The form cannot be filed electronically.
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.
In order to make a motion in the Court of Claims, you must prepare a set of "motion papers," serve a copy of the motion papers on the opposing party or the opposing party's attorney, and submit the original and two copies of the motion papers to the Clerk of the Court, with an Affidavit of Service (a sworn statement ...
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.
Small Claims Court helps individuals or corporations resolve disputes when the amount of the claim is $10,000 or less. All defendants must have an address in New York City. Get Small Claims Court information, including locations and hours of operation. Learn about case types handled by Small Claims Court.
Motions made by notice of motion and petitions and notices of petition in special proceedings are processed by the General Clerk's Office (Room 119) and are to be made returnable in the Motion Submission Part Courtroom (Room 130) on any business day of the week at AM.
A timely motion to dismiss pursuant to CPLR §3211(a) extends the Defendant's time to serve the answer until ten (10) days after an order issued by the court in regard to the motion has been entered and notice of entry has been provided.
The decision of the court shall be rendered within sixty days after the cause or matter is finally submitted or within sixty days after a motion under rule 4403, whichever is later, unless the parties agree to extend the time.
An example is a case where the husband and wife cannot agree on how to divide their property and their debts. In some counties, the parties agree to arbitrate disagreements about support as well. Local court rules may allow parties to choose mediation rather than arbitration if all sides agree.
The Scope of the Clause. This section of the clause is critical; it sets the boundaries for which disputes the tribunal is authorised to determine. Choice of Rules. The Number of Arbitrators. Appointing Authority. Choice of Venue. The language of the proceedings. Finality. Exclusion of the right of appeal.