Nevada Code § 121.110

Access to court records in family law proceedings; standards and procedures for sealing, redacting and unsealing records
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
1. In a family law proceeding:
(a) The following court records must be open to
public inspection in the clerks office:
(1) The summons and proof of service;
(2) If service is made by publication, the
affidavit for publication;
(3) The pleadings;
(4) Any decree or other order, including,
without limitation, an order directing the publication of a summons; and
(5) Any judgment, including, without
limitation, a judgment of default.
(b) The following court records are not open to
public inspection except by order of the court for good cause shown:
(1) Financial disclosure forms;
(2) Documents, records or evidence filed
under seal;
(3) Documents sealed by a court pursuant
to subsection 3;
(4) Confidential exhibits;
(5) Child custody evaluations;
(6) Medical records, including, without
limitation, any medical, psychiatric or psychological evaluation or report; and
(7) Any documents, the copying or
distribution of which is prohibited by federal or state law or regulation or
court rule.
2. Except as otherwise provided in
subsection 8 of NRS 121.100 , all other
court records, including, without limitation, exhibits and transcripts of
testimony, are presumptively open to public inspection.
3. The court may, on its own motion or at
the request of a party, seal or redact a court record described in subsection 2
if the court determines that the sealing or redaction is justified by a
compelling interest that outweighs the public interest in access to the court
record. For the purpose of this subsection, protecting personal identifying
information concerning a party or child involved in the proceeding from
disclosure shall be deemed to be a compelling interest that outweighs the
public interest in access to the court record.
4. The court may unseal a court record
sealed pursuant to subsection 3:
(a) Upon written stipulation of all parties;
(b) Upon its own motion for good cause shown; or
(c) Upon the motion of a party for good cause
shown. A copy of any such motion must be served upon all parties to the
proceeding.
5. In addition to any other factors the
court considers relevant in determining whether good cause exists for unsealing
a court record pursuant to subsection 4, the court shall consider:
(a) Whether the court record contains information
made confidential by federal or state law or regulation or court rule;
(b) Whether federal or state law or regulation or
court rule provides that any information in the court record is not a public
record;
(c) The interests of the party seeking to unseal
the record; and
(d) Whether unsealing the record would create a
substantial risk that a party to the proceeding or child involved in the
proceeding may suffer harassment, indignity, undue embarrassment or any other
physical or emotional harm.
6. As used in this section, court record
includes, without limitation, any document, information or exhibit maintained
by a court in connection with a family law proceeding.

‹ Prev All Nevada sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.