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Common methods to avoid being served Not answering the door. Lying about their identity. Hiding in the closet until the process server leaves. Staying at a family member or friend's home.
There is no limit to the number of times a process server can visit you or come to your house to serve you documents. Each process server has their own rules as to how many times they will attempt to serve documents. In most cases, three attempts will be made, and at different times of the day and on different days.
Delivering to a place of work If serving the documents to a residence does not work, the process server can also attempt to deliver to the person's place of work or business. The documents will need to be handed to the person's agent or the person in charge of the business at the time of delivery.
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.
In most cases, three attempts will be made, and at different times of the day and on different days. If the process server fails to serve the documents after all attempts are made, the applicant can go to the court and ask permission to deliver the documents by a substitute or alternative service method.