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Documentation Index

Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://help.rytz.com.au/llms.txt

Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

The Improve path is for when you have something on the page already — a draft you wrote in a Word document, a previous affidavit you want to update, or text from a lawyer you want to refine. The platform reads it, runs a structured audit across seven dimensions, and produces an annotated, prioritised review. Route: app.rytz.com.au/affidavit-preparation/improve.

Before you start

  • You have a draft ready — at minimum, a few paragraphs of factual content
  • Your Master Case File reflects the current matter (so the AI can ground its analysis)
  • Your Evidence Portfolio has the items you intend to annexure
The audit takes 30–90 seconds depending on draft length. The output is a long, dense review — set aside 30–45 minutes to read it carefully and another hour or two to action it.

The seven audit dimensions

The platform audits your draft against seven separate lenses:

Coherent theory

Does your affidavit tell one consistent story? An affidavit that shifts focus, contradicts itself between paragraphs, or jumps between unrelated topics is harder to follow and easier to undermine.

Priority findings

Which of your facts are the strongest? The audit identifies the 3–5 paragraphs that carry the most weight given the orders you’re seeking and flags whether they’re prominent enough.

Paragraph-by-paragraph analysis

For each paragraph, the audit identifies admissibility issues (hearsay, opinion, irrelevance), proposes plain-English rewrites, and flags whether annexure support would strengthen it.

Annexure opportunities

Where in your text could a specific evidence item become an annexure? The audit cross-references your Evidence Portfolio and suggests labels (JL-1, JL-2, …) for un-annexed assertions.

Concession advisories

Some facts are stronger if you concede them upfront rather than have the other side raise them. The audit flags candidates and explains the reasoning. Concessions are strategic — you decide whether to take the advice.

Missing evidence signals

The audit identifies factual claims you’ve made that have no corresponding evidence in your Portfolio, and flags them for follow-up — either find evidence, soften the claim, or remove it.

Disclosure check

Are you over-disclosing (sensitive material that doesn’t need to be in this affidavit)? Under-disclosing (material you’re obliged to disclose but haven’t)? The check helps avoid both.

Running the audit

1

Open the Improve surface

From the Affidavit Preparation hub, click the Improve an existing draft card. Or go directly to app.rytz.com.au/affidavit-preparation/improve.
2

Provide the draft

Two paths:
  • Upload — DOCX, PDF, or plain text. The platform reads the document, extracts paragraphs, and notes any existing exhibit references.
  • Paste — paste the text into the editor. Best for shorter drafts or when you’ve drafted in Notion / Apple Notes / a chat thread.
The platform handles both. For DOCX, formatting is preserved on extraction so the audit can see your structure.
3

Confirm context

The platform asks three questions before running the audit:
  • What stage is this affidavit for? Initiating Application, Interim hearing, Trial, or other. The stage shapes what “good” looks like.
  • What orders are you seeking? Brief description (parenting orders, property orders, both). The audit weighs paragraphs by relevance to the orders.
  • What’s already filed? Any prior affidavits in this matter, by either party. The audit checks for inconsistency or unhelpful repetition.
Most of this is auto-populated from your Master Case File. Confirm or correct.
4

Click 'Run audit'

The audit takes 30–90 seconds. While it runs, the screen shows the seven dimensions populating progressively. Don’t navigate away — the audit is a single transaction.
5

Read the output

The output is structured by dimension:
  • Headline summary — 3–5 sentences, the audit’s overall verdict
  • Coherent theory — narrative arc analysis
  • Priority findings — top 3–5 strongest paragraphs, top 3–5 weakest
  • Paragraph-by-paragraph — annotated review, paragraph-by-paragraph; click any paragraph to expand the analysis
  • Annexure opportunities — proposed exhibit additions
  • Concession advisories — strategic-concession candidates
  • Missing evidence — claims without supporting evidence
  • Disclosure check — over-disclosure / under-disclosure flags
Read the headline first, then jump straight to Priority findings + Paragraph-by-paragraph. Those two combined typically drive 80% of the rewrite.
6

Action the recommendations

The audit is read-only. Actioning means going back to the source draft (Word, the platform’s Interactive editor, or your starting document) and applying the recommendations.For platform users, the audit links directly into the Interactive editor with each recommendation marked as a line-level suggestion you can accept, reject, or modify.
7

Re-audit after material changes

After you’ve applied 5–10 substantial changes, re-run the audit. The previous audit is preserved (under audit history); the new one shows progress.A useful target: hit “no priority findings flagged as weak” + “no missing-evidence signals” before you swear and file.

Reading the output well

A few practices that pay off:
Read the headline last, not first. The headline summary is a synthesis. If you read it first, you anchor on the verdict and read the dimensions defensively. If you read the dimensions first, you form your own view, then check the headline against it. The latter is more useful.
Look at the weakest paragraphs first, not the strongest. Strong paragraphs need light editing. Weak paragraphs are where the affidavit either gets stronger or gets thrown out. The platform sorts findings by impact for this reason.
Take concession advisories seriously, but don’t act blindly. A concession can disarm an obvious counter-argument. It can also lock in a bad fact prematurely. The audit explains its reasoning; weigh it against your matter’s specifics.

What the audit will not do

A clear boundary:
  • It will not check facts. “Lucy left the children unsupervised on 14 March” — the audit cannot tell you whether that’s true. It can only check whether you’ve supplied corresponding evidence.
  • It will not assess your matter strategy. Whether to pursue interim orders, whether to seek FDR exemption, whether to settle — these are not affidavit-audit questions.
  • It will not write the affidavit for you. Recommendations are suggestions. You decide what to apply, modify, or ignore. The deponent (you) is responsible for every word.
  • It will not catch every issue. A senior family-law solicitor reading the same draft would catch things the audit doesn’t. For high-stakes affidavits (final hearings, contested matters, FV-substantial matters), get human review before swearing.

Common patterns the audit surfaces

PatternWhat it usually means
Many paragraphs flagged for hearsayFirst-time deponents instinctively recount what others have said. The fix is “I observed […]” not “Lucy told me […]”
Strong opinion language flagged”Lucy is unreliable” is opinion. “On 14 March, 22 March, and 5 April Lucy did not arrive at the agreed changeover time” is fact.
Long paragraphs flagged for lengthThe Family Law Rules favour short numbered paragraphs (one fact, one paragraph). Audit flags paragraphs above 4–5 lines.
Annexure opportunities clustered around datesYou’ve made factual claims with specific dates but haven’t supplied corresponding evidence. The Portfolio probably has the items — link them.
Disclosure under-flaggedParticularly common for financial affidavits. The Family Law Rules’ disclosure obligations are extensive — the audit checks against the standard list.

What’s next

Interactive editor

Apply audit recommendations inline with paragraph-level AI suggestions.

Create from scratch

For your next affidavit, consider starting in the wizard rather than auditing later.

Bundles for court

Once the affidavit is final, bundle the annexures into a court-ready PDF.

Affidavit overview

Step back to the framing — what affidavits are, why they’re hard.