as part of routine administration. Many, if not the majority, of District Court criminal courtrooms in North Carolina do not have recording equipment. If authorized by the Court (the presiding Judge), normally counsel brings their own audio-recording device or court reporter to the proceeding.

When a non-confidential proceeding is electronically recorded, a requester may use the AOC-G-114 form to seek a duplicate copy of the verbatim audio record from the clerk of court in the county where the case was heard. District court audio recordings remain public records unless they involve a confidential proceeding, such as a juvenile matter, or have been sealed. Once the audio is obtained, the requester may have it transcribed by a person of their own choosing, at their own expense. The current version of the form should always be confirmed directly through the North Carolina Judicial Branch website before filing, since forms are updated from time to time.

An audio file, a private transcription, the clerk’s file, and the official record on appeal are four separate things, and confusing them can cause problems. A private transcription of audio does not automatically become an official appellate transcript. Preparation of a transcript and record for use on appeal continues to be governed by the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure, and a court reporter or an AOC-approved transcriptionist is typically needed for that formal purpose. Obtaining district court audio also does not convert a criminal appeal into conventional appellate review. A defendant convicted of a misdemeanor in district court still generally appeals for trial de novo under G.S. 15A-1431, meaning the case starts over in superior court rather than being reviewed on the existing record. The audio may still be useful for reviewing what happened, preserving an issue, or another legally permissible purpose, even though it will not change how the appeal itself proceeds.

If a proceeding was never recorded, no request will produce a copy, because there is nothing to copy. That gap is common in routine district court criminal matters and is the starting point for understanding why the phrase court of record gets used so loosely.

North Carolina District Court | Court of Record

The phrase “court of record” may refer to at least two distinct possibilities under North Carolina law.

The first concerns the creation of a verbatim record for appellate review. Under that definition, the central question is whether testimony, objections, rulings, and arguments are recorded and preserved so a reviewing court (ordinarily a Superior Court Judge) can examine what actually happened in District Court.

The second concerns the institutional status of the tribunal itself as a matter of constitution and statutory precept. A court of record, in that sense, is one that exercises judicial power, enters judgments, maintains official records, and may impose orders carrying binding legal consequences, including the power to fine and imprison. A district court judge in North Carolina enjoys “court-of-record” status in this institutional sense, even when its routine oral proceedings are not automatically audio-recorded and thereafter transcribed into a written transcript of proceedings.

Whether a North Carolina district court is a “court of record” in the context of criminal motions and trials cannot be determined merely by asking whether a particular proceeding was recorded. Civil trials, by contrast, are subject to a statutory reporting requirement under N.C.G.S. § 7A-198, but that requirement alone does not establish that district court is a “court of record” for every legal purpose.

Criminal District Court | Not Generally Thought of as a “Court of Record”

North Carolina does not require every criminal district court proceeding to be recorded word for word. For district court misdemeanor trials, pretrial motions, suppression hearings, and sentencing proceedings may occur without a court reporter or electronic recording unless a judge directs otherwise. That is precisely why a copy of what was said cannot always be produced later.

That practice differs sharply from criminal jury trials in superior court. N.C.G.S. 15A-1241 requires the trial judge to have the reporter make a true, complete, and accurate record of statements from the bench and other proceedings, subject to three exceptions covering jury selection in noncapital cases, opening statements and final jury arguments, and arguments on questions of law. Upon motion of any party or the judge’s own motion, those excepted proceedings are to be recorded, and a motion to record jury arguments should be made before argument begins. If one argument is recorded, all must be. When an objection concerns an unrecorded statement made in front of the jury, the trial judge is tasked with the responsibility of reconstructing the disputed matter for the record as accurately as possible. The law in North Carolina also governs judicial corrections to a transcript and requires notice and an opportunity to be heard before substantive changes are made to the reported version of the judge’s charge, rulings, or comments.

Class H and I Felony Pleas in District Court

N.C.G.S. 7A-191.1 creates a specific exception to the general district court practice. When a defendant pleads guilty or no contest to a Class H or Class I felony in district court under N.C.G.S. 7A-272, the trial judge must require a true, complete, and accurate record of the proceeding, meaning a copy can later be requested through the ordinary channels.

