OK, this is the scenario. This is in Indiana. An attorney files a motion to the court, the other side is Pro Se. This attorney files a motion to the court, then serves it by mail to the Pro Se side. The Pro Se side get the motion in the mail 2 days later and gets an objection to the motion in to court the day after they receive it in the mail. By the time the Pro Se side files their objection in court, which mind you is the day after they had received the motion, the Judge has already granted the attorneys' motion before the Pro Se side has even received the motion. Wouldn't this be a violation of the Pro Se's Due Process of Law, as the court did not allow enought time for them to get an objection motion in?
2007-11-14
14:54:44
·
6 answers
·
asked by
bear 2 zealand ©
6
in
Law & Ethics