Pleadings and Motions Flashcards

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1
Q

Exceptions to the “short and plain statement” rule

Special pleadings

A
  1. fraud or mistake
  2. conditions precedent (the DENIAL must be made specifically, but may be alleged generally)
  3. incapacity
  4. special damages (like pain and suffering)
  5. supporting document (must attach the doc)
    Also - statements as to the time and place of an action
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2
Q

A complaint must include:

A
  1. a short plain statement of the grounds for jdx (PJ and SMJ)
  2. short plain statement of the ultimate facts, showing the pleader is entitled to relief
  3. demand for judgment and relief sought
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3
Q

An answer must:

A

either admit, deny, or respond without knowledge to the allegations of the pleading to which it responds

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4
Q

If you state in an answer that you’re without knowledge:

A

it’s an implied denial

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5
Q

If you fail to deny or allege insufficient knowledge in your answer:

A

it’s an admission. Except to damages

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6
Q

Defenses alleged in an answer

A

Have to include affirmative defenses in the answer, otherwise they are waived.

Must be stated plainly and concisely, and must meet the substance of the allegations and denials.

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7
Q

Timing of the answer

A

Have to file answer within 20 days of receiving service of process.

UNLESS - served by mail, then you get 60 days.

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8
Q

Compulsory counterclaim

A

one that arises out of the same T/O as one of the π’s claims.
It MUST be brought, or else you forfeit it

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9
Q

Permissive counterclaim

A

one that does NOT arise out of the same T/O as one of the π’s claims.
Do NOT have to bring it to avoid forfeiture

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10
Q

In Florida, all cross-claims are:

A

PERMISSIVE

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11
Q

Reply

A

A π’s response to what the ∆ has filed.

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12
Q

Are replies required?

A

NO - not unless the answer or third-party answer contains an affirmative defense that the π seeks to avoid.

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13
Q

Timing of a reply

A

20 days of the ∆’s filing

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14
Q

The filing of a motion to dismiss suspends the time to file an answer until the resolution of the motion. T or F?

A

TRUE

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15
Q

Standard of review for a motion to dismiss:

A

Must be denied UNLESS it appears beyond doubt that the π can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief

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16
Q

Upon mtn to dismiss for failure to state a cause of action, the court MUST:

A

Construe the complaint in the light most favorable to the π and assume everything the π says is true

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17
Q

If mtn to dismiss is granted, the court will usually allow the π to:

A

amend the complaint, either by filing a new and different complaint, or by simply tacking on a modified claim

18
Q

Defenses waived if not raised in the Answer, or Pre-answer motion:

A

PJ
Improper venue
bad service of process
bad process

19
Q

Bad process

A

when the process itself is insufficient

the rules are bad, violate Due Process

20
Q

Discretionary defenses, that you don’t lose if you fail to plead them at the outset

A

Failure to state a cause of action
Failure to join an indispensable party
AND
An objection of failure to state a legal defense

21
Q

Mtn for Judgment on the Pleadings

A

It’s made after the pleadings and all the mtns related to the pleadings are CLOSED, but within such time not to delay the trial.

Claims that based solely on the pleadings, the party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law

But like a mtn to dismiss for failure to state a claim

22
Q

Motion for a more definite statement

A

A way ∆ can respond to the pleading, if it’s so vague and ambiguous that the ∆ can’t even respond to it

23
Q

Mtn to Strike

A

Can move to strike from any pleading any redundant, scandalous, immaterial, or impertinent material

Does NOT toll the time to answer

24
Q

Can you make a verified motion to strike a sham pleading any time before the cause is set for trial?

A

YEP

25
Q

Third-Party Complaint (Impleader)

A

Allows a ∆ to bring another ∆ into the lawsuit, but ONLY IF the new ∆ is liable for some or all of the original ∆’s liability (get involved, share the load)

Cause of Action must be for:
1. contribution or indemnity
Contribution - between joint tortfeasors; Indemnity - insurers

26
Q

A third party ∆ may assert any defense it has against the original ∆. T or F

A

TRUE

Third-party ∆ may also assert claims against the original π, and gets the benefit of any defenses the original ∆ asserted

27
Q

Intervention

A

Where a non-party enters on his/her own accord

28
Q

In order to intervene, the non-party must be in a position that:

A

they will gain or lose by the effect of judgment. The suit will have to impact them in some way

29
Q

An intervenor has the status of a party, BUT:

A

They are subordinate to the main action, and he takes the action as he finds it

30
Q

Interpleader

A

Someone who’s stuck in the middle
Where a stakeholder, stuck between two competing interests, can have the court determine the stakeholder’s obligation. Like for life insurance policies.

31
Q

The order of Interpleader will require the stakeholder to:

A

Deposit the fund or property with the court, and the stakeholder will be dismissed as a party AND get reasonable attorney’s fees.

32
Q

How many times can you amend a pleading?

A

ONCE as a matter of course (before a responsive pleading is filed or the 20 day mark). If you want to amend AGAIN (or outside the time limit) then you need to petition the court to do so

33
Q

Timing for amending a pleading

A

Before a responsive pleading is filed.

OR if no responsive pleading is required - within 2 days of service of the pleading.

34
Q

Do you have to serve every paper filed in an action on every party to the action?

A

YES. Unless the court orders otherwise

35
Q

No service need be made on parties against whom a default has been entered, EXCEPT:

A
  1. an action for a final hearing
  2. a copy of the final judgment
  3. an amended complaint
36
Q

If a pleading has been amended, how long do you have to respond to it?

A

10 days

37
Q

How to count timing for things?

A

Start counting the day AFTER the trigger date.

If served on March 1, and have 20 days to file answer, March 2 would be day one of twenty.

38
Q

If the amount of time is 7 days or more:

A

You count Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays.

If it lands on one of these^^ then time period will end on next business day

39
Q

If the amount of time is less than 7 days (6 or less)

A

Then you do NOT count Saturdays, Sundays, or holidays

40
Q

Do allegations of malice need to be stated BEYOND a short and plain statement of the facts?

A

NOPE. Don’t need to go into super detail with malice.

41
Q

When considering a motion to dismiss, the court will look at:

A

Just the pleadings