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They all have the same merit list. There is no different Merit List.
An achieved status comes to us largely through our own efforts. Attained by a person largely through his or her own efforts
No. The defendant still remains charged with the same offense unless the charge is dismissed by the judge. Whatever the defendants status was before the hung-jury trial will remain the same until the court takes action to either dismiss the charge or re-schedule a new trial.
Trial date Jan.24, 2011. The trial was reset to May 23, 2011. Reset October 3, 2011.
The "status" of the case refers to what stage of the judicial process it is in, in the court system or on the court's docket. It refers to what step of the process the case is currently (e.g.: preliminary hearing - pre-trial - pending trial - adjudicated - etc).
No. It must remain the same.
The sides in a civil trial are the same as a criminal trial. There is a plaintiff and a defendant. In a criminal trial the plaintiff is usually the jurisdictioni charging the defendant.
A jury in a trial makes the same decisions as a judge would in a bench trial. Based on evidence, they decide if a person charged is guilty or innocent.
all of the trial balance will contain the same number of accounts
By nature of selecting a jury a jury trial can take longer, but when it comes to the actual trial from opening arguments to closing arguments they take about the same amount of time.
rank, cachet, caliber, character, degree, dignity, distinction, grade, footing, merit, mode, place, position, prestige, prominence, quality, rating, renown, situation, stage, standing, station, stature, worth
Individual judges may use a status hearing, or status conference, in different ways, but generally it is for the lawyers to inform the judge as to what motions remain pending in a particular case, whether settlement is likely, and whether a trial should be scheduled or not.