From the case file to the firm's letterhead
Clerk drafts your mises en demeure, conclusions and plaidoiries straight from the matter, then exports them as formatted .docx or PDF on your own template — ready to review, sign and file.
Real filings, grounded in the matter
Clerk reads the case file before it writes a word — so the draft argues from your facts, not a blank page.
Mises en demeure
Formal notices drafted from the contract, the dates and the amounts already in the file — with the governing article cited.
Conclusions
Structured pleadings that draw on the facts, clauses and jurisprudence Clerk has read for the matter.
Plaidoiries
Oral argument drafted from the same case file, so the narrative stays consistent with what you will file.
Your own letterhead
Every document exports onto the firm's template — formatted .docx or PDF, not raw text pasted into a Word file.
Ready to file
Each draft comes back formatted and complete: review it, sign it and send it without rebuilding the layout.
Cited, not invented
Clerk links every decision it relied on to its public source and flags any claim it could not ground.
From matter to filing in four steps
You stay in control at every stage — Clerk shows its reasoning as it goes.
Reads the case file
Clerk opens the documents already in the matter — contracts, scanned judgments, correspondence — and extracts the facts, clauses and dates it needs.
Grounds the argument
It searches the Luxembourg corpus, opens the decisions that apply, reads them in full and cites each one to its public source.
Drafts the document
Clerk writes the mise en demeure, conclusions or plaidoirie from the file, declaring what it read and flagging anything it could not ground.
Exports to your template
The finished draft exports as formatted .docx or PDF on the firm's letterhead — ready to review, sign and file.
A draft is only as good as the file it stands on
Clerk does not generate boilerplate. It reads the matter first, ties each procedural deadline and indemnité to its governing article, and carries those grounded facts into the document it writes.
- Délais, prescription, préavis and indemnité de départ cited to L.124-1, L.124-7 and the rest
- Échéances placed on the matter calendar as Clerk computes them
- Every decision Clerk read declared turn by turn, linked to justice.public.lu
Watch Clerk draft from a live matter
From the case file to a formatted document on your letterhead.
Mon client, cadre depuis 8 ans, a été licencié avec effet immédiat pour faute grave. Le licenciement est-il abusif ? Calcule les indemnités et trouve la jurisprudence.
Réflexion
J’examine un licenciement avec effet immédiat pour faute grave après huit ans d’ancienneté. Je vérifie la procédure, j’apprécie la gravité de la faute, puis je chiffre les indemnités dues.
Consultation de documents
contrat_de_travail.pdfPDFCalcul des indemnités
Préavis L.124-1 : 4 moisIndemnité de départ L.124-7 : 2 moisBase : 5 800 € brutRecherche dans la jurisprudence
faute grave absences injustifiéesproportionnalité de la sanctioncharge de la preuve employeurLecture d’une décision
C.S.J., n° 145/23 — 14 mars 2023Réflexion
La Cour exige une faute rendant immédiatement impossible la poursuite du contrat. De simples absences, sans avertissement préalable, sont rarement qualifiées de faute grave — le licenciement paraît abusif.
Drafting questions
Does Clerk write from scratch or from my file?
From your file. Clerk reads the documents in the matter, extracts the facts, clauses and dates, grounds the argument in the Luxembourg jurisprudence it has read, and drafts from that — not from a generic template.
What document types can it draft?
Mises en demeure, conclusions and plaidoiries, all drafted directly from the case file so the facts and the narrative stay consistent.
Will the export use our firm's letterhead?
Yes. Documents export as formatted .docx or PDF on your firm's own template and letterhead — ready to review, sign and file, not raw text you have to reformat.
Can I trust the citations in a draft?
Clerk declares the decisions it actually read each turn and links every citation to its public source. If it cannot ground a claim, it flags it rather than inventing support.
Does drafting connect to deadlines?
Yes. When a draft turns on a délai, prescription or indemnité, Clerk cites the governing article — for example L.124-1 or L.124-7 — and puts the échéance on the matter calendar.
Put the first draft where it belongs — on your letterhead
Grounded in the file, cited to source, ready to review, sign and file.