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In California, attorney are authorized to issue subpoenas to in-state witnesses. However, in order to obtain a subpoena of a witness who is out-of-state, the person seeking the subpoena must get an order signed by the judge.
A subpoena can only come from a judge and then you use a process service to serve it. They will know where to go.
More information is needed to answer this question. If you were court-ordered (by the judge) to appear, no further notification is legally necessary. If a subpoena/summons was left with a member of your household who acknowledged that you resided there it is considered as having been served.
A subpoena deuces tecum can only be filed for persons or documents related to the case at hand. Issuing a subpoena for a Judge to appear in court is not likely to be granted unless this person can serve as a material witness for the defense/prosecution.
In order to subpoena a contract you need to have a lawyer. The lawyer will then have the judge sign off on the subpoena, requiring the use of the contract for a case.
File a motion to quash (rescind) with the court where the subpoena was issued. If the judge agrees that the subpoena has no merit he or she will declare it invalid. Usually filing such a motion is the only way to have a subpoena rescinded other than the attorney who issued it voluntarily canceling it.
If a judge has not signed court documents yet, they are not legally in use yet. Court documents are not legal until all parties and the judge have signed off on them.
By subpoena, or summons, or if the person is actually in court, the judge can order it personally.
If you are asking if one can subpoena a priest for information gained in the sacrament of Confession, the answer is, in America, no. A priest cannot be legally sanctioned to reveal under duress a sin that is confessed to him. Priests are in the business of saving souls, not aiding justice, or, even, saving lives. Furthermore, even IF a priest could face legal troubles over his oath to secrecy, a devout priest would rather be jailed than break this sacred oath.
Depends on what Kind of Warrant, Some warrants do need to be notarized before going to the judge to be signed No, the submitting officer(s) swear under oath to the truthfulness of the information contained in the affidavit. After that it is signed by a judge or magistrate court
they are signed by my badonka
If there is a decree in the file signed by a judge that is the important signature and you can assume it is authentic.If there is a decree in the file signed by a judge that is the important signature and you can assume it is authentic.If there is a decree in the file signed by a judge that is the important signature and you can assume it is authentic.If there is a decree in the file signed by a judge that is the important signature and you can assume it is authentic.