Maryland source-and-organization guide
Maryland custody trial preparation: get your dates, records, witnesses, and exhibits organized.
A hearing date is coming, and right now your case lives in scattered places — texts, emails, school records, calendars, names you need to remember. This page gives you a calm, repeatable way to pull it together, anchored to Maryland's own official sources. One boundary up front: you won't find legal advice here — no rule summaries, no deadlines, no strategy. What you'll find is a way to organize what you already have.
1. Begin with your court's own materials
State-level self-help pages are a starting point, not a substitute for the orders, notices, scheduling materials, and local instructions in your matter. Save the title and URL of an official page, the date you accessed it, and the date or version shown on any linked document. If a question remains, record the question instead of filling the gap with an assumption.
2. Create an official-source log
Use one row per source. Useful organization fields are: source title, court or agency, URL, date accessed, document/version date, topic label, and an unresolved-question field. Revisit the original source before you act because pages, forms, and procedures can change.
Maryland official starting points
- Maryland Courts: children and family — the judiciary's hub for family and custody matters.
- Maryland Court Help Centers — free limited legal help for self-represented litigants, by phone, chat, or in person.
- Maryland Courts: court form search — the official statewide court form search.
- The People's Law Library of Maryland — plain-language legal information maintained by the Maryland State Law Library.
- Maryland Courts: courts directory — find your courthouse, with addresses and contacts.
- Maryland State Law Library — the judiciary's law library and research help.
Links are provided as starting points only. Their inclusion is not an endorsement by any court, and Steadycase is not affiliated with these courts, agencies, or organizations.

3. Connect your own materials without making legal judgments
- Index events. Enter a date or best-known date, a neutral description, and the location of the original record.
- Index people and files. Record who or what is connected to an event without deciding admissibility, relevance, or strategy.
- Use neutral topic labels. Apply consistent labels so related dates, witnesses, and documents can be found together.
- Separate user-entered dates from source checks. Copy dates from your own orders/notices exactly and verify questions through current official sources or qualified legal advice.
- Run a final location check. Confirm you can open the original item and that your index points to the right file.
4. Decide what level of system you need
Start with the free Custody Field Guide — a short PDF that walks you through the first organizing pass: collecting what you have and labeling it so it can be found again. If you outgrow it, the Steadycase Custody Trial Notebook is the full Excel and Google Sheets system for timelines, parenting-related topics, discovery, exhibits, witnesses, requested relief, source checks, user-entered deadlines, and final preparation tasks.

Steadycase was built by a practicing family-law attorney — a vetted organization system, not an AI guessing at your case. And it holds the same boundary as this page: it never selects arguments, calculates deadlines, determines admissibility, prepares filings, or predicts an outcome.
Legal-information boundary
Organization does not answer the legal question.
Steadycase is sold by AlbusWorks LLC, which is not a law firm. Buying or using it does not create an attorney-client relationship or include legal review, advice, representation, or access to David Martino. Use current official sources and seek advice from a qualified attorney when you need help applying law to your circumstances.