This Handbook is designed to help people dealing with civil lawsuits in federal court without legal representation. Proceeding without a lawyer is called proceeding "pro se1," a Latin phrase meaning "for oneself," or sometimes "in propria persona," meaning "in his or her own person." Representing yourself in a lawsuit can be complicated, time consuming, and costly. Failing to follow court procedures can mean losing your case. For these reasons, you are urged to work with a lawyer if possible. Chapter 2 gives suggestions on finding a lawyer. Do not rely entirely on this Handbook. This Handbook provides a summary of civil lawsuit procedures, but it may not cover all procedures that may apply in your case. It also does not teach you about the laws that will control your case. Make sure you read the applicable federal and local court rules and do your own research at a law library or online to understand your case. The United States District Court for the Northern District of California has Clerk's Offices in the San Francisco, San Jose and Oakland courthouses. Clerk's Office staff can answer general questions, but they cannot give you any legal advice. For example, they cannot help you decide what to do in your lawsuit, tell you what the law means, or even advise you when documents are due. There are Legal Help Centers in the San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose courthouses where you can get free help with your lawsuit from an attorney who can help you prepare documents and give limited legal advice. This attorney will not be your lawyer and you will still be representing yourself. See Chapter 2 for more details.
Describes courtroom layouts, rules and customs, and looks at legal procedures, evidence, and goals.
For people dealing with a personal injury claim, a landlord-tenant dispute, a small business scrape or any of the dozens of other possible legal muddles, this book points the way through the complex court system.
This book explains each step of the civil litigation process from pre-litigation investigation through trial on the merits to give you the best chance of prevailing in your efforts whether you are a plaintiff or a defendant.
Gary Zeidwig was born and raised in southern Florida. Zeidwig graduated from the University of Florida and obtained his JD from Nova University Law School in Broward County, Florida.
You hear the horror stories that people tell when dealing with the government, whether on a state level or federal level.
Many disputes are too big for small claims court, but too small to justify a lawyer's contingency fee. Fortunately, with the help of this book, you can handle your own...
This book depicts information needed to show consumers how to file a case in Federal Court system when they have tried every means necessary in the dispute process to have the CRA's remove errors that was wrongly place there by creditors ...
In this volume, black-letter Rules of Professional Conduct are followed by numbered Comments that explain each Rule's purpose and provide suggestions for its practical application.
Uniquely practical, this guide is the consumer's answer to questions about law from the commonplace to the complex. Each chapter addresses a different subject, such as landlord-tenant relations and buying...
Juristat, Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics, Statistics Canada, Catalogue 85-002XIE, Vol. 27, No. 1. ... Paths to justice Scotland: What people in Scotland do and think about going to law. Oxford: Hart Publishing.