Disposed by Judge - a judgment or disposition is reached by the judge in a case which is not dismissed and in which no trial has been held. Includes stipulations by the parties, conditional judgments, summary judgment after hearing and any matter in which a judgment is entered excluding cases disposed of by default.
If the phrase in the question was copied correctly - it sounds like words and phraseology taken from a court file or a disposition sheet which are typically written quickly in a kind of 'shorthand' or a short, brief, and terse fashion, which follows no legal formula.
That being said, THIS is how I would interpret it: The court action against the defendant was disposed of (ended/cut short/concluded) because the Prosecutor PROBABLY Nolle Prossed (declined to prosecute) the charge.
For an exact interpretation - call the Clerk of Court office and ask them what THEY understand it to mean.
Disposed by Judge - a judgment or disposition is reached by the judge in a case which is not dismissed and in which no trial has been held. Includes stipulations by the parties, conditional judgments, summary judgment after hearing and any matter in which a judgment is entered excluding cases disposed of by default.
Disposed means the case is closed. It could either be a final judgment or dismissed.
When a case comes to High Court/Supreme Court the case will be first listed and tracked with "Pending" Status,when argument for the case happens and Honorable Judge listens the arguments and feel that he can take a decision on the case then the Judgment Will be reserved and the case will be disposed. The case disposed doesn't mean that it is in favour of the appealed or not it only means that the case has been heard and a judgment has been made.
Case disposed means that a case has been dismissed, withdrawn or resolved. The judge that presides over the case has the power to dismiss or resolve the case.
It means something that can be recycled.
"Disposed" in this instance simply means that the charge was "settled," "attended to," or "handled."
"Disposed cases" generally means cases which have been decided.
Deposed means testified. To depose is to give sworn testimony. In a divorce case, one or both parties may be deposed by the other's lawyer. This does not necessarily mean the divorce is going to trial. Typically, during a deposition, both lawyers and both parties are present, along with a stenographer. You gave the definition for the wrong word. The word asked was DISPOSED...completely different meaning. Some cases get disposed through an agreed settlement or voluntary dismissal. Others get disposed because they are uncontested, (the defendant did not file an answer to the complaint), or because they get dismissed by plaintiff.I stand corrected. The word asked was disposed.
To me it means arranged or disposed in a neat, tidy manner or in a regular sequence:
It means disposed or inclined to revenge
Indispensible means that you can't do without it - you must have it - it is not dispensible (dispensible means that something can be disposed of).
It means the filing party has withdrawn the action.