Legal Question in Civil Litigation in California

Answering a civil complaint

I have a brother that is suing my brother and I for statemant made after our father passed away. there was no will so the estate went thru probate. So my brother does not like what to courts valued the business that he took over and received after probate. he is suing us for what he thinks is the difference of what he thought the business was worth and what the court presented it to be worth. What grounds do I have and how do I answer the complaint.


Asked on 12/10/08, 3:43 pm

3 Answers from Attorneys

Bryan C. Becker Your Lawyer for Life.

Re: Answering a civil complaint

If the statements were made during the court proceedings or in connection with them, I would suggest you consider filing a special motion to strike based upon Cal Code Civil Procedure 425.16. This is known as the Anti-SLAPP statute. The motion may be filed within 60 days of the service of the complaint.

If you would like more information, please feel free to contact me to discuss.

Yours truly,

Bryan

619.400.4929

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Answered on 12/10/08, 3:57 pm
Stanley Moerbeek The Law Offices of Stanley L Moerbeek

Re: Answering a civil complaint

If the new civil suit is based on the value of the business decided by the probate court proceedings, then that valuation is what the law calls res judicata (i.e. already decided). The proper way to raise such an issue would be to file a general demurrer to the complaint, not an answer, and provide the court with certified copies of the probate court's valuation and judgment attached to an accompanying declaration, under penalty of perjury, that shows the value assigned to the business by the probate court. Such a procedure maybe too complicated for a layman to handle. I suggest you retain an attorney to handle this right away.

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Answered on 12/10/08, 5:26 pm
Terry A. Nelson Nelson & Lawless

Re: Answering a civil complaint

You answer the complaint by filing properly drafted Answer or appropriate motions to strike or demur. Since you don't know how to practice law, hire an attorney to represent you to minimize the chances of getting a judgment against you. Feel free to contact me if serious about doing so. It may be possible to get the case dismissed, or to settle it somehow without spending a fortune in litigation expenses.

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Answered on 12/10/08, 7:42 pm


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