Word pleading paper template




















This has worked fine for years. One day last week, after our outside IT vendor did some work on my work desktop computer to hook it up with a remote desktop so I can access it from my laptop at home, my computer suddenly stopped showing the pleading paper template. Now, every pleading document I have ever created looks like the pleading paper template has been stripped out of it so that the text remains and looks like pleadings in other jurisdictions around the country but the line numbering and borders are gone.

This is true whether I access the file while working in my office at my desktop or at home on my laptop when working on my remote desktop feature. However, when I open the document on another computer either in our network or when I open it on my laptop at home NOT going through the remote desktop, the pleading paper is again displayed. Two IT persons have played around with it but have not fixed it. It appears the original developer of the template was Capsoft Development Corp. The other thing that happened at the same time is that the postage-stamp-sized icons of Word documents on my desktop all changed from.

I saw that Wisconsin attorney Charles K. Kenyon provided some help to a person with a similar problem in January Hi Frank, I'm still here. My first guess is that you have "white space" hidden. These contain accurate safe information that I think will help you. However, as an Independent Advisor I am required to give the following notice when providing non-Microsoft links: Note: This is a non-Microsoft website.

The page appears to be providing accurate, safe information. Watch out for ads on the site that may advertise products frequently classified as a PUP Potentially Unwanted Products.

Thoroughly research any product advertised on the site before you decide to download and install it. Surprisingly, the rules and line numbers in pleading paper are generally also in the headers even though they seem to be in the side margins. If I am guessing correctly, when you print the page, they will all magically be there. Essentially, your headers and footers and page numbers are still there.

Word considers them to be part of the "white space" between pages. You've hit on an option that hides that "white space" from you. The link shows you how to get them back and also will likely tell you how they disappeared. It is a well-written page of material and I won't reproduce it here. You are commenting using your Twitter account. You are commenting using your Facebook account.

Notify me of new comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email. This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed. Customized Templates for Oregon Lawyers If you are an Oregon lawyer and would like a customized Mac pleading template, contact me. Like this: Like Loading Leave a Reply Cancel reply Enter your comment here That's why the feature is often hard to find -- deliberately so, since most users have little need to modify it, and most would not want the [Watermark B] code deleted accidentally.

If you create a pleading document and double-click this code, you will see a [Watermark B] code in the Styles Editor's Contents field -- i. Generally, you probably will not want to modify the pleading macro's hidden Watermark B, since you can modify the resulting document with graphics, text boxes, etc.

You will need two empty documents available. Step 1. Create a Pleading in the current document, which, as we now know, creates a Pleading watermark [Watermark B] code inside the document's initial [Open Style] code. Step 2. Double-click the [Open Style: DocumentStyle] code the document's initial style code at the top of the current Pleading document.

In the Styles Editor that pops up, place the cursor to the left of the [Watermark B] code, hold down the Shift key, and press the right arrow key once. This selects just the watermark code. Step 3. This will force WordPerfect to skip the first two pages before displaying the Pleading marks. If the document has fewer pages, the Pleading marks will not display. In a case having multiple parties, any answer, response, or opposition must specifically identify the complaining, propounding, or moving party and the complaint, motion, or other matter being answered or opposed.

If a case is reclassified by stipulation under Code of Civil Procedure section The caption or title must state that the case is a limited civil case reclassified as an unlimited civil case, or an unlimited civil case reclassified as a limited civil case, or other words to that effect.

Your email address will not be published. Court Deadlines contains reference information and calculators for common deadlines in the federal rules of civil procedure. Court Deadlines also includes links to certain state court rules.



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