4 Reasons Your California Divorce Request to Enter Default Is Rejected
Filing a request to enter default in a California divorce may seem straightforward: serve the other party, wait 30 days, then file. In practice, courts reject these requests fairly often. Understanding the common pitfalls will save weeks of delay and a lot of frustration.
What “request to enter default” means
Request to enter default is the paperwork you file when the other spouse fails to file a response after being properly served. The court will only enter a default if no response exists and specific procedural requirements have been met.
Top reasons the request is rejected
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A response was filed by the other party
If the other spouse files any response before the court enters your default, your request will be rejected. Keep in mind that your request does not get entered immediately when you drop it off. It sits on the clerk’s desk and can take several weeks to be processed. Even if the 30-day service period has passed on paper, the other party can still file a response during the time your paperwork waits to be entered. When their response is filed first, it blocks your default.
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Address or attorney records don’t match
If the address where you served the request is different from the address on the original petition or the court’s records, the court may reject the filing unless you have updated the record. This includes situations where a substitution of attorney or a notice of change of address was previously filed but not properly reflected on the petition or proof of service.
Action steps: file a formal change of address or a substitution of attorney before submitting your request, or include a short declaration explaining why a different service address was used.
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Errors on the form
Simple mistakes cause rejections more than you might expect. Typical errors include the wrong case number, misspelled party names, incorrect dates, missing signatures, or other clerical mistakes. Another common form error is filing the request prematurely – before the required 30-day service period has elapsed.
Action steps: double-check the case number, names, dates, and signature block. Verify the filing date relative to the service date so the request is not premature.
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Missing or incomplete proof of service
The court will reject a default request if the proof of service was not filed, filed after the request, or filled out incorrectly. The correct sequence is: serve the documents, file the proof of service with the court, wait the required 30 days, then file the request to enter default. If you skip or mess up any step in that order, the request is vulnerable to rejection.
Action steps: immediately file the proof of service after serving, keep a copy, and confirm it is entered on the court docket before filing for default.
One more important issue: serving at a different address than the petition
Courts scrutinize discrepancies between the address on your original petition and the address used for serving the default request. If you served at an address different from what’s on file, the court will want an explanation. This situation comes up often when a party moves or when the court’s records were not updated to show a substitution of attorney or change of address.
Provide a clear declaration explaining the change and attach any supporting paperwork showing the new address was properly noticed to the court. That explanation often prevents rejection.
Practical checklist before filing a request to enter default
- Confirm no response exists on the court docket.
- File the proof of service immediately after serving and confirm it was recorded.
- Wait the full 30 days from the date of service before filing for default.
- Verify addresses and counsel information match court records or file a change of address or substitution of attorney first.
- Double-check all form fields for correct case number, party names, dates, and signatures.
- Keep copies of all documents and proof that they were filed with the court.
If your request is rejected
Read the rejection stamp or notice carefully. It will usually state the reason and what you must fix. Correct the error, refile the missing or corrected documents, and consider filing a short declaration explaining the corrections. If the rejection was due to a filed response, consult an attorney to understand next steps, because converting to a default may no longer be an option.
Final tips
Timing and paperwork precision matter more than speed. Because the clerk’s office can take weeks to enter filings, always assume delays and plan accordingly. Small clerical mistakes are easy to avoid with a checklist and a final review. When in doubt about address changes or procedural questions, get legal guidance to avoid costly delays.
Correct filing sequence, accurate forms, and updated court records are the best protection against a rejected request to enter default.
Following these steps will improve your chances that the court accepts your request the first time. If you encounter a rejection, respond quickly and methodically to correct the defect so your case can move forward.