Creditor court case

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sdima114

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Greetings, I am (1) out of (2) defendants in a case where a judgment was won for a unpaid balance to a creditor. My co-defendant filed a notice to vacate the judgment against the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs followed by filing a affirmation in opposition. The case went before the courts and was postponed to a later date in order to allow the judge time to review the case. At the next hearing my co-defendant who filed the notice to vacate the judgment failed to appear in court. The plaintiff appeared and submitted a supplemental affidavit in opposition. The judge once again postponed the hearing to a later date, granting me time to locate my co-defendant. Unfortunately he is unreachable. My question to you as a codefendant can I file a new motion to vacate the judgment ? If not, What type of paperwork do I need to file? What options do I have ? I would like to have the judge review the case and charges on the bill.
 
Greetings, I am (1) out of (2) defendants in a case where a judgment was won for a unpaid balance to a creditor. My co-defendant filed a notice to vacate the judgment against the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs followed by filing a affirmation in opposition. The case went before the courts and was postponed to a later date in order to allow the judge time to review the case. At the next hearing my co-defendant who filed the notice to vacate the judgment failed to appear in court. The plaintiff appeared and submitted a supplemental affidavit in opposition. The judge once again postponed the hearing to a later date, granting me time to locate my co-defendant. Unfortunately he is unreachable. My question to you as a codefendant can I file a new motion to vacate the judgment ? If not, What type of paperwork do I need to file? What options do I have ? I would like to have the judge review the case and charges on the bill.



You're in over your head on this one.
Many lawyers don't know how to get a judgment vacated. Why? becaus eto do so is VERY rare.
Hire a lawyer. Vacating a judgment is unfair to the one who initially prevailed, unless you can show the trial court erred.

Having a judgnment vacated is very complex. There is more to it than filling out a form. What reversible error occurred?

Why should the common law principle of stare decisis now be reversed in your case?
 
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