The question makes no sense. A "charge" refers to a criminal charge. A civil case refers to a case that is not criminal.
The judge has found SOME portion of the charge(s) improper or not comporting with law and has dismissed ONLY THAT portion of the original charge(s). The remaining portion of the case is (presumably) still viable and will go forward without the portion that was dismissed.
No, a case cannot be dismissed at a summons. A summons is an official document issued by the court compelling a person to answer charges either in civil or criminal Court. The case for which the summons was issued could be dismissed at any time.
If the check you wrote to the payday company is returned by your bank for insufficient funds, etc. it is considered to be a "bad check" and the payday loan company can obtain a civil judgment against you. Most of them simply put it on your credit report but some companies do proceed with civil action. To determine what legal consequences of a bad check is in your state check out this website: www.ckfraud.org/penalties.HTML
If it is dismissed without prejudice the case can be filed for suit again. And, if it is with prejudice the case will have notes from the judge and be permanently closed.
It deals with the federal rules of civil procedure. and how cases are dismissed. See below link:
Depends on what type of case you have: If it is civil then yes If it is criminal then no
Tomomi Inada is the Minister in Charge of Civil Service Reform for Japan.
Pickett's Charge - one of the 'nearlys' of the Civil War.
Abraham Lincoln
Grant
It means that it is gone, for now. It could be refiled and restarted, but when it is dismissed the judge sees a problem or that the evidence isn't there for the case. So, until more evidence is produced or something else is introduced into the case it is closed.
No. It is not even a criminal charge.