• who's the defendant?

    From RichD@21:1/5 to All on Tue Sep 20 20:55:44 2022
    Let's say you want to sue a business in small
    claims court, something routine.

    You visit the courthouse, fill out the paper work,
    you have to name the defendant. What if it's a
    franchise of a national/international organization? (CVS)
    What goes in the blank?

    Yes, I have a motive behind this question -

    --
    Rich

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  • From Roy@21:1/5 to RichD on Tue Sep 20 21:55:00 2022
    On 9/20/2022 8:55 PM, RichD wrote:
    Let's say you want to sue a business in small
    claims court, something routine.

    You visit the courthouse, fill out the paper work,
    you have to name the defendant. What if it's a
    franchise of a national/international organization? (CVS)
    What goes in the blank?

    Yes, I have a motive behind this question -

    --
    Rich


    AFAIK the defendant is the owner of the business. If you fall down in a McDonalds then you sue the owner (usually the franchisee).

    It may take bit of work to find the owner. The real estate may be
    leased to the business so the property deed may not help. The best
    thing might be to see who has the business license. Many governments
    require the license be posted in the business.

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  • From Barry Gold@21:1/5 to RichD on Wed Sep 21 11:25:51 2022
    On 9/20/2022 8:55 PM, RichD wrote:
    Let's say you want to sue a business in small
    claims court, something routine.

    You visit the courthouse, fill out the paper work,
    you have to name the defendant. What if it's a
    franchise of a national/international organization? (CVS)
    What goes in the blank?

    Yes, I have a motive behind this question -

    I think CVS stores are owned by CVS, so you would sue CVS (see my
    earlier post about "registered agents for service of process")

    But if you want to sue a MacDonalds or Starbucks franchise, you would
    either visit the place and look at their business license, or contact
    the county/city registry of business licenses (or a large public library
    might know).

    I guess you could also sue "John Doe, Richard Roe, et al" and have the
    business served. If they file a demurrer ("that's not us"), you grab the
    name from the demurrer amend your lawsuit, and serve them again. (You'll probably have to pay an additional fee to amend the suit.)

    If they're smart, they won't do that, because the fees you paid get
    added to the judgment if you win.

    --
    I do so have a memory. It's backed up on DVD... somewhere...

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  • From Barry Gold@21:1/5 to Roy on Wed Sep 21 11:28:23 2022
    On 9/20/2022 9:55 PM, Roy wrote:

    AFAIK the defendant is the owner of the business.  If you fall down in a McDonalds then you sue the owner (usually the franchisee).

    It may take  bit of work to find the owner.  The real estate may be
    leased to the business so the property deed may not help.  The best
    thing might be to see who has the business license.  Many governments require the license be posted in the business.

    Most cities and counties maintain a registry of business licenses, so
    you can get that information from the relevant official. I have also
    found public libraries to be useful. Let's say I decide to sue Ford
    Motor Company in small claims court. Ford isn't headquartered in
    California, but they do business here. The law requires them to have a "registered agent" in California whom you can serve with the papers. The Business section of the downtown Los Angeles library has a list of those agents. Or at least used to: I called up once and got the info.

    --
    I do so have a memory. It's backed up on DVD... somewhere...

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  • From Stuart O. Bronstein@21:1/5 to RichD on Fri Sep 23 18:17:00 2022
    RichD <r_delaney2001@yahoo.com> wrote:

    Let's say you want to sue a business in small
    claims court, something routine.

    You visit the courthouse, fill out the paper work,
    you have to name the defendant. What if it's a
    franchise of a national/international organization? (CVS)
    What goes in the blank?

    The answer to your questeion depends on the form of the business you
    are suing. If it's a proprietorship or partnership, you sue the
    individual owners. You can find their name in the county database of Fictitious Names. Check with the county clerk to see how to find
    those owners, though many counties have that information on line now.

    If the business you are suing is a corporation or LLC doing business
    in your state, the name of who you sue is the name of the corporation
    or LLC. Check the records of your state's Secretary of State, to
    find the precise name of the company, and their "Agent for Service of
    Process." That agent is the person you serve the summons and
    complaint on.


    --
    Stu
    http://DownToEarthLawyer.com

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  • From RichD@21:1/5 to Barry Gold on Fri Oct 21 20:35:38 2022
    On September 21, Barry Gold wrote:
    Let's say you want to sue a business in small
    claims court, something routine.
    You visit the courthouse, fill out the paper work,
    you have to name the defendant. What if it's a
    franchise of a national/international organization? (CVS)
    What goes in the blank?

