If you have a court date and you are not able to attend, or if you must provide documents to the court and cannot meet the deadline, you must file a Motion to Continue and a Notice of Hearing. Your request for a continuance and hearing must be filed as far in advance as possible.
A motion is a formal proposal by a member to do something. Motions are the basis of the group decision-making process. They focus the group on what is being decided. Generally, a motion should be phrased in a way to take an action or express an opinion.
A motion is an application to the court made by the prosecutor or defense attorney, requesting that the court make a decision on a certain issue before the trial begins. The motion can affect the trial, courtroom, defendants, evidence, or testimony. Only judges decide the outcome of motions.
I have a warrant, what do I do? A: To quash a warrant, you must appear for a Motion to Quash hearing. Warrants are no longer quashed on the same day.
Overview. During a civil case, most of your interactions with the judge will be the result of you or the other side filing a written motion. A “motion” is a written request to the judge that asks for a ruling on some issue in the case.
If you are the Responding Party, you must serve the Moving Party with your responding documents and file them at least four (4) days before the motion. You can respond by filling out, serving and filing a Form 14A. Both parties must file the Affidavit of Service Form 6B with the court.
A motion is a written request to the court asking it to do something or require your opponent to do something. There are many reasons to file a motion. Motions ask the court to enter an order deciding something or requiring your opponent to do something. Either side in a case can file a motion.
A motion is a written request made to the court, asking the judge to issue an order. The motion must be supported by evidence.
All emergency custody petitions must be accompanied by a separate Motion for Temporary Orders, a form of Emergency Child Custody Order for the judge to sign, and an Order to Appear on the motion for temporary orders. The judge will review all of your documents and will do one of three things.
If you have a court date and you are not able to attend, or if you must provide documents to the court and cannot meet the deadline, you must file a Motion to Continue and a Notice of Hearing. Your request for a continuance and hearing must be filed as far in advance as possible.
 
                    