Received FL 165 — This Is Not Your Final Judgment | California Divorce

 

Received FL 165 — This Is Not Your Final Judgment

What is an FL-165?

The FL-165 is the California court form commonly called the Request for Default or Default. It is a procedural notice the court issues after you file a default-style divorce judgment packet. Receiving this form means the court has processed the default request portion of your paperwork, not that your divorce is finalized.

The FL-165 is otherwise known as a request and/or default.

Why you get the FL-165 first

In default or default-with-agreement cases the court processes paperwork in stages. A clerk dedicated to default requests handles the FL-165. A separate clerk later handles the final judgment paperwork. Because of that division of duties, the FL-165 arrives in the mail before the final judgment.

Typical timeline: When to expect the final judgment

After the FL-165 is filed, expect roughly 30 to 45 days before the court issues the final judgment (usually the FL-180). The FL-180 will include the official date your divorce becomes effective.

What to do when you receive an FL-165

  1. Do not panic. The FL-165 is not the final divorce paperwork.
  2. Confirm your case type. FL-165 appears when a case is a default or default-with-agreement. If the other party filed a response, you typically will not see an FL-165.
  3. Watch your mail. The final judgment packet (FL-180) should arrive in about 30 to 45 days.
  4. Keep your contact information current. Make sure the court has your correct mailing address to avoid delays.
  5. Contact the court only if the judgment does not arrive. If more than 45 days pass, call the clerk assigned to judgments to check the status.

Common scenarios explained

  • Default or default with agreement: You will receive FL-165 first, then FL-180 later.
  • Contested case (response filed): The FL-165 usually will not be part of the record in the same way.
  • Hybrid cases: Depending on what was filed, the FL-165 may or may not be used.

 

Received FL 165 — This Is Not Your Final Judgment

What is an FL-165?

The FL-165 is the California court form commonly called the Request for Default or Default. It is a procedural notice the court issues after you file a default-style divorce judgment packet. Receiving this form means the court has processed the default request portion of your paperwork, not that your divorce is finalized.

The FL-165 is otherwise known as a request and/or default.

Why you get the FL-165 first

In default or default-with-agreement cases the court processes paperwork in stages. A clerk dedicated to default requests handles the FL-165. A separate clerk later handles the final judgment paperwork. Because of that division of duties, the FL-165 arrives in the mail before the final judgment.

Typical timeline: When to expect the final judgment

After the FL-165 is filed, expect roughly 30 to 45 days before the court issues the final judgment (usually the FL-180). The FL-180 will include the official date your divorce becomes effective.

What to do when you receive an FL-165

  1. Do not panic. The FL-165 is not the final divorce paperwork.
  2. Confirm your case type. FL-165 appears when a case is a default or default-with-agreement. If the other party filed a response, you typically will not see an FL-165.
  3. Watch your mail. The final judgment packet (FL-180) should arrive in about 30 to 45 days.
  4. Keep your contact information current. Make sure the court has your correct mailing address to avoid delays.
  5. Contact the court only if the judgment does not arrive. If more than 45 days pass, call the clerk assigned to judgments to check the status.

Common scenarios explained

    • Default or default with agreement: You will receive FL-165 first, then FL-180 later.
    • Contested case (response filed): The FL-165 usually will not be part of the record in the same way.
    • Hybrid cases: Depending on what was filed, the FL-165 may or may not be used.

Quick checklist

  • Received FL-165 — understand it is a processing notice, not final judgment.
  • Expect FL-180 roughly 30 to 45 days after FL-165 is processed.
  • Keep a copy of your filings and all court mailings.
  • If the FL-180 does not arrive after 45 days, contact the court clerk handling judgments.

Final note

Receiving the FL-165 is a normal and expected step in a default-style California divorce. It means the court is moving forward. The next important document to watch for is the FL-180, which contains the final judgment and the date your divorce becomes effective. Stay organized, monitor your mail, and reach out to the court if the anticipated timeline is exceeded.

 

Quick checklist

  • Received FL-165 — understand it is a processing notice, not final judgment.
  • Expect FL-180 roughly 30 to 45 days after FL-165 is processed.
  • Keep a copy of your filings and all court mailings.
  • If the FL-180 does not arrive after 45 days, contact the court clerk handling judgments.

Final note

Receiving the FL-165 is a normal and expected step in a default-style California divorce. It means the court is moving forward. The next important document to watch for is the FL-180, which contains the final judgment and the date your divorce becomes effective. Stay organized, monitor your mail, and reach out to the court if the anticipated timeline is exceeded.