    I think CVS stores are owned by CVS, so you would sue CVS (see my
    earlier post about "registered agents for service of process")
    But if you want to sue a MacDonalds or Starbucks franchise, you would
    either visit the place and look at their business license, or contact
    the county/city registry of business licenses (or a large public library might know).

    So I look up the business license of the franchisee, and name him as defendant.

    Now in this case, we had a dispute, the manager said "The computer software is corporate, we can't do anything about it, we have to follow its procedures." The machine is master, and the human operators are servants -

    So I want to name the franchisee, and CVS, through their registered agent?

    The case could become interesting, because if my complaint holds up,
    it implies a system wide issue; consumers are harmed every day,
    routinely. Then it might evolve into a class action suit, though that's
    a stretch,

    In such a case, might we ask for punitive damages, to provoke the
    corporation to change its policy?

    --
    Rich

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  • From RichD@21:1/5 to Stuart O. Bronstein on Fri Oct 21 20:36:05 2022
    On September 23, Stuart O. Bronstein wrote:
    Let's say you want to sue a business in small
    claims court, something routine.
    You visit the courthouse, fill out the paper work,
    you have to name the defendant. What if it's a
    franchise of a national/international organization? (CVS)

    If the business you are suing is a corporation or LLC doing business
    in your state, the name of who you sue is the name of the corporation
    or LLC. Check the records of your state's Secretary of State, to
    find the precise name of the company, and their "Agent for Service of Process." That agent is the person you serve the summons and
    complaint on.

    After filing the papers at the court house, I have to serve the summons
    myself? Doesn't the court notify him, through registered mail?

    --
    Rich

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  • From Barry Gold@21:1/5 to RichD on Sat Oct 22 07:43:40 2022
    On 10/21/2022 8:36 PM, RichD wrote:
    On September 23, Stuart O. Bronstein wrote:
    Let's say you want to sue a business in small
    claims court, something routine.
    You visit the courthouse, fill out the paper work,
    you have to name the defendant. What if it's a
    franchise of a national/international organization? (CVS)

    If the business you are suing is a corporation or LLC doing business
    in your state, the name of who you sue is the name of the corporation
    or LLC. Check the records of your state's Secretary of State, to
    find the precise name of the company, and their "Agent for Service of
    Process." That agent is the person you serve the summons and
    complaint on.

    After filing the papers at the court house, I have to serve the summons myself? Doesn't the court notify him, through registered mail?

    No. The clerk should tell you the process if you ask, but the general
    procedure is to do one of three things:

    1. Get a process server to hand the papers (the "summons and complaint")
    to the defendant, in person. In LA County, the Sheriff's office will do
    this fora small fee (around
    2. Send the papers to the defendant by certified mail.

    When I was in my late teens, my father ran a small check cashing
    business. He cashed two kinds of checks: payroll checks and government
    checks. Occasionally some business owner would stop payment on a check
    or write an NSF check. Then he would call or if necessary visit the
    business, inform the owner of the rules about paychecks (higher priority
    than other debts) and the "holder in due course" doctrine.

    If the owner refused to pay, it was off to small claims court.

    I was in college at that point, and during the summer I would often go
    to work with him, help out in small ways, and then go off to the library
    or watch a movie.

    One morning he stopped by a resident, gave me the papers, and told me to
    knock on the door, ask the person's name, and give him the papers. I
    did, then signed the affadavit of service. [You can't serve the papers yourself, but almost any other person except your lawyer can. In LA
    County, the Sheriff's department will do this for $40 (small claims).]


    --
    I do so have a memory. It's backed up on DVD... somewhere...

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  • From Barry Gold@21:1/5 to RichD on Sat Oct 22 07:42:01 2022
    On 10/21/2022 8:35 PM, RichD wrote:
    On September 21, Barry Gold wrote:
    Let's say you want to sue a business in small
    claims court, something routine.
    You visit the courthouse, fill out the paper work,
    you have to name the defendant. What if it's a
    franchise of a national/international organization? (CVS)
    What goes in the blank?

    I think CVS stores are owned by CVS, so you would sue CVS (see my
    earlier post about "registered agents for service of process")
    But if you want to sue a MacDonalds or Starbucks franchise, you would
    either visit the place and look at their business license, or contact
    the county/city registry of business licenses (or a large public library
    might know).

    So I look up the business license of the franchisee, and name him as defendant.

    Now in this case, we had a dispute, the manager said "The computer software is
    corporate, we can't do anything about it, we have to follow its procedures." The machine is master, and the human operators are servants -

    So I want to name the franchisee, and CVS, through their registered agent?

    The case could become interesting, because if my complaint holds up,
    it implies a system wide issue; consumers are harmed every day,
    routinely. Then it might evolve into a class action suit, though that's
    a stretch,

    In such a case, might we ask for punitive damages, to provoke the
    corporation to change its policy?

