He files a motion for an order to have the Judge recuse himself from the case.
Where is your attorney? Have the Clerk Of the Court, give you an extract of the judge's order which should be contained in the case court file.
You can either hire an attorney or do all the work yourself. You can go to the court house and file a petition to request a judge to review your case.
yes they can.Added: An attorney can file a 'Motion to Withdraw' from a case with the court. Usually such a motion is granted. In a criminal case the judge may replace your attorney with a public defender. This option is NOT available in civil cases.
Your attorney must file a motion with good reason to support moving the case. The judge will give each attorney their chance to argue for and against the motion.
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.
A person can file a libel case by hiring an attorney. The attorney will decide if the person has enough proof to make a case. The attorney will usually need witness statements, documents, and other things to prove the case before filing.
If the US Attorney wishes to continue to prosecute the case, they will re-file the case and prepare it for a new trial.
There is paperwork to fill out and a judge has to approve the dismissal. You can submit it to the trustee or judge in charge of your bankruptcy. If you have an attorney, the attorney can do this for you.
Not at all. You usually are able to benifit greatly by you and your attorney negotiating with the DA or the judge. Most pleas and deals happen in the judge's chambers with the Judge, your attorney, and the DA/prosecution present. This is one of the many reasons why having a private attorney is immensely beneficial to you and your case. A public defender won't put that much effort into your case and try to make a deal in the Judge's chambers. You're just another number and file to them. Always try to negotiate, it could NEVER hurt, and could be very beneficial for your case. Sources: a lot of personal experience.
If you cannot get your former attorney to release your case file to you, the easiest way is to hire another attorney. The new attorney can file a motion with the court to obtain an order forcing your previous attorney to release your file to your new attorney. I know because I went through the same process.
You will have to hire an attorney to get alimony in the state of South Carolina. The attorney will file papers in court and judge will have final say over the matter.
If a judge denied his original request, that WAS the state of Ohio (in the person of the judge) who denied his petition. This time around, with an attorney submitting the petition, it might have a better chance of being reviewed, but it is no 'slam-dunk' simply becauise an attorney is handling the case.