Difference between revisions of "How Do I Respond to a Family Law Action in the Provincial Court?"

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{{JP Boyd on Family Law How Do I TOC|expanded=defending}}
{{JP Boyd on Family Law How Do I TOC|expanded=defending}}
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Once you have been served with the applicant's Application to Obtain an Order, you have 30 days to file a form called a Reply. The Reply is available at the provincial court registry, although a copy may have been delivered with the Application to Obtain an Order. You must file your Reply at the same court registry the Application to Obtain an Order was filed, and you can tell which registry this is by looking at the box at the upper right-hand corner of the form. There are no fees charged to file your Reply.
Once you have been served with the applicant's Application to Obtain an Order, you have 30 days to file a form called a Reply. The Reply is available at the provincial court registry or online (see the [[Provincial Court Forms (Family Law)|Provincial Court Forms]] section), although a copy may have been delivered with the Application to Obtain an Order. You must file your Reply at the same court registry the Application to Obtain an Order was filed, and you can tell which registry this is by looking at the box at the upper right-hand corner of the form. There are no fees charged to file your Reply.


You have 30 days to file your Reply from the date ''you were served'', not 30 days from the date the Application to Obtain an Order was ''filed in court''.
You have 30 days to file your Reply from the date ''you were served'', not 30 days from the date the Application to Obtain an Order was ''filed in court''.
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