WHAT IS A WARNING?
The official warning letter appears with the name of the warning and is used in the sense of protest.
A warning refers to a legal action that causes the counterparty to default in relation to the said transaction in legal transactions that are legally mandatory, or determines the beginning of interest on the same transaction and must be notified to the counterparty. A warning is a legal act that must be delivered to the other party. In this sense, the warning may also be sent to the other party via different ways.
Response to the Warning
When a notice is sent to you via a notary, the first thing to note about this notice is whether any period is specified in this notice. These periods may be a period specified by the person sending the notice, as well as a period caused by the law.If the notice period is specified in the sent notice, then you must respond within the time period determined by the notice sent to you.
As we mentioned above, the appeal periods for notices sent through a notary are directly related to the material content of the legal issues that are the subject of the notice. For example, if a notice sent to you from a notary public contains a request from your landlord to evict the house in which you live as a tenant, you must respond to this notice within 7 days. Of course, if you are going to respond to a warning, this answer should again be in the form of sending a warning through a notary channel.
If another example is given, if the claims contained in the warning received by you do not reflect the truth and are not specified for a period of time, you should send a warning containing your statements that the mentioned claims do not reflect the truth as soon as possible.
IN CASE OF NON-RESPONSE TO A WARNING FROM A NOTARY;
In general, by not taking any action against a notice sent to you through a notary, your failure to respond to that notice will not create a situation against you. Because you do not make any willful actions to reject or verify the claims in legal proceedings, that is, if you shut up, this does not mean that the claims have been accepted, that is, the claims have been admitted by you.
as a result
If a notice sent to you through a notary is to be answered against, you must first exercise your right to appeal within the time limit. On the other hand, if you believe that the claims subject to the notice sent to you reflect the truth, it will be beneficial for you to perform the actions reported to you in the notice that you are asked to perform through the notice again during the period. Otherwise, you will face a lawsuit, enforcement proceedings, etc. it will be more likely that you will encounter a more difficult situation as a result. If the claims regarding the actions requested by you that are the subject of the notice do not reflect the truth, it will be beneficial for you to send a notice containing your right to object within the time limit or your statements that the claims are untrue to the truth as soon as possible if a period of time has not been set for an appeal, again through a notary.