How do you know if you have been sued or filed?

The way to know whether you are being sued or filed is as follows:

1. Check whether you have received a court summons or a short message from the judicial service hotline 12368;

2. Call the judicial service hotline 12368 to inquire whether there are any cases being prosecuted;

3. Go directly to the court to inquire about the case information with my ID card;

4. If it is a criminal case, you can go to the public security organ to check whether it has been filed for investigation.

Inquiries about being sued or bringing a lawsuit:

1. Check private letters or emails: after the court files a case, it will send a formal complaint or notice to the defendant, usually by mail or email;

2. Log in to the local court in official website: Many courts provide online inquiry services, and you can check whether there are relevant case records by inputting personal information;

3. Direct contact with the court: you can directly call or provide personal identification information to the local court case inquiry window for inquiry;

4. Consulting a lawyer: If a lawyer is represented, you can directly consult a lawyer about the case;

5. Check the credit report: In some cases, the credit report may show information about personal legal proceedings.

To sum up, the ways to know whether you are being sued or put on file are: checking court summons or text messages, calling the judicial service hotline, going to the court to inquire about case information, and going to the public security organ to inquire about criminal cases. In addition, you can also check personal letters or emails, visit the court in official website, contact the court, consult a lawyer, and check the credit report.

Legal basis:

Criminal procedure law

Article 112

The people's court, the people's procuratorate or the public security organ shall, within the jurisdiction, timely review the materials of accusation, complaint, report and surrender, and if it is considered that there are criminal facts that need to be investigated for criminal responsibility, it shall file a case; If it is considered that there are no criminal facts, or the criminal facts are obviously minor, and it is not necessary to pursue criminal responsibility, the case shall not be filed, and the complainant shall be informed of the reasons for not filing the case. If the complainant refuses to accept it, he may apply for reconsideration.