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dolly
a wheelbarrow.
Professional corporation.
A segway
Beryl!!
It's called a rickshaw
cart
A court official is anyone working on an official capacity in court. Often, this includes the clerk, the attorneys, the judge, and the bailiffs/police officers that are in charge of court security and conduct. Other court officials, known as ancillary officials, include translators, attorney investigators (such as state attorney and public defender investigators), and court reporters.
The divorce attorney 'of record' is the attorney who represented a party in a divorce action. To determine the name of the attorney of record you can visit the court, request the file and look inside to find the name of the attorneys who represented the parties.
scully
Technically an "Officer of the Court" is any officer who receives his authority from, and owes allegiance to, a court of competent jurisdiction. Court officers are required to take an oath of office like a public official. In most states, these officers include judges, the clerk of the court (and their deputy clerks), court reporters, process servers, and all attorneys practicing before that court. Notaries Public, sheriffs, and police officers are typically Officers of the State, rather than Officers of the Court. Judges may actually be both Officers of the State and Officers of the Court if they received their judicial appointment from a state authority, such as the Governor. Although all attorneys are court officers, the attorney is not an employee or agent of the court or the court system. The attorney owes his/her direct allegiance to the client, and this includes a duty of advocacy of positions, based upon the facts, that favor the client as long as they are within the bounds of recognized law. An attorney can, and probably should, be creative in his/her arguments, but may never misrepresent facts or law. It is in the latter sense that the attorney is considered to be an officer of the court. "Winning the case" may never be at the expense of the integrity of the judicial system.
Officers of the Court.ADDED: (in the US) There is no all-encompassing term that covers ALL those personnel with just one name or title. Only the judge and members of The Bar (practicing attorneys) are referred to as 'Officers of the Court.'The remainder of the courtroom personnel are collectively referred to as court "staff." Bailiffs are usually (but not always) Deputy Sheriffs (in state courts), or in federal courts, US Marshals. The court clerk is an employee of the Clerk Of The Court (an elective office) and the court stenographer can either be an employee of the court system or a private subcontractor. Jurors occupy a special position, and are always referred to as simply 'Jurors' or 'The Jury.'