That exception is relevant to consider for two reasons. First, North Carolina law can require a verbatim criminal district court record when the General Assembly decides one is needed. Second, a targeted requirement for felony pleas would serve little purpose if every district court criminal proceeding already carried a recording requirement. The exception should not be read beyond its text. It governs a plea to a Class H or I felony accepted in district court under the statutory procedure. It does not establish a general duty to record misdemeanor trials or ordinary criminal hearings.

Trial De Novo | Criminal Appellate Rule

The absence of a required district court criminal transcript later affects, as a practical matter, how a defendant appeals a conviction to superior court. N.C.G.S. 15A-1431 provides that a defendant convicted before a district court judge may appeal to superior court for a trial de novo with a jury. Notice of appeal must be given orally in open court or in writing within ten days. Trial de novo means a new trial. Superior court does not review the district judge’s factual findings or credibility determinations by reading a transcript and searching for reversible error. The case begins again or “anew,” which is also why a copy of the district court proceeding is deemed necessary for that particular appeal.

The State’s ability to appeal is far narrower. N.C.G.S. 15A-1432 permits the State to appeal from district court to superior court only when charges have been dismissed, or when a new trial has been granted on the ground of newly discovered evidence and only on questions of law. That appeal proceeds by written motion filed within ten days of judgment, and because no verbatim record exists, the superior court judge reviewing the motion may need to conduct a full evidentiary hearing rather than a conventional record-based review.

That “appellate” structure differs completely from a civil appeal. A final civil judgment (such as in a family law or divorce matter) entered in district court generally proceeds directly to the North Carolina Court of Appeals under the general appellate provisions of N.C.G.S. 7A-27. In those instances, the NC Court of Appeals reviews the existing proceedings for legal error rather than conducting a new evidentiary trial, which requires a record capable of showing what evidence was presented and what the trial court decided. The route of appeal is therefore central to understanding why the same District Court Division is treated so differently depending on the docket, and why a copy of the proceeding matters enormously in one setting and barely at all in another.

State v. Ward and State v. Gurganus | Criminal Court of Record

In State v. Ward, 127 N.C. App. 115, 119 (1997), the Court of Appeals applied an earlier holding from State v. Gurganus, 71 N.C. App. 95, 99, 321 S.E.2d 923, 925-26 (1984), that district criminal courts are not courts of record. The issue arose in the specialized context of the State’s appeal under N.C.G.S. 15A-1432 from a district court order dismissing criminal charges. Ward explained that superior court could not simply review the district court’s findings under the conventional appellate standard and determine whether competent evidence supported them. Citing Gurganus, the Court observed that there may be no method for making that determination from the district court proceedings, which is why an evidentiary hearing may be necessary as part of a superior court’s de novo review.

Ward does not hold that a district court judgment is unofficial, unenforceable, or incapable of being preserved as a court record. Nor does it hold that a criminal district court proceeding can never be recorded. The opinion addresses the nature of review under N.C.G.S. 15A-1432 and the practical problem created when a superior court cannot determine from the existing record whether evidence supported the district court’s findings. Ward reversed because the superior court reinstated the charges without conducting the de novo hearing required under that statutory framework.

District Court Judgments | Official Court Records

A verbatim account of courtroom proceedings is only one type of judicial record. Charging documents, motions, written orders, judgments, docket entries by the Clerk of Court, and disposition information remain official court records even when no transcript or complete audio recording exists. The phrase “not a court of record,” as used in Gurganus and Ward, should therefore not be read to mean that district criminal court creates no official record of how the court (the Judge in district court) proceeded.

The more precise distinction is between the official record of the case and a sufficiently complete record of the underlying proceedings to permit conventional appellate review and/or a trial de novo, as the case may be. A district court file may establish the charge, the parties’ appearances, filed motions, the court’s ruling, and the resulting judgment while leaving no reliable means to reconstruct all testimony, arguments, objections, evidentiary rulings, or oral findings. That was the problem identified in Gurganus and applied in Ward. Because the superior court may have no adequate record from which to determine whether district court findings were supported by competent evidence, N.C.G.S. 15A-1432 contemplates de novo review and, when necessary, a new evidentiary hearing rather than ordinary appellate review of the district court record.

