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litigant: one who is engaged in a lawsuit mitigant: one who engages in appeasing the litigant
Appellant
Final Appeal From the Files of Unsolved Mysteries - 1992 was released on: USA: 18 September 1992
No, they are not synonymous.
No the term litigant applies almost exclusively to civil law or tort cases. The individual accused of a crime is known as the defendant.
Don't worry, if the employer wins the appeal, you WILL be notified of what you have to do.
Dred Scott (1795?–1858)
it means you dont take no as an option....
Litigous IMPROVEMENT. Litigious, litigant .
A person who files continuous/multiple lawsuits against an individual, company, organization, etc. without just cause. In other words, someone who abuses the judicial system in an attempt to get revenge so to speak instead of justice.
According to the literature sent by them along with the letter that gives an appeal time and place, if you are the employer and filed the appeal but don't show, the award goes to the employee. If you are the employee and filed the appeal but don't show you lose. If the employee files the appeal and the employer doesn't show, you still must present your facts and evidence to be considered.
appeal