Service by Notice and Acknowledgement of Receipt (Code Civ. Proc. § 415.30) is the recommended method of serving a summons on a known-to-be represented party or an unrepresented party who you believe to be amenable to such service.
Service by Notice and Acknowledgement of Receipt (Code Civ. Proc. § 415.30) is the recommended method of serving a summons on a known-to-be represented party or an unrepresented party who you believe to be amenable to such service.
The written response must be made within 20 days of personal service, or within 30 days of the time when service by any other means is complete. If the defendant fails to respond he or she is in default and plaintiff may be able to obtain a default judgment against the defendant.
The summons and complaint in the case are deemed “served” on the Defendant (i.e. the Defendant's 30-day clock to file an answer under CCP section 412.20 starts) on the date they put on the Acknowledgment. In addition to signing the Acknowledgment form, the Defendant also has to date their signature.
Generally, you have 30 days AFTER the date you are served to file a response with the court. The 30 days include weekend days and court holidays.
Once they are served, they have 30 days to respond. After that, your case can move forward even if they don't respond.
Your acknowledgment receipt should contain the names of the issuing party and the person receiving the document. A description, with the name of each document being issued, date of the issue and the purpose of the document should be clear.
How to serve by mail with Notice of Acknowledgment and Receipt Choose a server. Figure out when to serve. Fill out and copy Notice and Acknowledgement of Receipt. Prepare a return envelope. Have your server mail the papers and envelope. Wait for server to get signed Notice in the mail. Fill out the Proof of Service forms.