    If you think the policy is sufficiently harmful. But if you're looking
    to get CVS to change their policy, you'd get more results with a class
    action suit. And in general, if you're looking to go for punitive
    damages, it's timeto get out of Small Claims and hire an actual lawyer.


    --
    I do so have a memory. It's backed up on DVD... somewhere...

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  • From Stuart O. Bronstein@21:1/5 to RichD on Sat Oct 22 08:49:55 2022
    RichD <r_delaney2001@yahoo.com> wrote:
    Stuart O. Bronstein wrote:

    Let's say you want to sue a business in small
    claims court, something routine.
    You visit the courthouse, fill out the paper work,
    you have to name the defendant. What if it's a
    franchise of a national/international organization? (CVS)

    If the business you are suing is a corporation or LLC doing
    business in your state, the name of who you sue is the name of
    the corporation or LLC. Check the records of your state's
    Secretary of State, to find the precise name of the company, and
    their "Agent for Service of Process." That agent is the person
    you serve the summons and complaint on.

    After filing the papers at the court house, I have to serve the
    summons myself? Doesn't the court notify him, through registered
    mail?

    That can be done in California small claims court for an additional
    fee. But that doesn't guarantee the person is served - if he doesn't
    pick it up and sign for it, he's not served.

    Serving the defendant is your responsibility. And normally personal
    service (not by mail) is required.

    --
    Stu
    http://DownToEarthLawyer.com

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  • From Stuart O. Bronstein@21:1/5 to RichD on Sat Oct 22 09:55:04 2022
    RichD <r_delaney2001@yahoo.com> wrote:
    Barry Gold wrote:

    Let's say you want to sue a business in small
    claims court, something routine.
    You visit the courthouse, fill out the paper work,
    you have to name the defendant. What if it's a
    franchise of a national/international organization? (CVS)
    What goes in the blank?

    I think CVS stores are owned by CVS, so you would sue CVS (see my
    earlier post about "registered agents for service of process")
    But if you want to sue a MacDonalds or Starbucks franchise, you
    would either visit the place and look at their business license,
    or contact the county/city registry of business licenses (or a
    large public library might know).

    So I look up the business license of the franchisee, and name him
    as defendant.

    Yes, that should work. Checking the DBA database is also a good
    idea. Again, it could be a corporation, or LLC so you could serve
    their Agent for Service of Process.

    Now in this case, we had a dispute, the manager said "The computer
    software is corporate, we can't do anything about it, we have to
    follow its procedures." The machine is master, and the human
    operators are servants -

    So I want to name the franchisee, and CVS, through their
    registered agent?

    Yes, you should sue both. Name the corporations, serve the Agents.

    The case could become interesting, because if my complaint holds
    up, it implies a system wide issue; consumers are harmed every
    day, routinely. Then it might evolve into a class action suit,
    though that's a stretch,

    That's the purpose of class actions - when individual damages are too
    small to sue for, but they add up to a lot considering all the
    customers or people injured.

    In such a case, might we ask for punitive damages, to provoke the
    corporation to change its policy?

    Unlikely. Punitive damages are very difficult to get unless there
    has been an intentional tort. And in small claims court while a
    judge may technically be able to give punitive damages up to the
    small claims limit, I've actually never seen it done.

    --
    Stu
    http://DownToEarthLawyer.com

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  • From Barry Gold@21:1/5 to Barry Gold on Sat Oct 22 16:24:01 2022
    On 10/22/2022 7:43 AM, Barry Gold wrote:
    No. The clerk should tell you the process if you ask, but the general procedure is to do one of three things:

    1. Get a process server to hand the papers (the "summons and complaint")
    to the defendant, in person. In LA County, the Sheriff's office will do
    this fora  small fee (around
    2. Send the papers to the defendant by certified mail.

    I forgot 3. serve by publication. Used only when you have tried the
    first two and failed several times. Then you go to court and get
    permission from the judge to serve the defendant by publication.


    --
    I do so have a memory. It's backed up on DVD... somewhere...

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  • From Stuart O. Bronstein@21:1/5 to Barry Gold on Sat Oct 22 21:37:20 2022
    Barry Gold <bgold@labcats.org> wrote:
    Barry Gold wrote:

    No. The clerk should tell you the process if you ask, but the
    general procedure is to do one of three things:

    1. Get a process server to hand the papers (the "summons and
    complaint") to the defendant, in person. In LA County, the
    Sheriff's office will do this fora  small fee (around

    2. Send the papers to the defendant by certified mail.

    That normally doesn't work by itself, unless it's a California small
    claims court that is doing the mailing. Even then service is not
    guaranteed unless the person actually picks up and signs for the
    envelope.

