ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
DICKSON, Justice.
This is an appeal from the denial of a party’s timely motion for change of judge in a post-dissolution proceeding.
In January, 1994, the appellant-respondent, Anthony Trojnar, requested a change of judge under Indiana Trial Rule 76(B).
The Special Judge, Edward P. Grimmer, denied the motion. The Court of Appeals reversed the trial court, finding that the motion for change of judge should have been granted.
Trojnar v. Trojnar,
656 N.E.2d 287, 290 (Ind.Ct.App.1995). On remand, pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule 79(F)(1),
Judge Grimmer named a panel of three eligible judges from which the parties could each strike one of the judges. While not specifying any time within which to strike, he ordered that they strike “pursuant to rule.” Record at 27. The applicable rule provided that an order naming a panel of judges for striking may allow the parties up to fourteen days to strike. Ind.Trial Rule 79(F)(2). Judge Grimmer named the panel on December 1, 1995 and transmitted the order to the Clerk’s office on December 4. However, the Clerk’s office did not mail the order to the respondent until December 18, fourteen days after it received the order from Judge Grimmer. The appellant’s attorney received the order on December 19 and immediately struck one of the judges on December 20. The strike was received by the Clerk’s office on December 21. However, December 21 was more than fourteen days after Judge Grimmer had named the panel.
Judge Grimmer found that the appellant’s motion to strike was not timely filed because Trial Rule 79(F)(2) “is not predicated upon service of any documents or notice.” Record at 45. Judge Grimmer therefore resumed jurisdiction of the post-dissolution case pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule 79(F)(3).
The appellant filed a motion for relief under Indiana Trial Rule 72(E),
arguing that he was entitled to relief because the Clerk failed to mail copies of the orders in a timely manner, thereby preventing him from complying with the fourteen day time limit. Judge Grimmer denied this motion as well. The appellant then filed a request for certification allowing an interlocutory appeal of the ruling regarding the change of judge. Judge Grimmer granted the certification, but conditioned it upon the appellant posting a cash bond in the amount of $7,000. For reasons undisclosed by the record, the interlocutory appeal was never perfected.
Following a hearing on the merits of the post-dissolution action, this appeal was taken.
The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court,
Trojnar v. Trojnar,
676 N.E.2d 1094 (Ind.Ct.App.1997), finding,
sua sponte,
that the appellant waived his appeal regarding the change of judge motion by failing to perfect immediately an interlocutory appeal.
Id.
at 1096-97. The court—over a strong dissent from Judge Staton and contrary precedent from the Court of Appeals
—opined
that, because Indiana Trial Rule 75 (preferred venue) involves the same concerns as Trial Rule 76 and, because Indiana Appellate Rule 4(B)(5) requires that a mandatory interlocutory appeal be taken when Trial Rule 75 is involved,
Trial Rule 76 is implicitly included in the mandatory requirement of Appellate Rule 4(B)(5).
Trojnar,
676 N.E.2d at 1096.
In his petition for transfer, the appellant contends that the Court of Appeals improperly decided this issue because an appeal regarding Trial Rule 76 need not be brought in an interlocutory appeal, but may be properly brought in a direct appeal. We agree with the appellant and Judge Staton’s dissenting opinion. Our rule expressly requires mandatory interlocutory appeals only from decisions involving Trial Rule 75. The appellant did not waive his appeal by failing to take an interlocutory appeal from Judge Grimmer’s Trial Rule 76 ruling.
As noted above, Trial Rule 79(F) provides the procedure to be followed for the selection of a special judge under Trial Rule 76. A panel of three judges is named and the parties have up to fourteen days to strike judges from this panel. The issue here is whether the fourteen day period begins to run when the judge names the panel, or when the parties receive notice that the panel has been named,
The text of this Rule is dispositive: “Within two (2) days of deciding that a special judge must be appointed under this section, the judge ... shall submit a panel ...
to the parties
for striking.... The parties shall have not less than seven (7) days nor more than fourteen (14) days to strike as the court may allow.” T.R. 79(F) (emphasis added). To assure that parties have a reasonable opportunity to exercise the rights afforded under the rule, the time begins to run when the panel is submitted
to the parties,
not when the panel is submitted by the judge to the Clerk’s office.
