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glaszman

04/25/07 1:21 AM

#70449 RE: matrix #70446

LOL....

you know what? i said MY DD.. that means i DID it already:

Oklahoma Small Claims Court



# Statues: Oklahoma Statutes Annotated, Title 12, Ch. 36, Sections 1751-1773; Title 12, Ch. 5, Sections 134, 139, and 141. # Dollar Limit:: $4,500 until November 1, 2004 when it increases to $6,000. Where To Sue: Where defendant resides, debt arose or contract signed. Damage to land or buildings Where property is. Corporations Where principal office is, where officer resides, where any co- defendant is sued or where injury occurred. Nonresident corporations Where it has property or debts due, where agent is found, where any co- defendant is sued, where injury occurred or where plaintiff resides.
# Service: Certified mail by court clerk with return receipt, sheriff or court-approved disinterested adult.
# Hearing Date: 10-60 days from filing of complaint.
# Attorneys: Allowed, but can't charge more than 10% of judgment in uncontested cases.
# Transfer: If defendant counterclaims for more than $4,500 or if court grants defendant request, case tried under regular civil procedure of District Court, unless both parties agree in writing to stay in Small Claims Court.
# Appeals: By either side for review of law, not facts; to Supreme Court within 30 days.
# Special Provisions: Only cases to recover money, personal property or debt-payment distribution to several creditors. No libel or slander cases. Jury trial available. Collection agents may not sue. Right to sue may not be transferred.

Note: This section outlines the special rules that apply to the small claims courts of all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Filing fees are not listed because they vary greatly and change frequently. This information was last updated in 2004. Because court rules may change at any time, always check with the clerk of the small claims court to verify the accuracy of the information given for your state.


http://www.consumeraffairs.com/consumerism/small_ok.html

and? there is generally a limit of $15,000 for the JUDGEMENT (that would be in toto, not to each defendant) in district court..if it exceeds that amount? it would usually be moved to Circuit Court... but you guys knew that right? LOL


RDG013

04/25/07 2:29 AM

#70456 RE: matrix #70446

matrix, yes the district courst do hear cases below $10,000 and they are small claims cases. Stop attacking views that don't talk about rainbows and candy canes and understand that none of us knows for sure right now exactly where this is leading. Our CEO has alleged serious violations against us. If they really are to help us, great, but let's also keep an open mind to what else he may be trying to do. Best for everyone at this point, until we know for sure whatis going on.