Andorran Developer Launches TEMIS AI Tool for Lawyers' Court Rulings
Guillem Prada Torres introduces TEMIS, an AI platform that enables natural language searches of Andorra's public judgments and laws, tackling.
Key Points
- TEMIS allows natural language queries for public court rulings and active laws from a custom, manually updated database.
- Prioritizes reliability: prefers no results over incorrect info, unlike general AIs like ChatGPT.
- Free access complies with Andorran law; value from AI analysis, 2FA security, no external training.
- 24 users (15 active, mostly lawyers); speeds searches amid ongoing digitalization efforts.
A Andorran developer has launched TEMIS, an AI-powered tool designed to streamline lawyers' access to public court rulings and legislation in the country.
The platform, created by Guillem Prada Torres, addresses longstanding complaints from attorneys about the challenges of locating specific judgments using existing search tools. Prada began work on TEMIS in April 2025 after lawyers highlighted difficulties with current systems amid debates over incomplete publication of some resolutions.
TEMIS draws from a custom database that manually compiles all publicly available sentences from the former judicial search engine, along with current laws from the legal portal and the BOPA official gazette. Developers update the database by hand to distinguish active regulations from those repealed, ensuring accuracy.
Access to the documents remains free, as Andorran law prohibits direct commercialization of such content. Instead, TEMIS adds value through AI-driven analysis, allowing users to query in natural language. For instance, someone could describe a case involving semi-liberty or abusive clauses, and the system would return relevant rulings with citations and links to originals.
A key focus has been reliability. "We prefer the tool to say it finds nothing rather than provide incorrect information," Prada said. Unlike general-purpose AIs such as ChatGPT, TEMIS specializes solely in Andorran law, relying on a controlled, closed dataset. It also features two-factor authentication and ensures user queries are not repurposed to train external models.
The platform currently has 24 registered users, about 15 of whom are active, mostly lawyers and tax advisors. While it cannot access unpublished resolutions—leaving that broader issue unresolved—TEMIS speeds up searches within available materials and reduces reliance on informal professional networks.
The initiative arrives as Andorra advances judicial digitalization, aiming to make case law more readily available to practitioners.
Original Sources
This article was aggregated from the following Catalan-language sources: