Mont. Admin. R. 24.5.311 - EMERGENCY TRIALS
(1) The petitioner
shall indicate any request for emergency trial in the title of the petition,
and explain the facts constituting the emergency in the petition. The court may
hold a trial upon less than 75 days' notice if the petitioner demonstrates good
cause. The court designates these trials "emergency trials." The petitioner
shall set forth facts constituting the emergency in sufficient detail for the
court to determine whether an emergency exists. The petitioner shall also set
forth a statement indicating the petitioner is ready to proceed to trial. If
the petitioner does not demonstrate good cause for the emergency setting in the
petition, the court sets the trial on its regular trial calendar. The court may
find that an emergency exists if the petitioner demonstrates:
(a) the potential for irreversible or serious
harm resulting from inability to obtain medical care or medications;
(b) undue financial hardship constituting an
inability to obtain the necessities of life such as food, shelter, clothing, or
transportation; or
(c) other facts
establishing an emergency.
(2) The court, on its own motion, may set a
trial as an emergency trial. When the court orders an emergency trial, the
court provides reasonable notice of the time and place for a pretrial
conference and for the trial.
(3)
If the court makes a preliminary determination that good cause exists for an
emergency trial setting, the court issues a notice to the opposing party,
indicating that:
(a) the petitioner filed a
request for emergency trial;
(b)
the court made a preliminary determination that the petitioner set forth good
cause; and
(c) the opposing party
may file a written objection, containing a concise statement setting forth the
basis for the objection, within the time set forth in ARM
24.5.320.
(4) The court schedules a hearing as soon as
practicable after either the opposing party files a written objection or the
time set forth in ARM
24.5.320 for objection to the
request for emergency trial setting runs, whichever occurs first. The court may
hold the hearing in person or by phone. The court conducts the hearing to
determine the validity of any objections to the emergency trial setting and to
confirm the parties are prepared to proceed to trial. The court issues an order
granting or denying the request for an emergency trial setting within 5
business days, or as soon as practicable, after the conclusion of the hearing.
The court includes a scheduling order fixing the deadlines referenced in ARM
24.5.310(4)
within either the emergency or regular trial setting.
Notes
AUTH: 2-4-201, MCA; IMP: 2-4-201, 39-71-2901, MCA
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