That is determined by state law where you reside and whether or not you or the court is required to serve the other party (that can vary as well depending on location). As statutes may vary from state to state or country to country, it's extremely helpful if you provide the state or country of the court of jurisdiction when asking legal questions.
You should check with the clerk of the court or an attorney for more information.
Impossible. An 'Ex-Parte" hearing means that the other party is not present.
This is short for " ... show cause why the other party should not be held in contempt [of court]." In such a hearing, one party claims that the other party has violated a court order and should be required to show why the court should not hold her/him in contempt and, therefore, impose a monetary judgment or some other punishment.
Generally that means one party did not show up for the hearing so the other party won by default.
If they did then the hearing would not be "Ex Parte." For a legal definition of ex parte, see: http://definitions.uslegal.com/e/ex-parte/
There is no proper way to file divorce papers. You can also hire a lawyer to help you fill out the papers and contact the other party to present them with the divorce forms.
If the judge has signed them, the parties' signatures are not required. If one party has prepared the decree following the judge's oral pronouncement, and if the other party fails to sign the proposed draft of the decree of divorce so that it can be submitted to the court, then the drafting party should file a "Motion to Enter" with a copy of the proposed decree attached to the motion and seek a hearing on the motion, and at such hearing the Court will enter a decree with or without signatures.
Unfortunately the only way to get divorced when the other party is uncooperative is to set a court hearing. You should contact your local court where the divorce was filed and find out how to set the case for hearing/trial. At the hearing you should be prepared to discuss all issues regarding your assets and debts, custody if you have children, etc. The Judge can grant you a divorce even if your wife is not signing.
A hearing before the court to prove a plaintiff's case against a defendant, where the defendant is in default and has not made an appearance in the case. Generally used to get a default judgment against a non-answering party.
You file a "petition to terminate guardianship" in your state, with the court your case will be held at. There will be a filling fee but you can also fill out the form for a deferral of court fees if you qualify under the guidelines. Once these things are done you will have to serve the other part legally, through a process server, or any other legal way to serve papers, you need to serve the other party with a copy of the petition you filed with the clerk, and also the "notice of hearing" you will get in the mail in about two weeks; when you filled your petition. make sure you give the server the correct papers to serve the other party with, and you also make sure you have a current address for them. You case maybe dismissed if you don't notify the opposing party properly. If you don't have the address to serve the party then you have to provide proof of your efforts to contact them and present it in court. Make and keep copies of all your paperwork. At this point you just wait for your hearing. At this point when all your paper work is taken care of then you just wait till your hearing arrives. Most of the time i hear the parent usually gets they're it they are fit.
Normally yes, they do. If one party doesn't appear, the other party normally wins by default.
You can file a special education Due Process Hearing in Georgia by informing the Georgia Department of Education (GaDOE) and the other party.
Here it will depend on who has filed the papers first . If your lawyer delayed it by a day or a few hours it may be to late for your advantage.