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Is Substituted Legal Service Out of State valid enough for the the court to accept jurisdiction?

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Is Substituted Legal Service Out of State valid enough for the the court to accept jurisdiction?

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No. Service has very little to do with jurisdiction. The only exception to his is IN STATE personal service is usually enough to establish impersonum jurisdiction. However, if someone is out of the state, you need to turn to your states long arm statute and the Constitution to see if a state court can exercise jurisdiction.

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