No.
The person filing a lawsuit is the Plaintiff. The person they are suing is called the defendant.
The person who brings a lawsuit is called the Plaintiff or Petitioner.
Excusable Neglect (CCP473(b)): To be excusable, the neglect must have been the act or omission of a reasonably prudent person under the circumstances. Forgetting the lawsuit, being too busy to properly respond, or being unable to afford an attorney are not ground for excusable neglect. Examples of excusable neglect include: * Illnes that disables the party from responding on apearing in court * Failure to respond because you relied on your attorney to do so * Failure to appear at trial because you relied on misinformation provided by a court officer.
Not to collect a debt, that must be handled through the BK process. Anything else, yes.
A lawsuit is an action a person takes in the court of law when they feel wronged by another person or company seeking money from damages.
The person who files a lawsuit is called the plaintiff if they are the one filing the lawsuit, or the defendant if they are the one being sued.
Either through your own "uninsured motorist" coverage in your policy or through a lawsuit against the person that hit you.
There is no such thing as a criminal lawsuit. Criminal prosecutions are brought by the state through the appropriate prosecution, and are not called lawsuits. Lawsuits are civil suits, that are, by definition, not criminal.
plaintiff
A plaintiff initiates a lawsuit against a defendant.
a medical person in a hospital referred to their computer on wheels as a 'cow' and a family member thought this person was talking about them. it led to a lawsuit.
The person who is filing the lawsuit against someone is the plaintiff in the US court system.