The plural form of plaintiff is plaintiffs.
Complaintiff: complainant plaintiff
Defendant
A defendant may assert that the plaintiff "came to the nuisance." A "coming to the nuisance" defense may be successful if a defendant can prove that he or she engaged in the offending activity with similar results before the plaintiff moved to the neighborhood. For example, a plaintiff is unlikely to succeed in a nuisance action for barking dogs when the plaintiff knowingly bought property next to a large dog kennel.
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
not unless the context requires it
The plural form of plaintiff is plaintiffs.
The plural form of the noun plaintiff is plaintiffs.The plural possessive form is plaintiffs'.
"Plaintiff's" is the possessive form of "plaintiff," indicating something belonging to a single plaintiff. "Plaintiffs'" is the plural possessive form, indicating something belonging to multiple plaintiffs.
The Plaintiff.
The person initiating a law suit is called an Appellant.
The possessive form for the noun plaintiff is plaintiff's.Example: The plaintiff's case is based on heresay.
"Ptf." is the shorthand for plaintiff.
Plaintiff is a noun.
a male plaintiff = to'en (טוען) a female plaintiff = to'enet (×˜×•×¢× ×ª)
You must obtain a release from the plaintiff's estate.You must obtain a release from the plaintiff's estate.You must obtain a release from the plaintiff's estate.You must obtain a release from the plaintiff's estate.
The plaintiff.The plaintiff.The plaintiff.The plaintiff.
The plaintiff is the person who brings or files suit and the defendant is the person who is sued by the plaintiff.