During martial law and general mobilization, summonses may be served to conscripts in virtually any public place
In addition, the document can be brought home, because the law does not provide for a place where a summons can be issued.
Lawyer and advocate Rostyslav Kravets explained the validity of subpoenas left at the door of a conscript's residence:
▪️ the summons must be given to the conscript personally, he must sign that he received it.
▪️ if there is no personal signature - the actions of the military with a summons at the door do not have legal force.
▪️the person they summon to the Military Commissariat may not appear, and there will be no legal consequences for her.
"Representatives of the TCC had to wait for the person and hand him the summons personally. Attaching the document to the door (even if there is photo evidence) is a deviation from the general rules for serving summons," explained Rostyslav Kravets.
In addition to the signature of the conscript, the summons must be certified by the seal and signature of the head of the military committee (TCC and SP).
"If a person came home and saw a summons on the door, then you can not respond to it at all. It has no legal force," the lawyer assured.
Note that if a person received the summons personally and signed it, he must appear at the military commissariat and be registered. If this did not happen, then in some cases liability is possible.