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Basically your verdict is dismissed and if the D.A. feels he still has a strong case he has to refile charges and try you again.

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The decision is vacated and the case remanded to the lower court for a new trial.

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13y ago
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6y ago

When a case is sent back to the trial court, it is "reversed and remanded", many people will just say "remanded".

If a case is remanded, it means the original court made an error during the initial trial (which led to the appeal). The appellate court recognized and pointed-out the error, then sent it back to the trial court.

The trial court is expected to re-hear the case, correcting the error.

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11y ago

It is called a "remand", and the trial court's further proceedings must be consistent with the ruling of the appellate court.

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11y ago

Appeal

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11y ago

Remand

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Q: When an appellate court sends a case back to the trial court?
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Related questions

What does it mean when an appellate court sends a case back to the trial court?

apelleate court sends a case back to the trial court


When an appellate court sends back a case back to the trial court?

Appeal


When the appellate court sends a case back to the trial court?

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When an appellate court sends case back to the trial court?

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When an appellate court sends a case back to trial?

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When the appellate court sends the cse back to the trial court without overturning it this is called?

If I correctly understand the question, this is generally described as an appellate court upholding or affirming the lower court's rulings.


When the appellate court sends a case back to the trial court for further action it will state that the case is?

I think the word you're looking for is "remanded".


Is there a limit to court remands?

Unsure exactly what it is that is being asked.Remand - defined: It is a finding by an appellate court, which sends a case back to the trial court for further proceedings. The trial court must conduct further proceedings consistent with the appellate court's ruling.Once a case is "in the judicial system" it does not go away, expire, or have a statute of limitations. On the other hand a remanded case is not instantaneously given priority treatment either. It is simply added to the docket of whatever court it was remanded back to, and will once again come up for hearing/trial in due course.


What happens when appellate court reverses summary judgment?

When an appellate court reverses summary judgment, it means that the court has determined that there are genuine issues of material fact that need to be decided by a jury. The appellate court has concluded that the lower court erred in granting summary judgment, which is a determination made by the court without a trial because there are no disputed facts. The case will typically be remanded back to the trial court for further proceedings or a trial on the merits.


Is an overturned case considered remanded?

No it is not. If a criminal defendant had been convicted of two charges and the appellate court reversed in part by setting aside the conviction on one of the charges, there would be no remand because the defendant could not be retried on the count reversed. In a civil action, if a plaintiff won on two counts of a complaint and the appellate court reversed the judgment on one by reason of it not being supported by the weight of the evidence, it would not be remanded because the plaintiff doesn't get another chance to prove his case.


What do Remanded for findings mean?

Appellate and supreme courts do not generally make "findings of fact." That means they don't think about issues of witness credibility, specific damage amounts, what the conditions of a road were at a particular time, etc. Those jobs are reserved for the trial court. An appellate/supreme court will remand for findings when it wants to send the case back to a trial court for the trial court to get more information before reaching its verdict.


What is a denovo hearing?

A second time; afresh. A trial or hearing that is ordered by an appellate court that has reviewed the record of a hearing in a lower court and sent the matter back to the original court for a new trial, as if it had not been previously heard nor decided. This applies to law.