View Single Post
  #5  
Old 02-12-2008, 10:49 AM
sheisaceo sheisaceo is offline
Practice Makes Perfect
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 442
The minute that she is served, she writes a letter telling the court clerk that she is returning the notice for refusal of cause.

TO CLERK: "This instrument is returned to you for refusal of cause. Please insert this response in the jacket for this cause number" xxxxxx-xxxx. She should sign her name in blue ink and take a red pen and write diagonally across the first three pages 'REFUSAL FOR CAUSE'. It is as simple as that.

Please make note that the instructions for this goes back many years thus the differences in ink.

Take this letter to a notary. Make sure that the letter has an area (jurat/acknowledgment) for the notary to sign, at the bottom, with a description that the notary has seen the letter, is knowledgable of the contents and assures that your friend (spelled out) wrote the letter for the purpose intended. Then take the letter and send it certified with delivery confirmation.

Make sure that she gets a copy of the same letter stamped by the notary, also along with the receipt for the letter mailing and you can even take this farther to print out the delivery confirmation from the post office when you go online to see if it arrived at destination for her records. If there is any issue where someone says that this letter was not received, you have your paper trail for recourse.

In an ideal world you have 72 hours to do this, but the preference is to do this immediately.

After delivery, call to make sure that the action was rescinded. Should be 10 days later.

Please see this link:

http://www.suijuris.net/forum/succes...debt-gone.html

There is helpful information for this same subject. The above I devised myself and has proven successful.
Reply With Quote