Process Services

Since 2004, Funderburk Investigative Services has been professionally serving documents in the Charlotte Metro area. We make several attempts to contact the person and make sure the job is done.

After documents arrive at our office, they go out no later than the next day, unless a request for quick service has been made. Process serving is our business, so we go the extra mile to do it right. Our firm serves all civil documents, including, but not limited to, summons, court orders, affidavits, liens, notice of liens, cross complaint, complaints and alias and pluries summons, motion order to appear, motion for supplementary proceeding, answer, notice of deposition taking, request to produce document, and post judgment interrogations.

Our standards

  • Honesty, Integrity, and Truthfulness
  • Operate within local, state, and federal laws
  • Honorable discharge of professional duties
  • Provider of ethical services
  • Adhere to the Constitution of the United States

Document service

If you have papers in need of serving, contact us for effective and prompt service..

Maybe you have struggled with delivery in the past, but at Funderburk Investigative Services, if they are in the Charlotte Metro area, we'll locate and serve them!

You are our client, and we pride ourselves on exceeding your expectations. Give us a call today at 980-224-3907.

 

Other Services

  • Background Checks
  • Child Custody Issues
  • Civil & Criminal Issues
  • Conservatorships
  • Contract Disputes
  • Divorce Actions
  • Domestic Infidelity
  • ID of Assets
  • Locate Missing Children/Parents
  • Missing Persons
  • Personal Injury
  • Probate Matters
  • Surveillance Skip
  • Suspicious Deaths
  • Tracing Missing Heirs
  • Witness Locates & Interviews
  • Wrongful Death

What is Process Service?

  • Process Services is service of process directly to the (or a) party named on the summons, complaint or petition. In most lawsuits in the United States, Process Service is required to prove service. Most states allow substituted service in almost all lawsuits unless you are serving a corporation, LLC, LLP, or other business entity; in those cases, personal service must be achieved by serving (in hand) the documents to the "Registered Agent" of a business entity. Some states (Florida) do not require that the documents actually be handed to the individual. In California and most other states, the documents must be visible to the person being served, i.e., not in a sealed envelope. If the individual refuses to accept service, flees, closes the door, etc., and the individual has been positively identified as the person to be served, documents may be "drop" served, and it is considered a valid service.
  • via Wikipedia