43470 is for Superior Court-San Jose Facility and 43100 is for Santa Clara Superior Court. These codes assist in determining which court the case originates from.
§ 18.30(a). You must document that service with a certificate of service. A certificate of service is a signed written statement that the paper was served on all parties.
Tells the court that you had legal papers in a civil case - other than a summons - delivered to (served on) the other party. Lists the papers that were served and tells who they were served on, where, when, and how they were served, and who served them.
Tells the court that you had the other party served in person with legal papers. Lists the papers that were served. It also tells when and where the papers were served and who served them.
As an individual you can use Small Claims Court if your claim is for $12,500 or less. If you are an individual who owns a business (i.e. sole proprietor) and do business under a fictitious business name, you are considered to be an "individual" in Small Claims Court.
An example of a Proof of Service is a signed declaration from the person who served the documents, stating the name of the person who was served and the date, time, and manner of service. A Proof of Service may also include an affidavit, which is a sworn statement that the documents were properly served.
The process server must fill out and sign the proof of service form, which shows how, when, and where the papers were served, and who received them. The server then gives you the proof of service. Make a copy of the proof of service. Take both the original and the copy to the court clerk to file.
Early Settlement Conferences are only for cases where everyone agrees to try to settle the case early. The conference usually takes place very early in the case, within the first 6 months. Every case that does not settle before trial and would take more than one day in trial will have a Mandatory Settlement Conference.
It means a copy of a document (yes, usually a legal document of some kind) has been examined by an authorized representative of another (usually the clerk of a court representing the judge) and stamped with an official seal and signed by the clerk saying (in legal effect) “this is an accurate copy of this document ...