-Respondent’s address and/or telephone number is required; however, it can be the address of their job. If ex parte is denied and the matter is set for a hearing, the respondent cannot be verbally notified of the hearing, they must be served the documents and NOH personally; therefore, we will accept any address where respondent can be served.
-If petitioner doesn’t know respondent’s address, we typically tell them we can accept it without the address; however, if the matter gets set for hearing they MUST have an address to serve respondent. Usually, they can find the address online. If they try service at that address and service fails, they can motion for alternate service at that point.
@ABillmire 🚀 glad we have proof of concept for this method of making notes! I'm going to close this issue now since it does not require any active work, but we'll be able to find it by searching or the tag.
From Oakland (11/6/24):
-Respondent’s address and/or telephone number is required; however, it can be the address of their job. If ex parte is denied and the matter is set for a hearing, the respondent cannot be verbally notified of the hearing, they must be served the documents and NOH personally; therefore, we will accept any address where respondent can be served.
-If petitioner doesn’t know respondent’s address, we typically tell them we can accept it without the address; however, if the matter gets set for hearing they MUST have an address to serve respondent. Usually, they can find the address online. If they try service at that address and service fails, they can motion for alternate service at that point.