You, or your attorney, should file a motion for the judge to recuse himself from your case. You should accompany your request with some hard facts and reasoning that makes you believe the judge could not render a fair opinion in your case.
You ask your lawyer to file a motion to have the judge changed and request another or to have the judge recused from the case.
Normally the parties, not the court, files the judgment. There is no time requirement for the judge to RENDER a decision.
by the judge
In California, a minor can be emancipated by proving they are financially self-sufficient, have appropriate housing, and can make informed decisions on their own. They must also convince the court that emancipation is in their best interest.
These matters may even be further delineated in the county in which you reside. I believe the best way to go about asking for a change would be to contact your county's family court division and ask them directly, as each county's procedure may be different and it might be difficult to get an exact answer here unless you post the county and happen to get someone with the firsthand knowledge of that county. Good luck! Added: In any case, if there are circumstances showing that the judge does not have the ability to be unbiased, you file a motion to recuse the judge. Typically, you cannot request a change of judge without some sort of bias. Generally, allowing litigants to "judge shop" or hand pick their judge is against court policy.
The four primary branches of Civil Law include: 1. contract law 2. tort law 3. property law 4. family law
Torts, Contracts, Family, Probate, and Property Law
Torts, civil wrongs, family Law, bankruptcy, etc. ANYTHING not having to do with criminal law.
The four primary branches of Civil Law include: 1. contract law 2. tort law 3. property law 4. family law
That depends on the Judge, the law of the state where they are, and the specific of the custody request.
Please define what you mean by the phrase "processual law." Family Law is conducted under the same judicial rules of procedure as all other civil law.
Yes. Divorce and family law is civil law as opposed to defense attorneys who practice criminal law. However, there are many different specialities within the practice of civil law, not only divorce.