legal-news

2:26-cv-00978 Clifton Walker v. Rasilar R. Patel et al

updateUpdated 1 day ago
26-cv-00978 Filed
Active Active litigation Sign in to follow this case
Share mail
Advertisement
description

Case Summary

In case 2:26-cv-00978, Clifton Walker filed a lawsuit against Rasilar R. Patel and others. The case was voluntarily dismissed pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a)(1), indicating the plaintiff chose to end the case without a court order, typically before the defendant files an answer or motion.

Stage

Active litigation

Timeline

4 events

Coverage

4 articles

Sources

1

Key Issues

  • Voluntary dismissal
  • FRCP 41(a)(1)
  • Plaintiff-initiated termination
  • No substantive ruling

update What Changed This Week

4 events 4 articles
Advertisement

Case Timeline

4 events
info
Other April 16, 2026

1:26-cv-00978 EB5 UNITED RANGER REGIONAL CENTER LLC v. NOEM et al

Notice of Appearance ( 3

gavel
Order April 15, 2026

2:26-cv-02972 Clifton Walker v. GSA Supply, Inc. et al

In the case of Clifton Walker versus GSA Supply, Inc. and others, the court issued an order without holding a formal hearing. This means the judge made a decision or directive based on the submitted documents alone. Such orders help move the case forward efficiently without the need for in-person proceedings.

info
Other April 15, 2026

2:26-cv-03050 Clifton Walker v. Santa Fe Wine LLC et al

In the case Clifton Walker v. Santa Fe Wine LLC et al, the court confirmed that the summons and complaint were successfully delivered to the defendants 21 days after issuance. This step is crucial as it officially notifies the defendants of the lawsuit, allowing the case to proceed. Without proper service, the court cannot move forward with the legal process.

info
Other April 15, 2026

2:26-cv-00978 Clifton Walker v. Rasilar R. Patel et al

In the case of Clifton Walker versus Rasilar R. Patel and others, the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed the lawsuit under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a)(1). This means the plaintiff chose to end the case without the court deciding on the merits. Such a dismissal typically occurs when the plaintiff decides not to pursue the claims further, possibly due to a settlement or reassessment of the case.

Advertisement
show_chart

Coverage Timeline

newspaper

Press Coverage

4 articles