Yes they can. It happened to me over a 10 year old divorce settlement. A judge can rule and overthrow many things that you would think can't be done!
Interesting question that can only be answered by a court of law. Bring this information to the attention of the judge assigned to your case for his decision.
Statute of limitations do not apply to divorce decrees. The decree can be brought before a judge, consult a local attorney.
A statute law is made by parliament. Statute is legislation and acts. A judge-made law, or a common law, is a result of judicial decisions, decisions which originate from court cases.
No, if the statute contains a maximum fine or sentence for the offense for which you were convicted, the judge may not exceed the maximum.
There would not be any limitation on the resulting warrant. The warrant will be active until you are arrested or it is canceled by the judge.
No they will. Not
Warrants never expire. They exist until canceled by the judge.
It will greatly depend on the jurisdiction and the judge. In some cases they may dismiss the case.
Felonies are forever. Meaning you have to report a felony conviction for the remainder of your life. If a judge has expunged your record, then you don't have to report it.
The plaintiff cannot - that is a judge's prerogative. The plaintiff can REQUEST that a judge consider ruling that way, but it is up to the judge as to whether he will grant it or not.
There is no statute of limitation in the state of California for failure to appear. A failure to appear charge results in a warrant being issued for your arrest and that arrest warrant never expires.
a statute is just a guideline. the judge will sentence criminals based on their prior record, if they appeared remorseful....etc