In most civil cases it is only necessary for a reasonable attempt be made to serve the defendant(s). All US states have laws which allow creditor suits and certain other cases to be tried (heard) and judgment to be rendered with or without the presence of the defendant(s).
If you fail to appear, the judge can (and usually will) issue a judgement against you requiring you to pay.
The creditor can then take the judgement and apply it against your credit reports, garnish your wages or have property seized.
Probably. A civil summons is served at the address of the person named. Therefore, any person who is of legal age and residing at the same address may, as a rule, be served in lieu of the named. There are some exceptions, the main one being if the order is a subpoena rather than a summons.
Many things including but not limited to being told to turn it down, to being yelled at, to having the police called, to getting into a physical altercation, to nothing.
No, they are not related. Katy Perry's real last name is "Hudson." She took her mother's maiden name as her stage name, in order to avoid being confused with actress Kate Hudson.
Here's one: The accused knew instantly that the witness had perjured herself when she said she did not recognize his handwriting. The accomplice perjured himself to avoid being included in the murder charge.
On the final date of their Foiled tour, Blue October were served with legal papers informing them they were being sued for one million dollars by their former manager Mike Rand. He claimed that he was entitled to a cut of the sales from the highly successful Foiled album, even though he had ceased to be the band's manager years earlier. The band were so incensed by this that they wanted to kick the crap out of him and bury him alive. Of course they couldn't do this, so they wrote a song about it instead. Dirt Room would be the lead single for their next album. The lawsuit was later dismissed and Rand didn't receive a penny.
If you avoid being served, you will then be investigated. Upon completion of he investigation, a default judgement can be ordered against you. so in simple terms you will have been found guilty of the accusation against you.
The only reason to avoid being served for a DUI offense is to buy more time to formulate a defense or to file papers in another court or district prior to being served to attempt some other jurisdiction. Avoiding being served is simply that, avoidance, and in almost all cases you will be served eventually. Avoiding the summons by leaving the state, however, has the potential to be viewed upon negatively by the judge in the case.
You can't refuse court served papers. Each state varies but service could be accomplished just by leaving the papers on the door of the persons house (provided the person serving the papers are authorized to do so).
The court issues a summons or process and a sheriff or summons server delivers it to the individual. Papers are served as a result of an action filed with the court, then the court notifies those involved that they must appear.
Yes, being served could mean, physically by a sheriff or by private processor, posting or hanging, or certified mail.
People may get served papers for a variety of reasons, including being involved in a legal dispute or lawsuit, receiving a court summons, or being notified of legal actions such as eviction or divorce proceedings. Serving papers is a way to officially communicate legal information and ensure that individuals are aware of their rights and obligations.
If you are served with lawsuit papers from a credit card company, contact an attorney immediately. If you wait, your time to answer the petition will expire and depending on the state you live in, that credit card company can obtain a default judgment to garnish your wages or your checking/savings accounts.
Employers do not have to give the location of an employee but they can choose to do so if they wish. It is difficult to hide when you are being sought after by creditors who wish to serve you.
I assume you mean a summons? a affidavit is created after the summons has been served, the affidavit is what goes to the courts after you have been served. There are three ways a person can be served papers. One is (personal hand delivery) two is (suitable age) which means anyone of or over the age of 15 in your household. and last is (taping to the door) after three attempts to serve you papers these are all reasonable means of being served atleast in my State.
You must hold some position as an "officer of the company" in order to legally accept service for the company. If you are being served solely because of your position, or title, or the fact that you're a corporate officer, no, you bear no personalliability for the payment of the debt.However, if you do not fit any of these categories it is likely that the papers have been mis-served on the wrong party and that valid service has not been accomplished.
Common sense first. If you are being evicted, you should just go. Since you are asking for your minimum legal responsibility... The landlord must first win in court. Then you will be served by a court order. This order will state extremely clearly when you must go. Don't expect a lot of time.
Hire a process server. Unless your defendant lives in a bunker. Constitution allows sending it through the mail. But Asahi has altered FRCP rules.