Legal Question in Family Law in California
When you "submit to the Court" does that mean file papers at the Family Court Clerk?
"(e) Objections to proposed order after hearing"
"(3) If the parties fail to resolve their disagreement after meeting and conferring, each party will have 10 calendar days following the date of the meeting to submit to the court and serve on each other the following documents:"
"(A) A proposed Findings and Order After Hearing (FL-340) (and any form attachments);"
"(B) A copy of the minute order or official transcript of the court hearing; and"
"(C) A cover letter that explains the objections, describes the differences in the two proposed orders, references the relevant sections of the transcript or minute order, and includes the date and results of the meet-and-confer conferences."
1 Answer from Attorneys
Some attorneys mail them directly the judge in the department with a cover letter. Your best bet is to file them in person in the department, not at the main clerk's office.