Efficient and Reliable Process Serving
Contact Vernon Process Serving below
Efficient and Reliable Process Serving
Contact Vernon Process Serving below
Contact Vernon Process Serving below
Contact Vernon Process Serving below
We provide filing services at the Vernon Registry.
We can also prepare Application Record Binders.
We serve Provincial Court, Supreme Court, and Residential Tenancy documents.
We have over 25 years of process serving experience in the Vernon area.
Email: VernonProcessServing@shaw.ca
We will confirm when we receive your email.
In your email please ensure you include the following information:
Please feel free to share any additional information that may be useful in serving the person (i.e. work schedule, vehicles, etc)
Give us a call if you have any questions or concerns.
3602 17 Avenue, Vernon, British Columbia V1T 1B8, Canada
VernonProcessServing@shaw.ca Phone: (250) 542-2077 Don Jones' cell: (250) 540-2646
Open today | 08:00 a.m. – 08:00 p.m. |

We are Process Servers located in Vernon, BC, that provide process serving and court filing services.
Check our Frequently Asked Questions or send an email and we will be happy to help.
Please send us an email if you cannot find an answer to your question.
At this time we only accept cheques, cash or e-transfers. NO CREDIT CARDS
Cheques to Vernon Process Serving
E-transfers to VernonProcessServing@shaw.ca (will auto-deposit)
The documents can be emailed, sent by courier or Canada Post.
When emailing the documents, please ensure the documents are scanned as a PDF file not sent as a photo/.jpeg (a good PDF scanner for your phone is Adobe PDF scanner).
If the file is too large to send over email, then you can upload it to DropBox and provide us with the link and/or password.
If we are unable to personally serve the documents, we can provide an Affidavit of Attempted Service that outlines when/what we did to attempt to serve the documents.
The Affidavit of Attempt can then be used to apply for service by an alternate method.
An Affidavit of Service is a document used in court to prove that legal documents were served on the person they were intended for. It needs to be filled out by the person who delivered the documents and sworn to be true by a Commissioner for Taking Affidavits or Notary Public.
The difference is whether a Commissioner for Taking Affidavits or a Notary Public affirmed the affidavit. In most circumstances, a commissioned affidavit will be sufficient.
A notarized affidavit may be required for out of province documents.
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