State v. Hopkins

State v. Hopkins, 279 N.C. 473, 476 (1971), is regularly cited for the broader proposition that district court is a court of record. The case involved an attempt to use oral testimony to establish, explain, or contradict what had occurred in an earlier district court proceeding, and the Supreme Court referred to district court as a court of record while discussing that evidentiary question. The opinion, however, did not finally resolve the evidentiary issue it discussed. The Court held that the defendant had waived his double jeopardy argument by later entering a guilty plea, and it expressly declined to decide whether the NC Court of Appeals had correctly excluded the parol testimony. As such, Hopkins represents a broader institutional meaning of “court of record.” At the same time, it’s not an opinion that should be read as squarely settling what evidence may be used to explain or contradict a district court judgment. I

Civil District Court Is Different

N.C.G.S. 7A-198 addresses the reporting of civil trials in district court. As a general precept, court reporting personnel and/or audio-recording technology are to be employed to record the proceedings. When court reporters are unavailable, the Administrative Office of the Courts may provide electronic or mechanical recording equipment at the chief district judge’s request, and the clerk or another designated operator runs the equipment and preserves the resulting record, which is what later becomes available through a copy request.

The statute permits the parties to waive reporting by consent. It also allows a party to propose sharing the cost of a private court reporter selected from an approved list. If the opposing party declines, the requesting party may pay for the reporter directly, and if that opposing party later appeals, the statute requires reimbursement of the reporter and transcript costs. N.C.G.S. 7A-198(g) also supplies a remedy when the recording device fails to produce a reasonably accurate record for appeal, entitling a losing party who requested cost sharing to a new trial if that request was rejected. Such provisions in the law would make little sense unless the civil district court is expected to produce a reviewable trial record, and illustrate why a blanket statement that the district court is not a court of record is a bit of a misnomer.

Chapter 50B | Domestic Violence Protective Order (DVPO) Hearings

A Chapter 50B domestic violence protective order action is a civil proceeding. It is not a criminal prosecution, and entry of a DVPO is not a criminal conviction. A later violation of the 50B order may support criminal charges, but the proceeding requesting the order remains civil in classification.

When the defendant has been served and contests the request, the district court conducts an evidentiary hearing. Both parties may testify, call witnesses, present documents, offer recordings, object to evidence, and argue whether an act of domestic violence occurred. If the judge finds that it did, Chapter 50B requires entry of appropriate protective relief. That contested hearing is a civil trial for purposes of N.C.G.S. 7A-198 and must be audio-recorded under the general civil trial rule unless the parties consent to waive that requirement. The same principle applies when the court denies the requested DVPO after conducting the evidentiary trial. The record allows review at the appellate level of whether the findings are supported by competent evidence and whether those findings support the legal conclusions drawn from them.

The recording of the proceedings attaches to the trial itself, not necessarily to every administrative appearance. When the parties resolve the matter through a consent order without an evidentiary trial, there may be no trial requiring the same form of audio recording, thereby allowing for a transcript.

Ex Parte Chapter 50B Hearings Are Not Recorded

The recording rule for Chapter 50B contains an express exception. N.C.G.S. 7A-198(e) provides that reporting will not be furnished for ex parte or emergency hearings before a judge under Chapter 50B or Chapter 50C. The same subsection also excludes trials before magistrates and hearings to adjudicate district court infractions.

The distinction is between the initial emergency stage and the later adjudicatory stage. An ex parte hearing commonly occurs before the defendant has been served or heard, based solely on evidence presented by the plaintiff. That hearing is not recorded. After service of process, the court is directed to conduct a contested hearing at which both parties present evidence. That hearing falls outside the statutory exception, and the general civil trial recording requirement applies in full.

Key Tip: Ex parte and emergency Chapter 50B hearings are not required to be recorded. A contested Chapter 50B trial, after notice and service of process, must be recorded unless the parties waive by consent.

Chapter 50C Civil No Contact | Recordings

N.C.G.S. 7A-198(e) treats ex parte and emergency hearings under Chapter 50C the same way it treats Chapter 50B hearings. An ex parte or emergency civil no-contact hearing is excluded from the reporting requirement. A contested final adjudication under Chapter 50C falls within the general civil trial reporting rule.

