Motion papers must be filed with the E-file/Motion Support Office located in Room 227, Ex Parte Office located on the 10th Floor, Foreclosure Part Office located Room 295, OR in the Guardianship/Mental Hygiene Office located in Room 285 (see Note #2), at 360 Adams Street at least five (5) business days before the ...
FINAL PRE-NOTE ORDER. This form is used in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of Kings. The purpose of this form is to record that all parties involved in the case have represented that discovery (the process of collecting evidence and information for the case) is complete.
A motion may be withdrawn at any time prior to its return date by filing with the clerk a written request signed by counsel for the moving party.
The Kings County Supreme Court Civil Term handles civil matters, including name changes, matrimonial cases, foreclosures, mental hygiene applications, and elder law cases; while the Criminal Term handles felony criminal matters.
Decisions. If the motion or OSC can't be settled, the Judge will make a decision. Sometimes, the Judge makes a decision right away. If not, the Judge has 60 days by law to decide the motion.
The return date is the court date. The party making the motion chooses the court date and puts it in the Notice of Motion so everyone knows when to come to court.
A motion may be withdrawn at any time prior to its return date by filing with the clerk a written request signed by counsel for the moving party. A request to withdraw a motion after submission must be supported by a stipulation of withdrawal signed by all counsel.
A motion to withdraw is a formal legal request made by a party or their legal representative to remove or withdraw a previously filed motion, pleading, or legal document from consideration by the court.
Common grounds for a motion to dismiss in New York include: – Lack of subject matter jurisdiction: The court does not have the authority to hear the case. – Lack of personal jurisdiction: The court does not have power over the defendant.
The Brooklyn Supreme Courthouse is located on Adams Street between Joralemon and Johnson Streets. It also houses the Registrar's Office, County Clerk, and Surrogate's Court. Construction on the Supreme Courthouse began in 1955.