Legal Question in Personal Injury in Georgia

What is a Motion to Compel and Brief in Support Thereof?


Asked on 11/29/11, 7:51 am

5 Answers from Attorneys

Cyrus Malekabadi Law Offices of Cyrus K. Malekabadi

It means you desperately need a lawyer and you're about to be sanctioned by the judge presiding over your case. The one you filed pro se, remember?

Have fun losing.

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Answered on 11/29/11, 8:54 am
Scott Riddle Law Office of Scott B. Riddle, LLC

If you have the documents, you can read them to see what they are.

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Answered on 11/29/11, 9:32 am
Paula McGill Attorney at Law

Both attorneys are right. The motion to compel is exactly what it means. It is a request to the court to compel a party to do something. Read the motion and memoraundum to determine what they are want to compel.

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Answered on 11/29/11, 4:52 pm
Glen Ashman Ashman Law Office also dba Glen Ashman Attorney

It means you are probably in major trouble because of not having a lawyer.

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Answered on 11/29/11, 5:23 pm
Ronald Arthur Lowry Ronald Arthur Lowry

A Motion to Compel is a motion asking the court to order a party in a case to do something, usually provide answers to written questions called "Interrogatories" or to produce documents previously asked for by a "Request for Production." If a litigant does not respond to those things the opposite party asks for an order compelling that to happen using the "Motion to Compel" as the means of doing so. If the litigant does not respond to the Motion it is automatically granted. Unless there is a real reason to not grant the Motion such as the documents don't exist or you don't have the information, even if the litigant responds the Motion will be granted and a court order issued. If you do not comply with the order your case usually will be thrown out and/or you may be held in contempt and incarcerated, i.e. put into jail for violation of the court order.

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Answered on 12/01/11, 2:27 pm


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