Such submission to the parties means service by the Clerk of a copy of the court order. Thus, the fact that the Clerk’s office waited fourteen days to mail the names to the parties cannot divest the appellant of the fourteen days allotted to strike. Accordingly, the appellant’s striking was not untimely filed, and Judge Grimmer should not have resumed jurisdiction over the matter.
Accord State ex rel. Sargent & Lundy v. Vigo Superior Court,
260 Ind. 472, 296 N.E.2d 785 (1973).
The appellee also contends that the appellant is not entitled to relief under Indiana Trial Rule 72(E) because the chronological case summary shows that notice was eventually sent by the Clerk. Brief of Ap-pellee at 5. This rule generally provides that “[l]aek of notice ... from the Clerk shall not affect the time within which to contest the ruling, order or judgment, or authorize the Court to relieve a party of the failure to initiate proceedings to contest such a ruling, order or judgment.” Ind. Trial Rule 72(E). However, when the Clerk’s mailing of a ruling is not evidenced on the Chronological Case Summary (“CCS”), the trial court may grant an extension of “any time limitation within which to contest such ruling, order or judgment to any party who was without actual knowledge, or who relied upon incorrect
representations by Court personnel.”
Id.
Noting that an exception to the strict “lack of notice” provision was adopted “to provide essentially that counsel could rely on the clerk’s office to send notice and if such notice was not received, to provide an avenue through which to challenge the mailing of the notice,” this Court in
Markle v. Indiana State Teachers Ass’n,
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ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
DICKSON, Justice.
This is an appeal from the denial of a party’s timely motion for change of judge in a post-dissolution proceeding.
In January, 1994, the appellant-respondent, Anthony Trojnar, requested a change of judge under Indiana Trial Rule 76(B).
The Special Judge, Edward P. Grimmer, denied the motion. The Court of Appeals reversed the trial court, finding that the motion for change of judge should have been granted.
Trojnar v. Trojnar,
656 N.E.2d 287, 290 (Ind.Ct.App.1995). On remand, pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule 79(F)(1),
Judge Grimmer named a panel of three eligible judges from which the parties could each strike one of the judges. While not specifying any time within which to strike, he ordered that they strike “pursuant to rule.” Record at 27. The applicable rule provided that an order naming a panel of judges for striking may allow the parties up to fourteen days to strike. Ind.Trial Rule 79(F)(2). Judge Grimmer named the panel on December 1, 1995 and transmitted the order to the Clerk’s office on December 4. However, the Clerk’s office did not mail the order to the respondent until December 18, fourteen days after it received the order from Judge Grimmer. The appellant’s attorney received the order on December 19 and immediately struck one of the judges on December 20. The strike was received by the Clerk’s office on December 21. However, December 21 was more than fourteen days after Judge Grimmer had named the panel.
Judge Grimmer found that the appellant’s motion to strike was not timely filed because Trial Rule 79(F)(2) “is not predicated upon service of any documents or notice.” Record at 45. Judge Grimmer therefore resumed jurisdiction of the post-dissolution case pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule 79(F)(3).
The appellant filed a motion for relief under Indiana Trial Rule 72(E),
arguing that he was entitled to relief because the Clerk failed to mail copies of the orders in a timely manner, thereby preventing him from complying with the fourteen day time limit. Judge Grimmer denied this motion as well. The appellant then filed a request for certification allowing an interlocutory appeal of the ruling regarding the change of judge. Judge Grimmer granted the certification, but conditioned it upon the appellant posting a cash bond in the amount of $7,000. For reasons undisclosed by the record, the interlocutory appeal was never perfected.
Following a hearing on the merits of the post-dissolution action, this appeal was taken.
The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court,
Trojnar v. Trojnar,
676 N.E.2d 1094 (Ind.Ct.App.1997), finding,
sua sponte,
that the appellant waived his appeal regarding the change of judge motion by failing to perfect immediately an interlocutory appeal.
Id.
at 1096-97. The court—over a strong dissent from Judge Staton and contrary precedent from the Court of Appeals
—opined
that, because Indiana Trial Rule 75 (preferred venue) involves the same concerns as Trial Rule 76 and, because Indiana Appellate Rule 4(B)(5) requires that a mandatory interlocutory appeal be taken when Trial Rule 75 is involved,
Trial Rule 76 is implicitly included in the mandatory requirement of Appellate Rule 4(B)(5).
