summons or subpoena.
To properly subpoena someone in a legal proceeding, you must first obtain a subpoena form from the court. Fill out the form with the required information, including the person's name and the reason for the subpoena. Then, have the subpoena served to the individual by a process server or another authorized person. The person must then appear in court at the specified time and place as directed in the subpoena.
An unanswered subpoena is one which has been served on the named person, but the person on whom it was served has failed to appear as ordered.
The purpose of a subpoena is to get someone to come to court to either testify for you or against you. When a person gets this subpoena, they have no choice but to attend the court session.
The answer is no. Subpoenas are served to a person or entity, and only to that person or entity or an authorized person. For a subpoena to a person it has to be served only to that person or to someone living with that person at the residence. In the case of an entity it has to be served to someone who is authorized to accept a subpoena on behalf of the entity.
A subpoena must typically be served in person, but in some cases, it can be served over the phone if authorized by the court.
Basically the laws of every state with regard to extradition are the same: if a person is arrested in the state from the one that issued the warrant, the person is taken to the county jail of that jurisdiction and awaits extradition to the County seeking the person. Normally an extradition hearing is held to determine whether the individual is in fact the one that is being held for extradition. The individual can admit he is such person being sought (he is not admitting guilt) or challenge this. The state is seeking the person generally has up to two weeks to arrange for the defendant to be transferred, or the defendant can be released.
In certain circumstances, a person may challenge or contest a subpoena by filing a motion to quash with the court that issued the subpoena. Valid reasons for quashing a subpoena include lack of proper service, privilege, undue burden, or relevance. It is important to seek legal advice when considering how to respond to a subpoena.
Subpoena
The word you are trying to spell is "subpoena." A subpoena is a write ordering a person to attend a court.
It's certainly one legal argument that you could try to fight extradition with.
Subpoena