The Clerk Division of the Auditor-Controller/County Clerk's Office provides a variety of functions including issuing Marriage Licenses; performing Civil Marriage Ceremonies; processing Fictitious Business Name Statements; and reviewing and issuing professional records such as Notary Oath Filings, Process Server ...
Copies of marriage certificates for licenses issued in Sacramento County are issued by the Sacramento County/Clerk Recorder's Office. For copies of marriage certificates for licenses issued in another California County, contact the California Department of Public Health's Office of Vital Records.
To respond, you may use the Responsive Declaration to Request for Order (FL-320) form, which can be found here: This information sheet provides an overview of the process if you have received notice of a Temporary Emergency (Ex Parte) Hearing in a family law case.
Yes. You need your final divorce order. Each court is different. However, today, most judges simply sign them. The ``stamp'' will be the automatically-generated docket information appearing on each page when the court, your attorney, or even you, file something electronically in the court's record/docket.
CDPH-VR is only able to provide you with a Certificate of Record, which includes the names of the parties, filing date, county, and case number of the divorce. Copies of the actual divorce decree can only be obtained from the Superior Court in the county where the divorce took place.
Records such as court orders, divorce decrees, and wills ​are only available from the Sacramento Superior Court: For court orders or divorce records contact the Civil Division at (916) 874-5522. For wills and other probate records contact the Probate Unit at (916) 875-3400.
You must fill out an Answer, serve the plaintiff, and file your Answer form with the court. Generally, this is due within 30 days after you were served. If you don't, the plaintiff can ask for a default. If there's a default, the court won't let you file an Answer and can decide the case without you.
Any opposition to the motion must be served and filed within five days of service of the moving papers and may be no longer than 15 pages. Any reply brief must be served and filed within two court days of service of the opposition papers and may be no longer than 5 pages.
1.06 Tentative Ruling System. (A) In all civil law and motion, writ, and other departments as designated, a Tentative Ruling System is utilized. On the afternoon of the court day before each calendar, the judge will publish a tentative ruling on each matter on the next day's calendar.
A Motion has three required parts, and an optional fourth: Notice of Motion and Motion (date, time, and location of hearing, and a brief statement of the request); Memorandum of Points and Authorities (legal argument); Declaration(s) (evidence); and. Proposed Order (usually optional, but recommended.)