Jacksonville Answer to Complaint
Jacksonville Motion JNOV
Jacksonville Response to Motion for Partial Summary Judgment in Support of Hospital's Summary Judgment Motion
Jacksonville Notice of Dismissal
Filing Information
Contingency Fee Agreement with an Attorney or Law Firm
Cease and Desist Letter for Libelous or Slanderous Statements - Defamation of Character
Revocable or Irrevocable Proxy
Sample Letter for Acknowledgment of Receipt of Gift or Donation - Appreciative
USLF Multistate Patent and Trademark Law Handbook - Guide
Draw Request by a Contractor
Sample Letter for Request for Instructions
Verified Complaint for Replevin or Repossession
Proxy Statement - Neuberger and Berman - with exhibits
Absolutely! You can file a response to challenge their motion, providing your own evidence and arguments to counter their claims.
Yes, you need to file it following the court's timeline and rules, which typically set deadlines right before the trial starts.
If denied, the case will usually proceed to trial, allowing both sides to present their arguments before a judge or jury.
You can support it with documents, affidavits, and other evidence that backs up your claims and shows there’s nothing needing a trial.
You need to show that there are no genuine disputes about the important facts and that you're entitled to win as a matter of law.
You can file this motion after the discovery phase, but before the case goes to trial, when you believe there’s enough evidence to win.
A motion for summary judgment is a request to the court to decide a case without a trial, saying there are no important facts in dispute.