If the individual has some material information to contribute to your judicial hearing, you request that the court subpoena them on your behalf.
The answer is no. Subpoenas are served to a person or entity, and only to that person or entity or an authorized person. For a subpoena to a person it has to be served only to that person or to someone living with that person at the residence. In the case of an entity it has to be served to someone who is authorized to accept a subpoena on behalf of the entity.
Yes, if you hold a valid power of attorney to act on their behalf. Otherwise no. Signing for someone you do not hold power of attorney for is fraud, and against the law.
You need an attorney to subpoena someone in court. This is not something you can do yourself.
Walking a mile in someone elses shoes.
yes
I want to report immigrants using someone elses documents.
No,it is rude and illegal to rip someone elses' campaign poster.
The purpose of a subpoena is to get someone to come to court to either testify for you or against you. When a person gets this subpoena, they have no choice but to attend the court session.
take someone elses ;)
Goldilocks
yes