you can get a Philippine municipal trial court clearance at your Municipal Trial Court :D
A trial court is the court of original jurisdiction.
Actually a court of appeals cannot decide that. A court of appeals can only decide whether or not the trial court correctly followed procedures and existing legal precedence. It is entirely possible for procedures and legal precedence to be completely unfair (they have been many times) but if the trial court properly followed them, the court of appeals must support the trial court's decision. If the court of appeals decides that the trial court failed to follow procedures and/or existing legal precedent, then the case must be retried in a trial court.
trial court
apelleate court sends a case back to the trial court
On appeal, when a trial court of general jurisdiction offers a new trial instead of the review of the lower court's decision, it is giving a
A Tennis Court. Or a Squash Court.
No it doesn't.
The Superior Court of Massachusetts
It means a case has been sent to the trial court. This term is generally used after a preliminary hearing in a magistrate court. It may also be used if a case is in a lower court and is bound over to the general trial court for a jury trial.
The abbreviation of 'disp' can mean dispute, disposition, or dispensary. DISP can stand for Dispute Resolution, Disability Income Security Program, or Defense Industry Security Program.
A U.S. District Court