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Documentation Index

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The Hearing Prep surface at app.rytz.com.au/hearing-prep is the platform’s preparation toolkit for any court event. Whether your matter has a first court event next week or a final hearing in six months, Hearing Prep walks you through what to expect, what to prepare, and how to perform on the day.

Why hearing prep is its own surface

Court hearings are where matters are decided. The same evidence, the same arguments, the same legal positions — well-prepared parties win regularly; under-prepared parties lose regularly. The gap is preparation. Self-representing parties are particularly disadvantaged here because most professional preparation is invisible. A solicitor with a barrister does conferences, moots, document drills, expert briefings — none of which appear in the case file but all of which produce performance. Hearing Prep is the platform’s structured replication of that preparation, scoped to what a self-rep can do.

What’s covered

Court process orientation

What happens in the court room. Where you sit, who speaks when, how the registrar / judge will address you, what the bench is reading, the sequence of the hearing.

Moot court simulation

AI-driven simulation of cross-examination — the platform plays the other side’s counsel, asks the questions you’re likely to face, and captures your responses for review.

Evidence-rules refresher

Practical refresher on the Evidence Act 1995 (Cth) — what’s admissible, what’s not, when you can object, when the bench will object on your behalf.

Document drilling

Read-through your own affidavits with stress-test prompts: “if asked to elaborate on paragraph 14, what would you say?”, “what evidence supports paragraph 22?”, “where in your annexures is the document referred to in paragraph 31?”.

Procedural checklists

Pre-hearing, during-hearing, and post-hearing procedural lists. What to bring, what to wear, what to do at the bar table, what to say to the registrar.

Cross-examination preparation

Both sides — preparing to be cross-examined yourself, and preparing to cross-examine the other party (where leave is granted).

Tailored to the hearing type

Different hearings have different dynamics. Hearing Prep adapts:

First court event

A first court event (FCE) is a procedural hearing. Typical content:
  • What the FCE actually does — registrar reviews the matter, sets directions, assigns next dates. Usually 5–15 minutes per matter.
  • What the bench has read — your initiating documents, response, any affidavits filed
  • What you say — usually very little. Confirm your appearance, agree (or disagree) with proposed directions.
  • What to bring — your filed documents, photo ID, calendar diary for setting next dates.
  • Common pitfalls — over-preparing, over-speaking, treating the FCE as a chance to argue the substantive case (which is wrong — the FCE is administrative).

Interim hearing

An interim hearing decides interim parenting or property orders that hold pending final hearing. Higher stakes:
  • What the bench is deciding — interim orders typically take 1–2 hours; outcomes shape the matter for months.
  • What you’ve filed — Application in Proceeding (interim), supporting affidavit, evidence annexures.
  • What you say — opening (briefly), evidence (sworn or by reference to your affidavit), cross-examination (yours of them, theirs of you), closing argument.
  • Moot prep priority — high. The 30–60 minutes you spend mooting beforehand pay off in delivery.

Conciliation conference

A conciliation conference (in property matters) or FDR session (in parenting) is mediation rather than adjudication:
  • What it is — structured negotiation with a neutral facilitator. The mediator does not decide.
  • What you’re trying to achieve — settlement that produces consent orders, avoiding trial.
  • Prep — opening position document, walk-away threshold, BATNA (best alternative to negotiated agreement) clear in your head before you arrive.

Final hearing

The trial. Days or weeks of hearing, full evidence-in-chief and cross-examination, judgment to follow.
  • What’s at stake — final orders, often the matter’s resolution.
  • Prep depth — extensive. Every paragraph of every filed affidavit needs to be thoroughly prepared. Every annexure needs to be retrievable in seconds. Every cross-examination question rehearsed.
  • Lawyer engagement — Hearing Prep is most useful here as supplement to a lawyer (or counsel directly briefed). Going to a contested final hearing fully self-represented is high-risk and is usually flagged as such by the platform.

The moot court simulation

The moot is the platform’s most-distinctive Hearing Prep feature. The AI plays counsel for the other side and runs cross-examination questions calibrated to:
  • Your filed affidavits (asks you about paragraphs, presses on weak points, tests consistency)
  • Likely lines the other party would pursue based on their filed material
  • Common cross-examination patterns for your matter type
  • Your evidence stack (asks you to point to the supporting evidence for assertions)
The session typically runs 30–90 minutes and produces:
  • Recording of your responses (audio + transcript, retained in your account, private)
  • Notes on responses where you struggled, contradicted yourself, or revealed evidence gaps
  • Suggested follow-up — additional moot rounds focused on weak areas, evidence to capture, paragraphs to reword in supplementary affidavit
Run the moot at least twice before any contested hearing. The first round reveals where you struggle; the second round, after addressing the gaps, builds confidence. A third round close to the hearing day often catches the last “I forgot how to phrase that” moments.

Document drilling

Before any hearing, the bench will be reading your filed documents. Document drilling rehearses you on your own filings:
  • The platform asks “elaborate on paragraph 14” — you answer
  • The platform asks “where in your evidence is the document this paragraph references?” — you locate it
  • The platform asks “if asked when this happened, what would you say?” — you answer
The drill is fast (5–15 minutes per affidavit) and high-leverage. Self-represented parties most often stumble at hearing on details from their own filed material that they have stopped re-reading.

What to bring on the day

A standard checklist:
  • All filed documents — your applications, affidavits, evidence bundles, plus the other party’s
  • Two printed copies of each — one for the bench (if requested), one for you
  • Photo ID
  • Calendar diary — for any new dates set during the hearing
  • Pen and paper — for notes during the hearing
  • A printed Master Case File — for reference, particularly chronology
  • Water bottle
  • Cash for parking + transport — court precincts often have limited card-payment options
The platform produces a hearing-day pack PDF combining all of this into a single document for printing.

Court etiquette

A few practices that pay off:
PracticeWhy
Address the bench as “Your Honour” (judge) or “Sir/Madam” (registrar)Standard form; getting this wrong is the kind of small thing that matters in cumulative impression
Stand when the bench enters and leavesCourt convention
Stand when speaking to the benchConvention
Wait for an invitation to speakDon’t volunteer; respond to questions or wait for your turn
No phones on, no recordingCourt rules; offences
Dress conservativelySuit if you have one; clean and tidy minimum
Arrive 30 minutes earlyAllows for security, finding the courtroom, settling in
Don’t speak to the other party in the courtroomCommunicate via lawyers (or in writing); courtroom is not the place

What Hearing Prep will not do

  • It will not appear at court for you. Self-representation means showing up.
  • It will not predict outcomes. Court decisions are heavily fact-driven.
  • It will not replace a barrister for high-stakes matters. Final hearings on contested issues benefit hugely from professional advocacy.
  • It will not coach you on demeanour. Some aspects of court performance — composure under pressure, vocal pacing, eye contact with the bench — are best refined with a human coach.
For final hearings on contested issues, engage at least a limited-scope lawyer. A lawyer attending the hearing — even on a one-day brief — is one of the highest-leverage investments in any matter. Hearing Prep prepares you for self-representation; for matters where the stakes warrant it, the platform’s recommendation is to upgrade.

What’s next

Case Roadmap

The seven FCFCOA stages — what each hearing fits into.

FCFCOA stages — full detail

Stage-by-stage walkthrough.

Strategic Planning

Wider strategic frame for the matter the hearing fits into.

Affidavit overview

Affidavit preparation that feeds into hearing performance.