This is a Complaint pleading for use in litigation of the title matter. Adapt this form to comply with your facts and circumstances, and with your specific state law. Not recommended for use by non-attorneys.
This is a Complaint pleading for use in litigation of the title matter. Adapt this form to comply with your facts and circumstances, and with your specific state law. Not recommended for use by non-attorneys.
Notice of Intention to Defend - This is a form located on the bottom of your summons. Complete the Notice of Intention to Defend if you dispute owing all or some of what the plaintiff claims. The completed form must be returned to the Maryland District Court location listed at the top of your summons.
How Do You Apply for an Emergency Evaluation? Step 1: Complete the petition. Obtain a Petition for Emergency Evaluation (CC-DC-013) from the court clerk's office or online here. Step 2: File the petition. File the Petition for Emergency Evaluation during court hours. Step 3: Attend hearing the same day.
You and your attorney start the process by submitting an application for the emergency hearing. Your main goal at this point is to make clear to a judge that a particular situation represents an emergency and that a hearing should be scheduled as soon as possible.
If you cannot file a petition for emergency evaluation, contact the local mobile crisis team. If the situation requires immediate intervention (within two hours), call 911.
Enter the Case Number Enter your case number using one of the following formats: 99-12345. -cv-12345.
In District Court, after the court enters a judgment on affidavit, the defendant has 30 days to file a Motion to Vacate a Judgment. The 30 days starts when the judgment is entered, not when the defendant gets notice of the judgment. In the motion, you must explain why the judgment should be changed.
The general criteria for granting an emergency hearing: A child in immediate physical danger. A child who has been kidnapped. Other situations on a case-by-case basis as determined by a Family Division Magistrate.
You may file a petition for emergency evaluation only if you have reason to believe that the person you're filing for: • has a mental disorder, which means their behavior or other symptoms indicate a clear disturbance in the person's mental functioning (mental disorder does not include intellectual disability) and • ...
If you want to initiate or open a divorce case, use the Complaint/Counter-Complaint for Absolute Divorce (CC-DR-020) or Complaint/Counter-Complaint for Limited Divorce (CC-DR-021). If you want to respond to a divorce case that your spouse has opened, use the Answer (CC-DR-050) and Counter-Complaint (CC-DR-020/021).
Read the complaint and decide what to do. Read the complaint. You may agree with some, all, or none of the complaint. Write down next to each paragraph in the complaint whether you agree or disagree with what that paragraph says. If you agree with everything your spouse is asking for, you may not need to file anything.