With the Clerk of the Court's office of the court which will be hearing your case.
The realtor, themselves, must be the aggrieved party in the action. They can file a civil case with the Clerk of the Court just like anyone else who has a civil cispute.
2 months
do I have to file a bfief to file for a motion for change of venue in civil case
No. Dismissed with prejudice means the case has already been adjudicated, and that res judicata would prohibit bringing the case again. Furthermore, small claims court is a level of civil court that has a lower monetary jurisdiction than other levels. The alternative to civil court is criminal court, and small claims cases are not, by their nature, criminal matters.
All court cases are public records. Go to the Clerk of The Court offices and if you supply the names and dates of the case they should be able to pull the court file.
Your local family (civil) court is where you must file for child support arrears. If there is a child support order you must return to that court to file a contempt of court order.Your local family (civil) court is where you must file for child support arrears. If there is a child support order you must return to that court to file a contempt of court order.Your local family (civil) court is where you must file for child support arrears. If there is a child support order you must return to that court to file a contempt of court order.Your local family (civil) court is where you must file for child support arrears. If there is a child support order you must return to that court to file a contempt of court order.
No. Only the Defendant has the right to remove. If the P wants to file the case in a federal court, they could have to get the case dismissed and re-file the case in the federal court. Plaintiff gets choice of forum, so if he wanted federal court, he should've filed it there initially.
False
If a party refuses to answer Discovery in a civil case, you can file a Motion to Compel, requesting that the court compel them to answer.
You file a case in the court system of the jurisdiction in which the offense occurred.
While it is not required, very few (if any) court cases (either criminal OR civil) pass without someone filing a motion.