What Is a Motion and How Is It Used Procedurally?
What This Notice or Action Is
What Law or Rules Typically Govern It
Federal Rules (if in federal court)
- FRCP Rule 7: Defines motions and required format
- FRCP Rule 6: Time requirements for filing and service
- FRCP Rule 12: Pre-answer motions (motion to dismiss, etc.)
- FRCP Rule 56: Summary judgment motions
Common Types of Motions
- Motion to Dismiss: Asks court to dismiss case (lack of jurisdiction, failure to state claim, etc.)
- Motion for Summary Judgment: Asks court to decide case without trial (no genuine dispute of material facts)
- Motion to Compel: Asks court to order other party to provide discovery
- Motion for Continuance: Asks to postpone hearing or trial
- Motion in Limine: Asks to exclude evidence before trial
- Motion to Quash: Asks to void service of process or subpoena
Required Components
- Notice of Motion: States what you're asking for and when hearing is scheduled
- Motion: Formal request with legal grounds
- Memorandum/Brief: Legal argument supporting the motion
- Declaration/Affidavit: Sworn statement of facts
- Exhibits: Supporting documents
- Proposed Order: Draft order for judge to sign (required in some courts)
What Pro Se Litigants Commonly Misunderstand
❌ "I can just ask the judge in a letter"
Reality: Motions must follow specific format and procedural rules. Informal letters to judges are improper.
❌ "I can file a motion anytime"
Reality: Many motions have strict timing requirements. Some must be filed before answering; others have specific deadlines.
❌ "I don't need to serve the other party"
Reality: You must serve all motions on the other party and file proof of service. Ex parte motions (without notice) are rare exceptions.
How This Issue Is Typically Researched
Step 1: Determine the Right Motion
- What relief do you need?
- What is the legal basis?
- Is there a specific motion type for this?
Step 2: Research Timing Requirements
- Check rules for filing deadlines
- Determine notice requirements (how many days before hearing)
- Check if motion must be filed before answer
Step 3: Find Format Requirements
- Check local court rules for format
- Look for form motions on court website
- Review sample motions from law library
Step 4: Prepare and File
- Draft motion with all required components
- Serve other party (usually 14-21 days before hearing)
- File motion and proof of service with court
- Reserve hearing date if required
Common Procedural Risks or Traps
⚠️ Timing Is Critical
Missing motion deadlines can waive your rights. Some defenses must be raised in first motion or they're lost forever.
Notice Requirements
- Federal court: Usually 14 days notice
- State court: Varies (often 16-21 days)
- Check local rules for specific requirements
- Some motions can be heard on shortened notice with court permission
Opposition and Reply
- Other party can file opposition (usually 7-14 days before hearing)
- You can file reply brief (usually 3-7 days before hearing)
- Court may decide motion on papers without oral argument
- Some courts require request for oral argument
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