If your case has been adjudicated and you are ordered to pay the fine, you must pay the fine.
If you refuse to do so, you can be found in contempt of court, and face penalties.
"Decided" as a dispute. When a judge decides a case, it is said that the judge has adjudicated the case. (It is possible for legal disputes to be settled by arbiters other than actual judges.)
Adjudicated means the case is done: it has been convicted either by the defendant pleading guilty or found guilty by the Judge/jury.
Adjudicated guilty means the judge resolved the case and found the defendant guilty. Adjudication is the final action that the judge took.
NO. you still have a conviction. That would depend on how your case was adjudicated. Were you convicted of the charges, or were they dismissed?
Adjudication refers to judgments made by the court. The finding of guilt, innocence, and judgment are all instruments to adjudication.
In plain English it means that the final verdict or judgment has been rendered.
When a case has been either dismissed or adjudicated, it has been disposed of.
Yes, unless the judge rules it inadmissable for some good reason.
Contact the court clerk from the court that adjudicated the case.
When you receive a ticket, it is a summons to appear in court. You have three options any time you get a ticket: you can accept guilt and pay the fine, you can contest it and appear before a magistrate, or you can ignore it. If you accept guilt and pay the fine, the ticket is adjudicated. It has been resolved by the court. If you contest it and see the magistrate, he will either find in your favor (and the ticket is adjudicated because you are acquitted), or he finds you guilty and you pay the fine. At that time you may appeal and take the case to a higher court, but if you do it will not be adjudicated until the case is heard and ruled upon. If you ignore it, eventually the court may issue a bench warrant on you. When you are eventually collected by LEOs, and you face the judge, you will be found in contempt of court, your traffic fine will come due, and you will be sentenced. Once that sentence is read, the case is adjudicated.
The word ajudicated means that judgment has been rendered in the case. An ajudicated court case should be closed. You will have to contact the Clerk of The Court and ask the reason why the case is still in an 'open' status. It might simply be a clerical or filiong error.
It means that the case has been judged and is over.