    I forgot 3. serve by publication. Used only when you have tried
    the first two and failed several times. Then you go to court and
    get permission from the judge to serve the defendant by
    publication.

    Another option is a variation on #1 - serve the papers on an adult at
    either the person's home or office, and follow up by mailing a copy.
    It is presumed that an adult "apparently in charge" at the person's
    home or work will give the document to the defendant. So service is
    generally considered complete at that time. No court permission
    needed for doing this.

    --
    Stu
    http://DownToEarthLawyer.com

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  • From micky@21:1/5 to r_delaney2001@yahoo.com on Sat Oct 22 21:36:24 2022
    In misc.legal.moderated, on Fri, 21 Oct 2022 20:36:05 -0700 (PDT), RichD <r_delaney2001@yahoo.com> wrote:


    After filing the papers at the court house, I have to serve the summons >myself?

    You can't serve papers yourself because, I presume, there is too much temptation and opportunity to lie about it.

    In Perry Mason shows, in California, he's served subpoenas himself but
    of course that was 60 or more years ago. I don't doubt that things have changed (or that it wasn't that way then).

    Doesn't the court notify him, through registered mail?

    In Maryland the court would do this for a fee. It seemed quicker and
    cheaper to ask a friend, so I asked my girlfriend. She did it but she
    wasn't very happy about it. (One of many ways she wasn't a very good girlfriend.) I don't konw if she realized that if the Pres or Secretary
    of my HOA denied being served, she would have to appear in court, right?
    I thought that was a real possibility for Prez who was a liar who
    misinstructed the people counting the ballots and then threw the ballots
    away within 3 days of the voting, she said, but I forgot that they had Directors and Officers insurance, so little reason to deny being served.

    --
    I think you can tell, but just to be sure:
    I am not a lawyer.

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  • From Stuart O. Bronstein@21:1/5 to micky on Sun Oct 23 07:49:27 2022
    micky <misc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    You can't serve papers yourself because, I presume, there is too
    much temptation and opportunity to lie about it.

    In Perry Mason shows, in California, he's served subpoenas himself
    but of course that was 60 or more years ago. I don't doubt that
    things have changed (or that it wasn't that way then).

    The plaintiff can't serve process him/herself. But Perry Mason was the plaintiff's lawyer - the lawyer can do it because he's not the
    plaintiff.


    --
    Stu
    http://DownToEarthLawyer.com

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  • From Barry Gold@21:1/5 to Stuart O. Bronstein on Sun Oct 23 08:46:54 2022
    On 10/23/2022 7:49 AM, Stuart O. Bronstein wrote:
    micky <misc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    You can't serve papers yourself because, I presume, there is too
    much temptation and opportunity to lie about it.

    In Perry Mason shows, in California, he's served subpoenas himself
    but of course that was 60 or more years ago. I don't doubt that
    things have changed (or that it wasn't that way then).

    The plaintiff can't serve process him/herself. But Perry Mason was the plaintiff's lawyer - the lawyer can do it because he's not the
    plaintiff.

    In CA, at least, any adult (18+) except the plaintiff can serve the
    papers. I was somewhat surprised to learn some of the ways service can
    be accomplished (e.g., substituted service). I was also surprised to
    learn that the plaintiff's lawyer can themself serve the papers. I had
    thought they had to have an employee or contractor do it (e.g., if Perry
    Mason had asked Paul Drake to serve them).

    https://www.sdcourt.ca.gov/sdcourt/generalinformation/servingdocuments#:~:text=Any%20person%20who%20is%20at,served)%20to%20the%20other%20parties.

    --
    I do so have a memory. It's backed up on DVD... somewhere...

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  • From micky@21:1/5 to Stuart O. Bronstein on Sun Oct 23 09:46:51 2022
    In misc.legal.moderated, on Sun, 23 Oct 2022 07:49:27 -0700 (PDT),
    "Stuart O. Bronstein" <spamtrap@lexregia.com> wrote:

    micky <misc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    You can't serve papers yourself because, I presume, there is too
    much temptation and opportunity to lie about it.

    In Perry Mason shows, in California, he's served subpoenas himself
    but of course that was 60 or more years ago. I don't doubt that
    things have changed (or that it wasn't that way then).

    The plaintiff can't serve process him/herself. But Perry Mason was the >plaintiff's lawyer - the lawyer can do it because he's not the
    plaintiff.

    I only phrased it that way because Barry, in his first post in this
    thread, said that in California the lawyer can't. But you seem to have convinced both of us.

    --
    I think you can tell, but just to be sure:
    I am not a lawyer.

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