Yes. That would be a counter-suit or a counter-claim.
You can file a counter suit or sue for damages. You should consult with an attorney who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.You can file a counter suit or sue for damages. You should consult with an attorney who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.You can file a counter suit or sue for damages. You should consult with an attorney who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.You can file a counter suit or sue for damages. You should consult with an attorney who can review your situation and explain your rights and options.
in any pokemart near the counter.
It would depend on the reason. If the parent who filed custody over the six month old child from a divorce, but the other parent files a counter suit for the "safety" of the child, then the judge would have to look more into the case because the other parent had already, as it seems from your question, won custody. If nothing is found then the child remains with the custody holder. But, if something is found then the child will be handed over to the parent who filed the counter suit OR will be sent to child services. It literally depends on the case. Sorry.
You have go to the event first then go into a pokemart after you are done and talk to the guy in the green suit next to the counter.
It depends on why the suit was dismissed but you would probably be wasting your time and money resubmitting a lawsuit that the court had already determined was inactionable without making changes to the core of it to render it actionable.
fat America
Yes, you can. You must first rob the lady behind the counter and then quickly steal the suit you want and leave the store before the cops arrive.
There is nothing illegal about bringing a law suit. You have a counter suit in the form of negligence and breach of contract. Consult an attorney as soon as you can.
It's called a space suit
There isn't much you can do to fight a letter of termination besides pay your rent and our file a counter suit with the court in order to stay living in your home.
If I've understood the sentence right... no, you cannot continually bring the same suit against someone simply because you didn't like the previous results.