Motion To Excuse Compliance With Government Claims Act Presentment Requirement As Applied To Plaintiff; Or In The Alternative, Motion For Order That Compliance Is Excused Under Equitable Principles
Set for Law and Motion/Discovery Calendar on Tuesday, June 30, 2026, Line 12. Plaintiff Jason Scutt Motion To Excuse Plaintiff's Compliance With Government Claims Act Presentment Requirement As Applied To Plaintiff; Or In The Alternative, Motion For Order That Compliance Is Excused Under Equitable Principles is OFF CALENDAR.
Plaintiff failed to demonstrate he timely served his moving papers. ((See Code of Civil Procedure section 1005(b) [motion must be filed and served 16 court days before hearing]; Code of Civil Procedure section 1013(a) [service by mail where place of address and place of mailing are within State of adds 5 calendar days to the period of notice]; see Code of Civil Procedure section 1010.6(a)(3)(B) [service by email adds two court days to "any period of notice"]; Code of Civil Procedure section 1013(e) [service by fax only be agreement and adds two court days to "any period of notice"].)
A party must timely file proof of service of his moving papers. (See California Rules of Court, rule 3.1300(c).) Plaintiff here has not presented any proof of any service of his moving papers. The court denies Plaintiff's request to waive service or fins his unsworn assertions of "diligence" sufficient.
Further, Plaintiff's moving papers are unexecuted and not signed. (See Code of Civil Procedure section 128.7(a) ["Every pleading, petition, written notice of motion, or other similar paper shall be signed by at least one attorney of record in the attorney's individual name, or, if the party is not represented by an attorney, shall be signed by the party."].)
For the 9:00 a.m. calendar, all attorneys and parties may appear in Department 302 remotely or in person. Remote hearings will be conducted by videoconference using Zoom. (Dept. 302 Zoom ID 160 409 7690; Passcode 516287.) To appear remotely at the hearing, go to the court's website at sfsuperiorcourt.org under "Online Services," navigate to "Tentative Rulings," and click on the appropriate link, or dial the corresponding phone number.
Any party who contests a tentative ruling must send an email to contestdept302tr@sftc.org with a copy to all other parties by 4pm stating, without argument, the portion(s) of the tentative ruling that the party contests. The subject line of the email shall include the line number, case name and case number. The text of the email shall include the name and contact information, including email address, of the attorney or party who will appear at the hearing.
Counsel for the prevailing party is required to prepare a proposed order which repeats verbatim the substantive portion of the tentative ruling and must email it to contestdept302tr@sftc.org prior to the hearing even if the tentative ruling is not contested.
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The court no longer provides a court reporter in the Law & Motion Department. Parties may retain their own reporter, who may appear in the courtroom or remotely. A retained reporter must be a California certified court reporter (CSR), for only a CSR's transcript may be used in California courts. If a CSR is being retained, include in your email all of the following: their name, CSR and telephone numbers, and their individual work email address. =(302/JMQ) | |