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Her name is Esther Zano. I came home one day to find her in my house. She is crazy. I cant afford a lawyer, so I need to find out how many people she is doing this to. How do I find out how many lawsuits she has going on in Los Angeles Superior Court Central District.

2006-06-21 08:02:24 · 7 answers · asked by Malory Knoxxx 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

7 answers

Did you call the cops?

2006-06-21 08:05:21 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Go to the courthouse. Los Angeles has about nine branch courts and the central court, you can go to any one of them. The one in Torrance is nice and has free parking. Parking at Central will be about $20.

At the courthouse there will be a clerk's office. In the clerk's office there are computer terminals that allow you to access the court's records by name. If you can't find them or need help ask the court personnel. Type in Esther Zano as plaintiff and every case any Esther Zano has filed in the last 30 or 40 years will come up. You can then view the case history for each case and in some instances view filed documents. Write down the case names and case numbers.

From your home comupter you can access the Los Angeles Superior Court's website which you can then use to view (and print) those documents scanned into the system. Access to the system from outside the courthouse is by case number only -- you can not search by a person's name. That's why you have to make that first trip to the courthouse.

If you want to use any of the filings as evidence in your case, you will have to have the physical courthouse file delivered to the courtroom when your case is tried. Talk to the clerk about how to do this.

Please note that while the judge must take note of any judgment in a prior case, the statements in pleadings may or may not be admitted in your case.

You may also want to check out California landlord/tenant law. In general, a landlord may not enter a tenant's apartment unless there is an emergency, the landlord has permission, or the landlord has given 24 hours written notice stating the need to enter.

2006-06-22 20:45:06 · answer #2 · answered by shoshidad 5 · 0 0

You don't mention what you're being sued for and whether the suit is valid. All you mention is trying to get out of the suit, which leads me to believe that it IS valid. You should be able to go to the courthouse and look up any other suits. Plus, I'm sure she used the same lawyer, so that should help narrow down the search.

2006-06-21 08:06:31 · answer #3 · answered by Goose&Tonic 6 · 0 0

Go to the registers office for the county you live in they should have the records you need, if not you might have to check back judgements against this person. You just might have a lot of papers to go through.

2006-06-21 08:09:24 · answer #4 · answered by RONALDA 1 · 0 0

get a lawyer advise , not just for the case but to let the lawyer know you are to resue the landlady and i bet you get the record and win

2006-06-21 08:21:21 · answer #5 · answered by aliajao 5 · 0 0

go to you local legal aid they can help and make sure you have police reports when she goes to your house without permission call the police when she does this

2006-06-21 08:06:58 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

go to public records

2006-06-21 08:08:23 · answer #7 · answered by barney 1 · 0 0

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