well, i guess so. i mean yes you could sue someone twice for the same case, because maybe they did two bad things so u could sue them twice.
There are different categories of death. Therefore cases that involve a death may be heard in criminal or civil court depending on the circumstances. A case where a person died as a result of a car accident in which no one violated the law would be heard in civil court. A case in which someone purposely hit and killed someone with their car would be heard in criminal court.
No. Dismissed with prejudice means the case has already been adjudicated, and that res judicata would prohibit bringing the case again. Furthermore, small claims court is a level of civil court that has a lower monetary jurisdiction than other levels. The alternative to civil court is criminal court, and small claims cases are not, by their nature, criminal matters.
In neither civil nor criminal court will the same case be heard twice, unless it can be shown that the decision was faulty, in which case you need to choose a new court (civil) or move up to a higher court like Appellate court (criminal) or Supreme court (criminal)
With the Clerk of the Court's office of the court which will be hearing your case.
Depends on what type of case you have: If it is civil then yes If it is criminal then no
Usually civil courts handle civil cases. You may find civil courts inside your municipal court, circuit court, federal court, appeals court, etc.
While it is not required, very few (if any) court cases (either criminal OR civil) pass without someone filing a motion.
Are you asking about proceeding in 'civil' court for damages against someone or something, or in 'criminal' court as a criminal charge against someone or something? The statute of limitations in your state of residence (?) may come into play. in civil court in Georgia and it happen in 1998 and im just finding out about it
kind of court? Criminal court for adults, Family court for kids. Civil court of found not guilty for shoplifting and your suing them.
A court settles a disagreement between two parties when they cannot come to a resolution on their own and need a legal decision to resolve their dispute. Courts have the authority to interpret the law, determine the facts of the case, and make a binding judgment to resolve the disagreement.
a court for someone who has lost a case in a lower court
It means that that court can hear both criminal or civil cases. Either a criminal case can be filed and heard in that court, OR a civil case can be filed and heard in that court. For instance: most(all?) state circuit courts fit this description.