That the case is put on hold for a period of time if the prosecution does not follow up the defendent should have the charges expunged
Another View: The above description refers to a case which is SUSPENDED not retired.
I could find only two possible meanings of the word "retire" when applied to courts. The first refers to the jury - A jury retires after hearing all testimony, evidence, arguments of counsel, and instructions by the court, and retires (i.e. moves) from the courtroom to the jury room in order to to consider their verdict.
The second is in the use of the word to refer to court cases and court documents which are transferred into storage (i.e.: the 'retirement' of records.
The term 'disposition' refers to a court's final determination of a case or issue
It means that whatever the outcome of the court case was - that is the final finding and judgement.
A court disposition is is the ultimate adjudged result/finding of the case.
Go to the clerk's office in the court where the case was handled. Ask to review the file. You'll find some kind of disposing document, either an order, a verdict, or a disposition or some other document that shows how the case was disposed of.
A disposition narrative is a written report or document that outlines the final decision made by a judge or court in a legal case. It summarizes the details of the case, the evidence presented, and the reasoning behind the judge's decision.
The disposition is the ultimate outcome of a case. What that means in a particular context would depend on the case's unique facts.
It means exactly what it sounds like. The END of the case. It is the FINAL disposition of the case. A decision or verdict has been rendered, and judgment meted out.
Final paragraph
Final paragraph
it means the court can decide to screw you over if the city needs more money because the whole system is corrupt. Fat judges that have crazy families sentencing normal people that didn't even do much wrong. They can screw you over many times over and all they have to do is say the word.
The disposition of an appeal is the judge's final ruling in the case, or what he decides to do to it. The three most common dispositions are: Affirmed, in which the judge agrees with the lower court and the original ruling stands, Reversed, in which the judge disagrees with the lower court and invalidates that opinion, and Remanded, in which the judge sends the case down to a lower court for further action. Cases are often both reversed and remanded.
It means exactly what it sounds like. The END of the case. It is the FINAL disposition of the case. A decision or verdict has been rendered, and judgment meted out.