The judgment creditor or its attorney must file a written affidavit to enforce the foreign judgment, along with a certified copy of the judgment from the other state The written affidavit must provide the name and address of the judgment creditor, its attorney (if any), and the judgment debtor.
Process shall be served by the sheriff of the county where the action is brought or where the defendant is found, or by his deputy, or by the marshal or sheriff of the court, or by his deputy, or by any citizen of the United States specially appointed by the court for that purpose or by someone who is not a party and ...
A legitimation petition may be filed in the juvenile court of the county in which a deprivation proceeding regarding the child is pending. If there is a pending petition for adoption of the child, the father must file the legitimation petition in the county in which the adoption petition is filed.
If both parents freely agree and consent that the child may be legitimated, both the mother's and father's signatures are required. The signatures must be notarized and photo identification is also required.
Legitimation is a process where a child born out of wedlock is considered legitimate by fiction of law due to the subsequent valid marriage of the child's biological parents, who at the time of the conception of the child do not have any legal impediment to marry each other.
How do I file a complaint or petition in civil court? You file the complaint or petition with the clerk of court. You generally want to file in the court in the county where the person you are suing lives. Along with the complaint, the court must be told where to serve (give it a copy of it to) the defendant.
Since the biological father is the only person who is allowed to file for legitimation, establishing paternity first is necessary to file for legitimation. If a father wants to file for legitimation regarding custody and visitation rights with the child, he must do so in the county where the mother resides.
Under Georgia divorce law, residency is established once one has lived in Georgia for six (6) months. This six-month period must be consecutive and must be the six months prior to filing the divorce case. The individual living in Georgia can be your wife; it does not have to be you.
(b) The oath of office prescribed by subsection (a) of this Code section may be administered to the members of the General Assembly by any Justice of the Supreme Court, Judge of the Court of Appeals, judge of the superior courts, or judge of the state courts.
You must file for divorce with the Clerk of the Superior Court in the county where you or your spouse have lived for at least 6 months. You'll start by filing a complaint for divorce, or petition for divorce, with the legal grounds for your divorce and what issues you want the court to address.