Journal · Islamabad Capital Territory
Legalise Case Compiler: Briefing Tool for Mixed Client Material
Legalise Case Compiler: Briefing Tool for Mixed Client Material
Legalise Case Compiler is a briefing tool for Islamabad advocates who need to organize mixed client material before drafting, research, or review. It can work with pasted text, screenshots, scanned documents, uploaded files, and voice notes, then turn that material into a structured briefing saved to the Desk.
The feature is built for the intake stage of a matter. It is useful when the facts are present, but spread across different formats. A client may send WhatsApp messages, a scan of an agreement, screenshots of a conversation, a short chronology, and a voice note explaining the background. Case Compiler gives that material a cleaner working structure.
Quick Answer
Case Compiler on Legalise helps convert scattered case material into a structured briefing. It supports pasted text up to 40,000 characters, approximately ten pages of text, along with screenshots, scanned documents, uploaded files, and voice notes. The compiled briefing can be saved to the Desk for the same matter.
What Can Be Added to Case Compiler
The pasted text area can be used for client narrations, WhatsApp conversations, email extracts, consultation notes, timelines, and rough factual summaries. The 40,000 character limit gives enough room for longer material without requiring the facts to be shortened before submission.
Case Compiler also supports visual and document-based material, including screenshots, scans, and uploaded documents. Voice notes can be added when the background has been explained orally rather than written out in a clean chronology.
What the Briefing Contains
The output is a structured case briefing. It is not a final pleading, opinion, application, notice, or contract. It is a working document that helps organize the material before the next legal step.
A useful briefing can help identify the parties, the factual sequence, the documents involved, the key events, unclear points, and missing information. It gives the advocate a clearer starting point for deciding whether to draft a document, ask for more material, search case law, check a statute, or review the matter further.
How It Works With the Desk
Compiled briefings can be saved to the Legalise Desk. The Desk is the workspace for saved matter material, generated drafts, and file context that the user chooses to keep.
Saving a compiled briefing to the Desk keeps the intake material close to the rest of the file. The same matter can later be reviewed with its briefing, saved drafts, documents, and related notes in one working area.
Where It Fits Inside Legalise
Case Compiler sits beside the existing Legalise workflow rather than replacing it. Generate Document is used for drafting. IHC Case Law is used for reported Islamabad High Court judgments. The statutes, glossary, stamp duty, court fee, limitation, process guide, and jurisdiction tools support research and reference work.
Case Compiler comes before many of those steps. It helps prepare the facts so the next action is easier to choose and easier to carry out.
Trial Access
Case Compiler is available to signed-in users on Legalise. Submitting material to the compiler and saving the resulting briefing to the Desk requires an active account.
For the launch, signed-in users get 10 tries for Case Compiler. This allows the feature to be tested across different intake formats, including pasted text, screenshots, scanned documents, uploaded files, and voice notes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Case Compiler a drafting tool?
Case Compiler is not the same as Generate Document. It prepares a structured briefing from mixed material. Generate Document is used when the user wants to draft a specific legal document from structured inputs.
What kind of files does Case Compiler support?
Case Compiler supports most common file types, including PDFs, Word documents, screenshots, scanned documents, and audio in common formats.
Can the compiled briefing be saved?
Yes. A compiled briefing can be saved to the Desk after signing in and is usally done automatically.
Does Case Compiler replace legal review?
No. The briefing is a working overview. The user still reviews the facts, verifies the record, checks missing information, and decides the legal route.