It will be up to the judge in the case if a telephonic hearing is allowed in MI.
Generally, no. However they may be allowed in extraordinary circumstances. You need to call or visit your local family court to inquire.
No, a court case refers to the legal dispute being resolved in court, involving legal arguments, evidence, and a final decision by a judge or jury. A court hearing is a specific event within a court case where arguments are presented, witnesses testify, and rulings may be made by the judge.
File a "motion" and a "request to appear" with the Clerk Of Court's office in the branch of the court you wish to have your matter heard in (civil or criminal). CAUTION: The case will have to have "legal merit" in order to be considered for a hearing.
The same rules do not apply at a legislation hearing and a court of law. Each body has their own rules. In a court of law, the judge is in charge of the court.
I am unfamiliar with the term "clarification" hearing. However, any hearing must begin with a motion presented to the court requesting the hearing. File a motion with the Clerk of the Court's office setting forth the reason for the request and it will be forwarded to a judge (or in the case of a specific case, a particular judge) who will either grant or deny the hearing.
Judge Judy has them.
False
The judge closed the case.
The court itself has more than one judge assigned to it, but only one judge is assigned to hear each case in its entirety .
Dear Honorable [Judge's Last Name],
If the judge is revoking his own court order, it would make no difference whether your lawyer was present or not. The judge is allowed to revoke, withdraw, or alter, his own orders as he sees fit.
If I am understanding the question correctly - no motion is necessary or required to request the judge to move forward with the hearing. It is ALWAYS the court's intention to move a hearing forward. Unless the judge dismisses the case for some legal reasong, court hearings will automatically go forward unless a motion to drop or stop the hearing is presented on which he must rule.