So helpful to have this calm explanation in an even tempo and without aggressive delivery. Thanks Mr Ayers. I was served this morning and I do believe the world will keep turning.
Thank you for calming me down I know the video is 3yrs old. I do appreciate how you determined not be scared but to walk through the process. Bc ever since I saw it my stomach has been hurting
You can check your local rules, but in states that allow this (service of just the summons), you often can respond with a document referred to as a demand for complaint that gives them a time limit to serve a complaint on you.
I can't comment on whether it was proper service or not (there are specific rules that have to be filed in order to use "Nail and Mail" service in New York), but assuming it was done correctly, the time period should be 30 days. But I would suggest you speak to a local lawyer to determine if service was proper.
@@ayerslawThis is true in that you dont necessarily even want to admit you have the thing if service was bad - some courts will consider you to have been served if you admit on the record to actual posession of a copy where there was bad service due to technical reasons.
It's going to depend on your local state's rules on service. In some states, you are allowed to place it on the door and also mail a copy to the person and that is considered good service.
Normally service is addressed by both statutory law and by court rules. The rules to be followed also depend upon the nature of what is being served - some process can only be served by law enforcement because service comes from the fourteenth amendment procedural due process clause of the United States constitution.
So helpful to have this calm explanation in an even tempo and without aggressive delivery. Thanks Mr Ayers. I was served this morning and I do believe the world will keep turning.
I'm glad you find it helpful, especially with all the stress that can come when you are first served with papers.
Thank you for calming me down I know the video is 3yrs old. I do appreciate how you determined not be scared but to walk through the process. Bc ever since I saw it my stomach has been hurting
You're welcome and I'm glad the video was helpful.
Well Clearfield, good attorney
Andrew - I didn’t receive a complaint with my summons. While I can guess, I don’t have a definitive answer as to why I’m being sued. What now?
You can check your local rules, but in states that allow this (service of just the summons), you often can respond with a document referred to as a demand for complaint that gives them a time limit to serve a complaint on you.
I'm in nyc and it was taped to my gate not handed to me so do I get 20 or 30 days to respond?
I can't comment on whether it was proper service or not (there are specific rules that have to be filed in order to use "Nail and Mail" service in New York), but assuming it was done correctly, the time period should be 30 days. But I would suggest you speak to a local lawyer to determine if service was proper.
@@ayerslawThis is true in that you dont necessarily even want to admit you have the thing if service was bad - some courts will consider you to have been served if you admit on the record to actual posession of a copy where there was bad service due to technical reasons.
What if they didn't serve u but put it on your door?
It's going to depend on your local state's rules on service. In some states, you are allowed to place it on the door and also mail a copy to the person and that is considered good service.
Normally service is addressed by both statutory law and by court rules. The rules to be followed also depend upon the nature of what is being served - some process can only be served by law enforcement because service comes from the fourteenth amendment procedural due process clause of the United States constitution.
I got a call
this phony country