Legal Question in Civil Litigation in California

What is waiver service of summons?

Instead of answering the defendant have returned a waiver service of summons on it:

"I understand that a judgment may be entered against me (or the

party on whose behalf I am acting) if an answer or motion under Rule

12 is not served upon you within 60 days after 1/27/12"

and signed it on 3/27/12.

1.Does above mean the defendant is postponing the answer and if so how long he could postpone?

2.Does it mean the defendant would no longer answer knowing that the judge may

make a judgment against him?


Asked on 4/06/12, 5:12 am

2 Answers from Attorneys

Edward Hoffman Law Offices of Edward A. Hoffman

It means the defendant is saying you don't have to formally serve him. Usually when a defendant files this type of waiver he has received the summons and complaint by a means that does not qualify as proper service but has decided not to make the plaintiff jump through all the hoops proper service requires.

Service of process is normally what subjects a defendant to the court's authority. It also starts the clock on the defendant's duty to answer or bring a motion attacking the complaint. A defendant who waives service thereby submits to the court's authority and agrees to respond to the complaint just as if he had been served. Aside from the fact that you didn't actually serve him, the case will proceed exactly as it would have if the defendant had been served on the date he signed the waiver.

Note to other readers: the waiver of service is a standard form used in federal court. California state courts have a similar document called a notice and acknowledgment of receipt. There are some differences between the two procedures, but they serve the same purpose.

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Answered on 4/06/12, 10:26 am
Edward Hoffman Law Offices of Edward A. Hoffman

There is a mistake in my prior answer. I wrote that "the case will proceed exactly as it would have if the defendant had been served on the date he signed the waiver." It will actually proceed as it would have if the defendant had been served when the plaintiff sent the request for waiver, not when the defendant signed it.

The defendant's time to respond in a California state court would begin when he signs a notice and acknowledgment of receipt, not when it was sent to him. This is one of the differences I mentioned previously between the state and federal procedures.

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Answered on 4/06/12, 3:49 pm


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