Decisions, though made by individual judges are always decisions of the court. That is why whether the decision is manifestly wrong ab initio, the judge is not sued for it but an appeal to a higher court is advised.
It can be called several things depending on the circumstances of the court action being brought. It can be called a "verdict" - a "judgement" - a "ruling" - an "order" - a "finding" - etc. If that doesn't answer the question, you will have to re-submit the question with more specific wording.
The decision of a judge in court is known as the verdict. This is what will determine is a person is guilty or not and the type of penalty for the guilty ones.
the court has and opinion such as a jury but thr judge always can over ride any decision they came to
The decision by a judge is called a ruling. In appellate or the supreme court it is called a holding.
verdict
That decision is up to the court, not you.That decision is up to the court, not you.That decision is up to the court, not you.That decision is up to the court, not you.
In most cases a Supreme Court decision is permanent. The current Supreme Court can change the decision of a previous Supreme Court.
The decision of the court is ALWAYS binding on everyone, unless it is appealed to a higher court which may overturn the decision.
The decision of the lower court is final.
Appeal the decision of the court.
A Judgment
It will affirm or reverse the decision.
It will affirm or reverse the decision.
Verdict (typically refers to a jury decision) or judgment(final decision of the court).
The court.
Technically no, because all states have autonomous jurisdiction. A US District Court decision is persuasive authority over a state court. A US District Court is a federal court, not a state court. A state supreme court decision however, is binding authority on a state appeals court level, and a trial court decision in that state would still be persuasive because its from a lower court. The decision from the Virginia Court of Appeals, however, becomes a binding authority over the state court.
UPHOLD the lower court's decision. REVERSE the lower court's decision. REMAND the lower court's decision back to it.