Creditors can resume collection procedures against the debtor(s) including lawsuits to recover monies owed.
Latin words that mean "no process". In legal terms it means case dismissed due to lack of intrest or ability to prosecute.
then you are in a females case infertile or in a males case sterile
In that case, it will stay there.
In that case, the net force on the object is zero.
The energy in an ecosystem is used by the organisms in that ecosystem. In the case of the sun as energy, nothing happens because the sun always supplies energy.
IF by dropped you mean the case was dismissed, the answer depends on when and why the case was dismissed.
Not only is it possible, it is almost certain that the case would be dismissed. You might be given an extension by the court, but ultimately they must be filed.
No
The case first has to be dismissed. Once the case has been dismissed it will be disposed of. In some cases it may not be on your record and in some cases it will say dismissed.
A chapter 13 can be filed if it has been at least two years from the date the first filing was dismissed.
"Dismissed" is different from "discharged". If you truly mean "dismissed" (i.e., without a discharge), it's as if you never filed; you still owe, assuming the statute of limitations hasn't run on the debt (that varies by state). That usually happens only if you didn't follow all the rules. If you actually meant "discharged" (as normally happens at the end of a successful bankruptcy case, including Chapter 13), you don't owe. Technically, the debt still exists, but the discharge permanently enjoins the creditors in your case from enforcing it, thus effectively eliminating it.
The trustee cannot deny confirmation. Only the court can. The court can object to confirmation. If the objection is valid, and you do not correct the problems that prompted the confirmation, the objection will be sustained and confirmation denied. Your case would likely get converted to chapter 7 or dismissed.
Yes. It will show that you filed bankruptcy and that the bankruptcy was dismissed.
It means the case was closed, or dismissed. Usually this happens due to the petitioner failing to appear, or the alotted time required for the petitoner to complete an action has been exceeded. The matter can be refiled, though.
noAnother View: Yes, it could be, depending on HOW the case was dismissed. If the judge dismissed the case WITH prejudice it cannot be re-opened. If it was dismissed WITHOUT prejudice it can be.However, if a criminal case is dismissed without prejudice it may not be re-opened IF the applicable statute of limitations for that crime in that situation has lapsed.
Plaintiffs do not charge. They file lawsuits. The plaintiff can always file, but if the case is dismissed with prejudice, a new filing cannot be litigated. If a case is dismissed with prejudice, it means res judicata applies, and a new filing would be dismissed because the issues have already been litigated. If the case is dismissed without prejudice, it means that it has been voluntarily dismissed or dismissed for some reason to allow the case to be refiled and re-litigated later.
It means that for some legal reason the court has dismissed the charges against the individual. A case may be dismissed "with prejudice" or "without prejudice."