Ask for a trial or default judgment

After you serve your tenant with the Summons and Complaint forms, your tenant has 10 days to file a response with the court (or 20 days if they weren't served in person). Depending on how (and if) they respond, you have some options for next steps.

1. Wait to see how your tenant responds

After your tenant is served the Summons and Complaint forms, they have 10 days to file a response with the court. The 10 days don't include Saturdays, Sundays, or court holidays. 

If your tenant does not file a response on time, on the 11th day you can file forms asking the judge to order the tenant to move out. This is called a default judgment. The tenant can file a response any time before you file to ask for a default judgment, so it's best to ask for one as early as you can.

At any point, if you and your tenant work something out, you can talk or get help from a mediator to come to an agreement without going to court (or in addition to going to court).

2. Decide what to do

What you can do next, depends on what your tenant did. 

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