Whether for business purposes or for individual matters, everybody has to deal with legal situations at some point in their life. Filling out legal documents needs careful attention, starting with picking the appropriate form sample. For instance, when you choose a wrong edition of the Cancel Judgment Form California, it will be turned down when you send it. It is therefore important to get a reliable source of legal documents like US Legal Forms.
If you need to obtain a Cancel Judgment Form California sample, follow these easy steps:
With a substantial US Legal Forms catalog at hand, you never need to spend time searching for the right template across the web. Utilize the library’s easy navigation to find the proper form for any occasion.
To ask a court to set aside (cancel) a court order or judgment, you have to file a ?request for order to set aside,? sometimes called a ?motion to set aside? or ?motion to vacate.? The terms ?set aside? or ?vacate? a court order basically mean to ?cancel? or undo that order to start over on a particular issue.
You must file a motion for reconsideration within 10 days of being served with the written notice of entry of the order you want the court to reconsider. The motion must also include an affidavit with information about the original order and the new facts, circumstances, or law.
File your forms at the courthouse where you filed your case. The court clerk will process your Request for Dismissal (Form CIV-110) and Form CIV-120. The clerk will keep the original and return the copies of Form CIV-110 to you, stamped "Filed." Keep one for your records.
Complete an Abstract of Judgment (EJ-001) . Have it issued by the clerk and pay the issuance fee by submitting the document to the court location where your case was filed or you may also submit the document by eFile. Give the original issued Abstract to the County Recorder and pay their recording fee.
To remove a lien, file a certified copy of the Acknowledgment of Satisfaction of Judgment (form EJ-100) with each county recorder's office where you put the lien on their property.