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Elevator
String of numbers, maybe has some letters at the very beginning. Each court system has their own system for keeping track.
It is a rule in the judicial system when a court (like the federal court) abstains from hearing a case that should be heard in a different court (like the state court).
No because it is unconstitunial and many dont like it. If you are in a court case you shouldn't mention this as the judge will possibly deny it.
A civil or criminal court can handle a case like that , it would most likely be in criminal court and if they were unable to take the case it would handed up to a court like the state supreme court after it was tried in a lower court.
The judge in a Roman court case is called praetors (PREE-tuhrz).
The federal court system has three levels to provide a hierarchy for handling cases. District courts are the trial courts where cases are initially heard, circuit courts are the intermediate appellate courts, and the Supreme Court is the highest court that reviews decisions made by the lower courts.
I'm assuming you mean "half-life". If that's the case, that is a term referring to how long a drug stays in your system after you've stopped taking it.
First of all court need some proof of your case, so that court should take some action.
Court can have different meanings. They could not reach an agreement, so the case went to court. The tennis court was very wet after the rain. He wanted to court her, but she did not really like him.
The realtor, themselves, must be the aggrieved party in the action. They can file a civil case with the Clerk of the Court just like anyone else who has a civil cispute.
This sounds like it may be an abbreviation, or some type of "jargon" or "court shorthand," that might appear as a notation on a case folder or "dispo" (disposition) sheet. These abbreviations are not standardized and vary greatly from police agency to police agency and/or court system to court system. If you were represented by an attorney ask them, or go to the Office of The Clerk of Court and ask one of the clerks there if they might be able to tell you what it means.