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The Court requires at least five (5) days written notice to all parties, unless otherwise shortened by the Court, agreed to by all parties, or the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure require different deadlines. The failure to file a notice of hearing will result in the Court passing the hearing.
Grounds to set aside a default judgment may exist if there was mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect.
A response and brief to an opposed motion must be filed within 21 days from the date the motion is filed.
You must file a Motion to Set Aside Default Judgment and Notice of Hearing within 30 days of the date the default judgment was signed by the judge. See Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 329(b). In Justice Court, the deadline is 14 days.
Summary judgment motions do have a timeline for filing and response. First, a summary judgment motion must be on file at least 21 days before it can be heard. (TRCP 166a) Second, any opposing affidavits or written response should be on file no later than 7 days before the hearing. (Id.)