About Receipt for Lodged Original Confidential Financial Statements
Documents the receipt and return of confidential original financial statements lodged with the court in conservatorship proceedings.
When you'd use it: When a private professional conservator or other party lodges confidential financial statements with the court and needs a receipt, or when those statements are retrieved and returned.
Where to get the official form
The official version of Receipt for Lodged Original Confidential Financial Statements is published as a PDF by the California courts. We checked this link and it resolved to a form on an official court or government website — always download the current version directly from the source rather than a third-party copy:
Download Receipt for Lodged Original Confidential Financial Statements (PDF) →
Source: sanmateo.courts.ca.gov
Link last checked: May 31, 2026
How to file Receipt for Lodged Original Confidential Financial Statements in California
- Step 1 — Confirm you have the correct formUse Receipt for Lodged Original Confidential Financial Statements (PR-27) when when a private professional conservator or other party lodges confidential financial statements with the court and needs a receipt, or when those statements are retrieved and returned. Double-check it's the right form for your situation — California probate forms are revised periodically, so verify the name and number against your court's current form list before you start.
- Step 2 — Complete every required fieldFill out Receipt for Lodged Original Confidential Financial Statements carefully and review it for errors before filing. Probate cases can already take months — a small mistake on the form can set your timeline back further.
- Step 3 — Get it notarized or witnessed if requiredSome probate forms must be signed in front of a notary or witnesses. Check the instructions on the form itself, and arrange notarization before you file if it's required.
- Step 4 — File it with the correct courtSubmit Receipt for Lodged Original Confidential Financial Statements to the probate court or county clerk handling the estate — usually in the California county where the deceased lived. Ask the clerk how they prefer to receive filings (in person, by mail, or e-filing).