This form is a sample letter in Word format covering the subject matter of the title of the form.
This form is a sample letter in Word format covering the subject matter of the title of the form.
You typically have 30 days to respond to the request Once you've received (been served) the request, you have 30 or 35 days to respond, depending on how you received the request. In eviction cases (also known as unlawful detainer cases) you have 5 or 10 days to respond.
If the defendant didn't file a response by the deadline, the next day you can ask the court to end their chance to respond and to rule in your favor. This is called asking for entry of a default. You should file this within 10 days after the deadline to respond passed. California Rules of Court 3.110(g).
You typically have 30 days to respond to the request During the time you have to respond to discovery requests, you can still use mediation or work to negotiate a settlement with the other side.
If you do not respond, the other side may ask the judge to order that all the facts are true or documents are genuine. This can often cause you to lose your case.
Undeniably, if you ignore a request for information, the other party will either ask again or pursue a court order that forces you to provide evidence. This request, a motion to compel, requires submitting a formal request to a judge and asking them to intervene and request information.
If the other person does not respond, or their response is still incomplete, you can ask the court to order them to respond. You have 45 days from the service of the most recent responses to ask the court to make an order requiring an answer. If the response was served by mail, 5 extra days are added.
Requests for admission are not restricted to facts or documents, but “apply to conclusions, opinions, and even legal questions.” City of Glendale v. Marcus Cable Associates, LLC, 235 Cal. App. 4th 344, 353 (2015).
If the other person does not respond, or their response is still incomplete, you can ask the court to order them to respond. You have 45 days from the service of the most recent responses to ask the court to make an order requiring an answer. If the response was served by mail, 5 extra days are added.
If you ignore a college acceptance letter, admissions will consider that the same as a rejection. However, it's more respectful to decline. This generally only requires a few minutes to log in to the school's online system and reject the admission offer.
If the opposing side does not respond to your form interrogatories, special interrogatories, or request for production, you may file a motion seeking an order compelling the opposing party to respond.