Darkolight
New Member
- Jurisdiction
- Colorado
Hello,
I'm the defendant in a case in Colorado and a motion to strike has come up claiming that I cannot represent my business in court. I'm preparing a Motion to Oppose under the grounds that I do.
Colorado Revised Statutes Title 13
For the purposes of this section, each of the following persons shall be presumed to have the authority to appear on behalf of the closely held entity upon providing evidence of the person's holding the specified office or status...
Source: Colorado Revised Statutes Title 13. Courts and Court Procedure § 13-1-127 | FindLaw
My Response:
CompanyName is an LLC not a corporation, and there is a statute that authorizes Defendant to represent it. Further, the named individual is not dba the LLC, but is a member of the LLC and duly authorized to appear on behalf of the Entity before any court of record or any administrative agency.
§ 13-1-127(2), (3), (4), and (2.3)(c)
Would this be enough to argue that I can defend my single member LLC pro se in county court?
Or would this simply be a waste of time and it's time to find a lawyer?
I'm the defendant in a case in Colorado and a motion to strike has come up claiming that I cannot represent my business in court. I'm preparing a Motion to Oppose under the grounds that I do.
Colorado Revised Statutes Title 13
For the purposes of this section, each of the following persons shall be presumed to have the authority to appear on behalf of the closely held entity upon providing evidence of the person's holding the specified office or status...
Source: Colorado Revised Statutes Title 13. Courts and Court Procedure § 13-1-127 | FindLaw
My Response:
CompanyName is an LLC not a corporation, and there is a statute that authorizes Defendant to represent it. Further, the named individual is not dba the LLC, but is a member of the LLC and duly authorized to appear on behalf of the Entity before any court of record or any administrative agency.
§ 13-1-127(2), (3), (4), and (2.3)(c)
Would this be enough to argue that I can defend my single member LLC pro se in county court?
Or would this simply be a waste of time and it's time to find a lawyer?