Form 18-B. Acknowledgment and Waiver of Service of a Summons
A.B., Plaintiff,Civil No. . . .
vs.ACKNOWLEDGMENT AND WAIVER OF
C.D., Defendant.SERVICE OF A SUMMONS
To: (name of plaintiff's attorney or the unrepresented plaintiff):
I have received your request to acknowledge and waive service of a summons in this action along with a copy of the complaint, two copies of this acknowledgment and waiver form, and a prepaid means of returning one signed copy of the form to you.
I, or the entity I represent, agree to save the expense of serving a summons and complaint in this case.
I understand that I, or the entity I represent, will keep all defenses or objections to the lawsuit, the court's jurisdiction, and the venue of the action, but that I waive any objections to the absence of a summons or of service.
I also understand that I, or the entity I represent, must file and serve an answer or a motion under Montana Rule of Civil Procedure 12 within 21 days from the date I sign this acknowledgment and waiver form (or 42 days if I am signing on behalf of the State of Montana, a state agency, or a state officer or employee).
If I fail to do so, a default judgment will be entered against me or the entity I represent.
Date: __________________________________________________________________
Signature of the attorney or unrepresented party
________________________________________________
Printed name
________________________________________________
Relationship to entity or authority to receive service
________________________________________________
Address
________________________________________________
E-mail address
________________________________________________
Telephone number
Duty to Avoid Unnecessary Expenses of Serving a Summons
Rule 4 of the Montana Rules of Civil Procedure has a provision to avoid the unnecessary expenses of serving a summons and complaint. A defendant who fails to return a signed acknowledgment and waiver of service requested by a plaintiff will be required to pay the expenses of service, unless the defendant shows good cause for the failure.
"Good cause" does not include a belief that the lawsuit is groundless, or that it has been brought in an improper venue, or that the court has no jurisdiction over this matter or over the defendant or the defendant's property.
If the acknowledgment and waiver is signed and returned, you can still make these and all other defenses and objections, but you cannot object to the absence of a summons or of service.
If you waive service, then you must, within the time specified on the acknowledgment and waiver form, serve an answer or a motion under Rule 12 on the plaintiff and file a copy with the court.
History: En. Sup. Ct. Ord. No. AF 07-0157, January 31, 2012.