Trojnar,
676 N.E.2d at 1096.
In his petition for transfer, the appellant contends that the Court of Appeals improperly decided this issue because an appeal regarding Trial Rule 76 need not be brought in an interlocutory appeal, but may be properly brought in a direct appeal. We agree with the appellant and Judge Staton’s dissenting opinion. Our rule expressly requires mandatory interlocutory appeals only from decisions involving Trial Rule 75. The appellant did not waive his appeal by failing to take an interlocutory appeal from Judge Grimmer’s Trial Rule 76 ruling.
As noted above, Trial Rule 79(F) provides the procedure to be followed for the selection of a special judge under Trial Rule 76. A panel of three judges is named and the parties have up to fourteen days to strike judges from this panel. The issue here is whether the fourteen day period begins to run when the judge names the panel, or when the parties receive notice that the panel has been named,
The text of this Rule is dispositive: “Within two (2) days of deciding that a special judge must be appointed under this section, the judge ... shall submit a panel ...
to the parties
for striking.... The parties shall have not less than seven (7) days nor more than fourteen (14) days to strike as the court may allow.” T.R. 79(F) (emphasis added). To assure that parties have a reasonable opportunity to exercise the rights afforded under the rule, the time begins to run when the panel is submitted
to the parties,
not when the panel is submitted by the judge to the Clerk’s office.
Such submission to the parties means service by the Clerk of a copy of the court order. Thus, the fact that the Clerk’s office waited fourteen days to mail the names to the parties cannot divest the appellant of the fourteen days allotted to strike. Accordingly, the appellant’s striking was not untimely filed, and Judge Grimmer should not have resumed jurisdiction over the matter.
Accord State ex rel. Sargent & Lundy v. Vigo Superior Court,
260 Ind. 472, 296 N.E.2d 785 (1973).
The appellee also contends that the appellant is not entitled to relief under Indiana Trial Rule 72(E) because the chronological case summary shows that notice was eventually sent by the Clerk. Brief of Ap-pellee at 5. This rule generally provides that “[l]aek of notice ... from the Clerk shall not affect the time within which to contest the ruling, order or judgment, or authorize the Court to relieve a party of the failure to initiate proceedings to contest such a ruling, order or judgment.” Ind. Trial Rule 72(E). However, when the Clerk’s mailing of a ruling is not evidenced on the Chronological Case Summary (“CCS”), the trial court may grant an extension of “any time limitation within which to contest such ruling, order or judgment to any party who was without actual knowledge, or who relied upon incorrect
representations by Court personnel.”
Id.
Noting that an exception to the strict “lack of notice” provision was adopted “to provide essentially that counsel could rely on the clerk’s office to send notice and if such notice was not received, to provide an avenue through which to challenge the mailing of the notice,” this Court in
Markle v. Indiana State Teachers Ass’n,
514 N.E.2d 612, 614 (Ind.1987), affirmed the grant of such relief where the court’s docket (predecessor to the CCS form now in use) failed to contain a notation assuring that the questioned court orders had been mailed.
Id.
However, relief was not permitted in
Collins v. Covenant Mut. Ins. Co.,
644 N.E.2d 116 (Ind.1994), because the CCS contained the Clerk’s notation showing that the court’s order was mailed to the parties. As a result of Trial Rule' 72,
Markle,
and
Collins,
lawyers may rely on the Clerk’s office to send the court’s rulings, and thus, their burden to cheek regularly the records of each court in which they have a pending case is lessened, although a proper Clerk’s notation on the CCS will presumptively establish the fact that notice was mailed.
The “lack of notice” provision in T.R. 72(E) does not apply in the present case because notice was, in fact, mailed. Furthermore, by its express terms, the rule states that lack of notice “shall not affect the time within which
to contest
the ruling, order or judgment.” T.R. 72(E) (emphasis added). Here, the appellant’s exercise of his right to strike from the panel of judges did not “contest” the naming of the panel. The rule does not apply to preclude the appellant’s right to timely strike following submission of the panel to the parties.
Transfer is granted, thereby vacating the opinion of the Court of Appeals. Ind.Appellate Rule 11(B)(3). Because the appellant timely struck from the panel of judges named by the trial court, it was error for Judge Grimmer to disregard it and to resume jurisdiction. Any subsequent rulings are hereby vacated. This cause is remanded for the reinstatement of the appellant’s strike, the resumption of the selection of a special judge, and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
SHEPARD, C.J., and SULLIVAN, SELBY and BOEHM, JJ., concur.