The Plaintiff may withdraw the lawsuit, however, since the defendants have filed their counter claim, the suit will continue (now) against the plaintiff.
The case is dismissed. However both sides may have already wasted lots of time and money on the case! And the courts will also have wasted their time.
The plaintiff will win a by default and a judgment will be entered against the defendant. There are not laws that require a person to file an answer or to be present at the civil suit hearing.
Case gets thrown out.
You lose. If the defendant doesn't show up for their notified court hearing, a default judgment will be made against them. If the plaintiff doesn't show up, the case will be dismissed. In the case of a defendant, the plaintiff will then go about collecting the award through garnishment of wages and placing liens on property.
The plaintiff wins the case by default and a judgment is entered against the defendant. A civil lawsuit summons is not a court order per se and therefore the defendant is not obligated to appear. An order of appearance from the court, interrogatories, depositions, discovery motions and so forth are different matters and the person(s) named should always respond. Legal counsel is always advisable in such matters.
if the summons was returned unserved, the plaintiff should asked the court to issue an alias summons if the whereabouts of the defendant is ascertained.
Depending on state laws, you have 30 days to file answers to them, if you fail to do so they can be deemed true and not contested and a judgment against you will be put before a judge.
Basically both the plaintiff and the defendant will have the opportunity to make statements pertaining to the case and present supporting evidence. The judge will then rule on which one proved their case. If the plaintiff wins they will receive a writ of judgment and can execute it against nonexempt property belonging to the defendant. The usual choice is wage garnishment or bank account levy.In some states the winning party can also collect legal fees and/or court costs that were incurred.
It depends on what type of judgment is in place. If the person is the sole debtor but there is still jointly owned property, the plaintiff can place a lien against the defendant's share. Or use the judgment as a wage garnishment or bank account levy. In some states joint accounts can be levied against. If that happens, the funds are frozen and the non-debtor must submit proof to the court what portion of the account belongs to them. If the debt was not joint the judgment will be only be entered on the PR of the plaintiff's credit report.
There are several possible results for not appearing at a deposition. In order of least to most severity, possible results are: 1) simple resetting of deposition, 2) attorney fees awarded against party who failed to show, 3) answer is struck if defendant fails to show or plaintiff's complaint is dismissed if plaintiff fails to show.
In most cases, when a defendant does not appear, the judge will order summary judgment for the plaintiff. (In other words: if you don't show up, you automatically lose and the judgment will generally be the best possible for the other side and the worst possible for you.)
When the person has been notified of the impending civil legal action or a resonable attempt has been made by the plaintiff or court to do so the defendant is considered "served" regardless of whether he or she has taken actual possession of the summons/documents. That being so, the case in which the person is a party will go forward with or without his or her participation. Failure to appear generally results in an automatic "win" for the plaintiff and a judgment or whatever allowable action is called for will be enforced against the named defendant(s) property and/or assets.
The defendant must then suffer capital punishment so the plaintiff can collect in the afterlife. Unless the plaintiff is a Hindu, or Buddhist, then it is up to the attorney to locate the being that the plaintiff has been re-incarnated as.