What is a litigation legal document?

Litigation legal documents are documents used by judicial administrative organs, parties and lawyers in solving litigation and non-litigation cases, including non-normative documents of judicial organs. There are two kinds: standard and non-standard. General legal documents refer to legal documents produced by public security organs, procuratorates, courts, prisons or reform-through-labour institutions, notary organs and arbitration organs to handle all kinds of litigation cases and non-litigation cases, as well as documents with legal effect or legal significance written by parties, lawyers and law firms, that is, all non-normative legal documents except normative legal documents.

Legal basis: Article 274 of the Civil Procedure Law of People's Republic of China (PRC).

The people's court may serve litigation documents on the parties who have no domicile in the territory of People's Republic of China (PRC) in the following ways:

(a) served in the manner stipulated in the international treaties concluded between the country where the addressee is located and People's Republic of China (PRC) or attended by both parties;

(2) being served through diplomatic channels;

(3) The addressee with China nationality may entrust the people of China and the embassy or consulate of China in the country where the addressee is located to serve on his behalf;

(4) If it is served on the agent ad litem entrusted by the addressee, the agent ad litem has the right to accept the service on his behalf;

(five) to the representative office established by the addressee in People's Republic of China (PRC) or the branch or business agent with the right to accept the service;

(6) If the law of the country where the addressee is located allows it to be served by mail, it may be served by mail. The service receipt has not been returned for three months from the date of mailing, but if it is deemed to have been served according to various circumstances, it shall be deemed that the service period has expired;

(seven) by fax, e-mail, etc. to confirm the receipt of the recipient;

(eight) if it cannot be served in the above way, it shall be deemed to have been served three months after the date of announcement.

What are the delivery methods of litigation documents?

1, direct delivery. Direct service, also known as service, refers to the way that the people's court sends a special person to directly serve the litigation documents to the addressee for signature. Direct delivery is the most basic delivery method;

2, lien service, refers to the addressee unreasonably refused to serve the litigation documents, the addressee shall put the litigation documents in the addressee's residence and produce the legal effect of service;

3. Entrusted service means that when the people's court in charge of hearing civil cases has difficulty in directly serving litigation documents, it entrusts other people's courts to serve them on its behalf according to law. Entrusted service and direct service have the same legal effect;

4. Delivery by post means that the people's court sends the documents served to the addressee by registered mail through the post office. Practice shows that when the addressee's residence is far away from the court and it is difficult to deliver it directly, the court usually uses postal service as the mode of delivery.

5. Transfer service refers to the way in which the people's court sends the litigation documents to the addressee's work unit for collection and then forwards them to the addressee;

6, electronic service, refers to the court by fax, email, mobile communication and other modern electronic means of service;

7. Notice service refers to the way that the court issues an announcement when the whereabouts of the addressee are unknown or cannot be served by other means, and the announcement is deemed to be served after a certain period of time.