Polaris Columbus Process Service

Polaris Columbus Process service, also known as "service of process,” is the procedure employed to give appropriate notice of initial legal action to another party (such as a defendant), court, or administrative body in an effort to exercise jurisdiction over that person so as to enable that person to respond to the proceeding before the court, body, or other tribunals. Notice is furnished by delivering a set of court documents (called "process") to the person to be served; a process server performs process service.

Polaris Columbus PROCESS SERVERs

Our Polaris Columbus process servers serve all legal documents, including summons and complaints, divorce papers, family court documents, subpoenas, citations, small claims court cases, orders to show cause, petitions, discovery documents, evictions, landlord/tenant notices, motions, and more. We are a full-service process server agency providing services to federal, state & city agencies, law firms, attorneys, and the general public in Polaris Columbus.

We employ process servers local to Polaris Columbus, which allows us to provide all of our clients with professional process servers, delivering three (3) levels of process service in Polaris Columbus.

  • Routine (Process Server will make 1st attempt within 5-7 business days);
  • Rush (Process Server will make 1st attempt within 48hrs.);
  • Service by Mail (Documents will be mailed within 24hrs);

The only difference in the above levels of service (Routine & Rush) is the start times; they all include the Polaris Columbus process server making up to three (3) attempts (Morning, Afternoon & Evening).

Polaris Columbus PROCESS SERVICE INCLUDES:

  • GPS Affidavits of Service
  • Personalized "Real-Time" Email Status Updates
  • Email Copy of Affidavit Prior to Mailing
  • Free Basic Skip Trace for New Clients

Process service of court documents in Polaris Columbus is performed only by experienced Polaris Columbus process servers which meet all of the latest licensing, education, and bonding requirements imposed by the jurisdiction in which they operate. At Undisputed Le