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French is the official language of Juge.ca. In the event of any discrepancy, ambiguity, omission, or conflict of interpretation, the French version shall prevail.

The vision: enforcement, automated — under human supervision

From today's order board to full orchestration of judgment enforcement, in three phases. For investors, regulators and partners.

Phase 1 — today: AI suggests, humans confirm

The marketplace already puts four AI assistants to work, all bound by the same invariant: AI proposes, a human decides. In a legal-enforcement context, that guardrail is non-negotiable.

  • Document intake — AI flags defects (invalid address, incomplete package, wrong jurisdiction) before a bailiff has to reject.
  • Smart matching — suggests the best bailiff by territory and order type; assignment stays human.
  • Admin copilot — drafts ticket replies; the admin reviews, edits and sends.
  • Listing optimizer — sharper titles and descriptions; the client confirms before publishing.

Phase 2 — assisted automation

Suggestions become flows: auto-validated intake with sampled human review, rule-pre-approved matching (territory, workload, deadlines), ticket routing, and structured proofs of service (timestamps, geolocation) filed to the matter.

Phase 3 — end-to-end orchestration

From judgment to completed enforcement: orders generated from the case file, supervised auto-dispatch, realtime tracking for the citizen, the bailiff and the court, and an immutable audit log at every step. Humans keep a stop switch at every level.

Why this sequence

Judgment enforcement is the most manual link in Québec's justice chain. Starting with organization (phase 1) builds the structured data that makes phases 2 and 3 possible — and auditable. Each phase is validated with the Barreau, the Chambre des huissiers and the relevant authorities before advancing.

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