When a cases is sent back for further proceedings to the court that originally heard the case, it is actually being remanded. Remanded means that the original court now has control over the case.
Remand
remand
To remand means to hand back to the care of a court or jurisdiction. So to remand to a high court means just that: to hand a case back to the high court.
This is called a remand.
Typically, the Appellate Court will either uphold a conviction or reverse and remand (meaning the case goes back to the lower court for a new hearing on the merits).
to a lower court"Remand" can have two meanings.An Appelate Court can remand a case back to a lower court for correction or further action,-OR-A trial judge can remand a defendant to jail if, after a preliminary hearing, they find there is reason to hold the accused for trial.
"Adjourn" means to temporarily suspend a legal proceeding or meeting to a later date or time. "Remand" refers to sending a case back to a lower court for further consideration or action, typically ordered by a higher court.
The court of Appeals has three options after they have reviewed a case in appeal. They can affirm the original conviction and keep the status of the case unchanged. They can reverse the decision and remand the case back into the lower court system. They also can remand, change or modify the conviction.
No, they have made their ruling and the case is sent back to the court of original jurisdiction for their handling.
When a court decision is "reversed and remained," it goes back to the lower court for retrial or correction. For example, if a man held up another outside his house, fired a gun, and broke a window, he might be convicted on armed robbery and breaking and entering. The higher court might determine he was only guilty of armed robbery and breaking. He was not guilty of entering. It might remain his sentence for entering to the lower court. The judge in the lower court might reduce his sentence from 40 years to 30.
Uphold the original decision - Overturn the original decision - Remand the case back to the lower court.
Typically, the Appellate Court will either uphold a conviction or reverse and remand (meaning the case goes back to the lower court for a new hearing on the merits).