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"There is a time deadline you must be concerned about. The summons, which is a court paper issued by the clerk of the court, requires you to file a formal response to the claims made against you in the petition for dissolution (the paper that asks for the divorce and other relief) with the court, within 20 days of your being served. If you let that deadline pass without filing a response with the clerk, the clerk of court could enter a default against you. A default means you may lose the ability to raise defenses, make claims or present evidence at trial. A judge can enter a default, too. A default will be followed by a final judgment after default, unless the judge sets aside the default if there is a legal basis to do so (that’s a discretionary call for the judge to make and must be based on a good legal reason, usually some type of excusable neglect on your part). You do not want a court clerk or judge to enter a default or final judgment after default against you in your divorce case unless you don’t care whether all of the relief requested by your spouse in the petition for dissolution is granted and made part of the judgment of dissolution by the judge."

2007-04-06 02:23:41 · answer #1 · answered by What, what, what?? 6 · 0 0

Basically it means you have only so much time to reply to the date you were served with legalpapers defining some legal action like divorce against you. If you chose not to respond within that time, you waive your right to defend yourself in court before a Judge and he may award the full request to the other party suing you by default. Hope this helps

2007-04-06 02:37:16 · answer #2 · answered by Arthur W 7 · 0 0

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2015-02-04 14:40:58 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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