The enforcement mechanisms differ. A Chapter 50B violation can constitute a separate criminal offense. A Chapter 50C order is generally enforced through contempt rather than a dedicated criminal violation statute. The recording distinction, however, remains identical for purposes of N.C.G.S. 7A-198.

Frequently Asked Questions | Can I Get a Copy of What Was Said in Court?

How do I get a court transcript or audio recording in North Carolina?

Getting a copy of what was said in court in North Carolina depends on whether the proceeding was recorded. If an electronic recording exists and the hearing is not confidential or sealed, you may request a duplicate audio copy from the clerk of court using Form AOC-G-114 and have the recording transcribed independently. If a court reporter made the record, the transcript is generally obtained through the reporter. When no verbatim recording was created, there is no audio or transcript to request, although the clerk may still provide the judgment, orders, filings, and other official court records.

How do I request an official court transcript in North Carolina?

Requesting an official court transcript in North Carolina depends on how the proceeding was recorded. If an official court reporter was present, the transcript is generally requested directly from that reporter. If the court created an electronic audio recording instead, you may be able to obtain the recording from the clerk and arrange for transcription by an approved transcriptionist. For an appeal, the transcript must comply with the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure and applicable AOC requirements.

Is North Carolina criminal district court a court of record?

North Carolina criminal district court is generally described as not being a court of record when referring to a verbatim transcript and conventional appellate review. Routine criminal proceedings are not automatically recorded, and a defendant generally appeals a conviction to superior court for trial de novo.

Are domestic violence protective order hearings recorded in North Carolina?

Domestic violence protective order trials conducted after notice or service are civil trials governed by N.C.G.S. 7A-198 and ordinarily must be recorded. Ex parte and emergency Chapter 50B hearings are expressly excluded from recording. The parties may also consent to waive recording of a civil trial.

Are ex parte 50B domestic violence hearings recorded in North Carolina?

Ex parte and emergency hearings under Chapter 50B are not required to be recorded under N.C.G.S. § 7A-198(e). The same statutory exclusion applies to ex parte and emergency hearings under Chapter 50C. A later contested Chapter 50B hearing, however, is a civil trial and is generally required to be recorded unless the parties consent to waive recording.

Why is a contested 50B hearing recorded when a misdemeanor criminal trial may not be?

A contested 50B hearing produces a civil judgment that may be reviewed by the Court of Appeals based on the existing trial record. A misdemeanor criminal conviction generally may be appealed to superior court for a new trial instead. The different appellate routes explain most of the difference in recording requirements.

Is a 50B order a criminal conviction?

A Chapter 50B order is a civil protective order, not a criminal conviction. A willful violation of the DVPO may support a separate criminal prosecution, and the order itself may impose firearm, residence, contact, custody, and property restrictions.

Can I Get a Copy of What Was Said in Court in North Carolina | The Straight Answer

Whether a copy of what was said in court largely depends on whether the proceeding was recorded. In routine criminal prosecutions, the district court generally produces no statutorily required verbatim record, and a defendant convicted there ordinarily appeals for a trial de novo in the superior court rather than relying on a transcript. That is the context addressed by State v. Ward, and it is why criminal lawyers commonly describe the district criminal court as “not a court of record.”

Civil district court follows a different statutory structure. N.C.G.S. 7A-198 requires reporting of civil trials, subject to waiver and defined exceptions. A contested Chapter 50B hearing after notice is a civil trial and should be recorded, and a copy can typically be requested afterward. An ex parte or emergency Chapter 50B hearing is expressly excluded, so no copy will exist.

Bill Powers has practiced criminal law in North Carolina courtrooms for more than three decades, with a substantial focus on impaired driving, serious vehicular offenses, evidence, and trial advocacy. He is a past President of the North Carolina Advocates for Justice, a recipient of the North Carolina State Bar’s John B. McMillan Distinguished Service Award, and a regular instructor and program chair for continuing legal education seminars involving criminal law, evidence, and trial strategy. Powers Law Firm represents clients in DWI and criminal cases in Charlotte and surrounding counties and may be available to assist with select felony death by vehicle, serious injury by vehicle, and other serious vehicular homicide cases elsewhere in North Carolina. Call 704-342-4357 to see if the criminal defense lawyers at Powers Law Firm are available to help.

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