Form with which an individual may formally accept an appointment as a corporate officer or representative.
Form with which an individual may formally accept an appointment as a corporate officer or representative.
Rule 6. Form of Papers. (a) All papers submitted to the Commercial Division shall not be inconsistent with CPLR 2101 and section 202.5(a) of this Part. Papers shall be double-spaced and contain print no smaller than 12 point, or 8½ × 11 inch paper, bearing margins no smaller than one inch.
Rule 9. Accelerated Adjudication Actions. (a) This rule is applicable to all actions, except to class actions brought under Article 9 of the CPLR, in which the court by written consent of the parties is authorized to apply the accelerated adjudication procedures of the Commercial Division of the Supreme Court.
To qualify for assignment to the Commercial Division, a case must be "commercial," which is defined to include contract and real estate cases, corporate affairs, arbitration matters and some insurance matters.
11-f - Depositions of Entities; Identification of Matters (a) A notice or subpoena may name as a deponent a corporation, business trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company, association, joint venture, public corporation, government, or govern- mental subdivision, agency or instrumentality, or any ...
Understanding New York Commercial Division Rule 13(c) Rule 13(c) specifies that the expert report must contain: A complete statement of all opinions the expert will express and the basis and reasons for them.
The MySummons. NYC site will provide you with the information you need to answer a criminal summons issued in New York City.
The MySummons. NYC site will provide you with the information you need to answer a criminal summons issued in New York City. Attorneys may file their notice of appearance through the EDDS Electronic Document Delivery System found at NYCourts.
If it is a summons that was served to initiate a matter in a court of record, look it up in the office of the record keeper for the Court (generally the county clerk or equivalent). If it was not a court of record, try asking the court clerk.