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.
Bifurcation of issues. As part of the noticed Request for Order (FL-300) of a party, the stipulation of the parties, case management, or the court's own motion, the court may bifurcate one or more issues to be tried separately before other issues are tried.
For purposes of this rule: (1) A "trial day" is defined as a period no less than two and a half hours of a single court day. (2) A "long-cause hearing" is defined as a hearing on a request for order that extends more than a single court day.
(1) The court may deliver any notice, order, opinion, or other document issued by the court by electronic means. (B) Adopting a local rule stating that the court accepts electronic service. The rule must indicate where to obtain the electronic service address at which the court agrees to accept service.
California Rule of Court 5.125 requires that the prevailing party provide the other party with a copy of the PROPOSED ORDER before submitting it to the Court. If the other party appeared in court, you must serve them with a proposed Findings and Order After Hearing within 10 days of the hearing date.
This is used as the first page to list the decisions (orders) that a court made after a hearing. The orders are generally attached to this page.
(b) Either party may request a continuance of the hearing, which the court shall grant on a showing of good cause. The request may be made in writing before or at the hearing or orally at the hearing. The court may also grant a continuance on its own motion.
If you made an error like filing in the wrong case or submitting the wrong version of a document contact the clerk's office. Use the Court CM/ECF Lookup to find the clerk's office contact information.
The court began accepting documents through eFiling on March 25, 2024. eFiling is now mandatory for all parties represented by attorneys as of April 26, 2024. Self-represented litigants are encouraged to use eFiling but are not required to pursuant to CRC 2.253(b)(2) and CCP1010.
Please tell us as much as you can about what you are looking for, and tell us how we can reach you, including by email. Fill out and send a Request for Judicial Administrative Records form to the Public Information Officer by fax at (925) 608-2658 or by email at: mediainfo@contracostaurts.ca.
The Superior Court of Contra Costa implemented its E-filing system in 2022. They selected Odyssey Case Manager from Tyler Technologies, a software solution in use by 29 of the 58 courts in the state.