DecisionDepot
California Legal Research
All cases
PFL20200265·eldorado·Civil·Request to Enter Judgment
CONTINUED

BRYAN CHAIX V. KRISTINA NEIDIGER

Request for Order (RFO) seeking orders to enter judgment and reimbursement for support

Hearing date
Apr 16, 2026
Department
5
Judge
Prevailing
N/A

Motion type

Petition

Parties

PlaintiffBRYAN CHAIX
DefendantKRISTINA NEIDIGER

Ruling

LAW & MOTION TENTATIVE RULINGS DEPARTMENT 5 April 16, 2026 8:30 a.m./1:30 p.m.

2. BRYAN CHAIX V. KRISTINA NEIDIGER PFL20200265

Petitioner filed a Request for Order (RFO) on December 16, 2025, seeking orders from the court to enter the judgment pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure 664.6 and reimbursement for overpayment of support. Respondent was served electronically on December 23, 2025. The court notes the Proof of Service does not show Respondent was served with the Notice of Tentative Ruling.

Respondent filed a Responsive Declaration on February 2, 2026. It was served electronically on February 2nd. Respondent consents in part to Petitioner’s request and objects in part to the requests.

Petitioner filed a Reply Declaration on February 6, 2026. It was served electronically the same day.

The matter was originally scheduled for hearing on February 19, 2026. The parties asked for a continuance, which was granted, and the hearing was continued to the present date.

On March 4, 2026, Petitioner filed and served a declaration.

The court finds there has not been a meeting of the minds of the parties as to the terms of the judgment. As such, the court is not entering the judgment pursuant to 664.6.

The parties are ordered to appear for the hearing.

TENTATIVE RULING #2: PARTIES ARE ORDERED TO APPEAR FOR THE HEARING.

Cited authorities

Extracting citations from the ruling text…

Extracted by Gemini Flash from the ruling text. Verify against the source PDF — LLM extraction may miss or mis-normalize citations.

Looking for case law or statutes not cited here? Search published authorities

Ask about this ruling

Examples: “Why did the court rule this way?” · “What were the procedural grounds?” · “Is appearance required?”

Powered by Gemini Flash Lite. Answers reference only this ruling's text. Not legal advice — always verify against the source PDF.

Source

Share