Welcome to SPARC Forums. Please login or sign up.

Apr 25, 2024, 03:29:49 AM

Login with username, password and session length

This is what J&D site had....

Started by dipper, Aug 14, 2005, 08:33:11 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

dipper

Soc,

I had asked about ex parte in Virginia.

This is what I just read on the J&D court information.


"First continuance granted by clerk; subsequently by judge on motion."

Original court date was set for August 9.  Multiple filings after original had the Clerk continue the hearings to August 23.

This was not a requested change to date, but it was requested to have all hearings the same day.

Would bm be able to obtain a continuance without it going thru the judge?


If dh calls and finds this is under consideration, or being granted, can he file some sort of motion for reconsideration?

Thank you


socrateaser

>Soc,
>
>I had asked about ex parte in Virginia.
>
>This is what I just read on the J&D court information.
>
>
>"First continuance granted by clerk; subsequently by judge on
>motion."
>
>Original court date was set for August 9.  Multiple filings
>after original had the Clerk continue the hearings to August
>23.
>
>This was not a requested change to date, but it was requested
>to have all hearings the same day.
>
>Would bm be able to obtain a continuance without it going thru
>the judge?

No. You must receive notice. When you do, respond and object to the continuance on grounds that this hearing has been pending for 4 months, that the other parent has known both that the hearing and the start of school would occur in the same general time frame, and that this is nothing but a thinly veild stall tactic.
>
>If dh calls and finds this is under consideration, or being
>granted, can he file some sort of motion for reconsideration?

No. A continuance is cut and dried -- you get it or you don't, based on a showing of good cause, unless the other party can show unfair prejudice or unreasonable delay. In some courts, the judge will not permit his/her calendar to be upset, because it harms other litigants -- sometimes the judge will refuse all continuances for any reason other than some extreme hardship.