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Wyoming Default Judgment Rules: How to Vacate [2026]

State-specific rules, federal court data, and practical guidance for Wyoming residents.

Wyoming Default Judgment Vacatur Rules

Wyoming generally follows the federal 1-year framework for vacating default judgments under Wyo. R. Civ. P. 60(b). After the 1-year window, limited relief remains for void judgments, jurisdictional defects, or fraud.

RuleWyoming Standard
Primary rule citationWyo. R. Civ. P. 60(b)
Answer deadline (from service)30 days
Window to vacate (ordinary)1 year ((1),(2),(3))
Window for void judgmentreasonable time (4-6)

Wyoming tracks federal Rule 60(b) framework.

How Wyoming Courts Evaluate Your Motion

Show mistake, inadvertence, surprise, excusable neglect + meritorious defense.

The universal thread across most Wyoming cases: you must show both a procedural excuse (why you did not answer) and a meritorious defense (why you should have won). One without the other rarely succeeds.

  • Excusable neglect. Genuine accident, illness, or service failure -- not mere forgetfulness or choice to ignore.
  • Meritorious defense. SOL, lack of contract, wrong defendant, paid debt, or FDCPA violation. See the full list.
  • Prompt motion. Wyoming courts penalize delay. File immediately after learning of the judgment.
  • No prejudice to plaintiff. The longer you wait, the more the plaintiff has relied on the judgment.

Debt Collector Failure to Appear -- Wyoming Rules

If the collector or plaintiff fails to appear at a required hearing in Wyoming, you can often move for dismissal with prejudice. The cure rules flip in this scenario:

  • Status hearing no-show. Most Wyoming courts enter a dismissal for lack of prosecution after one or two missed appearances.
  • Garnishment hearing no-show. The writ is quashed and any withheld wages may be ordered returned.
  • Evidence hearing no-show. If the collector cannot produce a live witness with personal knowledge of the account, the court may sua sponte dismiss.

Many junk-debt buyers lose on failure-to-appear alone because they cannot produce a live witness with knowledge of the original account. Always demand a live witness and attend every hearing.

Improper Service in Wyoming -- The Strongest Ground

Service defects are the most common -- and strongest -- ground to vacate in Wyoming. When service was never properly made, the default judgment is void (not merely voidable), which means it can be attacked at any time under most state rules, not just within the ordinary vacatur window.

Common service defects in Wyoming:

  • "Sewer service" -- process server lies about delivery and you never receive the summons.
  • Service on wrong address after you moved.
  • Substitute service on someone not authorized to accept (e.g., minor child, ex-spouse, neighbor).
  • Publication service without exhausting personal-service attempts.
  • Service on a co-defendant rather than you directly.

See improper-service defense deep dive for the affidavit template and evidentiary burden.

Extrinsic vs Intrinsic Fraud in Wyoming

Wyoming distinguishes extrinsic fraud (cognizable as void-judgment attack, no time limit in most states) from intrinsic fraud (subject to the ordinary vacatur window).

  • Extrinsic fraud - fraud on the court that prevented you from presenting your defense. Example: the plaintiff lied about your address to prevent service.
  • Intrinsic fraud - fraud in the evidence or pleadings presented. Example: the plaintiff attached a forged contract. Subject to the 1 year ((1),(2),(3)) window in Wyoming.

Extrinsic fraud is the stronger path in Wyoming because it is generally not subject to the ordinary time bar.

When Bankruptcy Resolves the Underlying Debt

If you cannot vacate the default judgment in Wyoming, bankruptcy often remains viable:

  • Chapter 7 discharges the underlying debt, making the judgment unenforceable as to you personally.
  • Chapter 13 treats the judgment as a general unsecured claim paid pro rata through the plan.
  • Judgment lien avoidance under 11 U.S.C. Section 522(f) strips judgment liens that impair your homestead exemption.

Check 1328(f) refiling screener and the Wyoming means test to see if you qualify.