To "retry" a case that has been dismissed with prejudice you would have to take an appeal of the action since it has already been tried and the dismissal is not a procedural dismissal.
Aside from a direct appeal, a party can ask the trial court to reconsider its decision, reverse its own order and reinstate the action.
A party can make a motion for a new trial.
A party can make a motion to be relieved from its effects for the various reasons set forth in the court rules as may apply. Common reasons for being relieved of an effect of an order are that the order was entered as a result of mistake, inadvertence, surprise, excusable neglect, fraud or any other reason that the interests of justice would require the order be set aside.
Yes
It depends on whether it was dismissed with prejudice or without prejudice. If with prejudice, it can never be reinstated. If without prejudice, it can reinstated at any time. Usually a court will dismiss without prejudice.
The plaintiff cannot - that is a judge's prerogative. The plaintiff can REQUEST that a judge consider ruling that way, but it is up to the judge as to whether he will grant it or not.
There are two ways in which a judge can "dismiss" a case.Dismissed with prejudice, which means the case can never be brought up again, and dismissed without prejudice, which means that the government can re-file the case if some certain minor flaw in the original presentment is remedied.It sounds like your original case was dismissed WITHOUT prejudice.
Yes, if the case was dismissed "without prejudice."
As long as the courts dismiss the case "without prejudice," she can bring it again.
It's typically up to the Prosecutor in a criminal case to make the decision to dismiss the case, unless, the state has failed to meet the requirements for the charge they've laid against a person. When the latter happens, the defense can motion for the case to be dismissed with or without prejudice.
Yes, a judge will dismiss a case without prejudice if the case is brought in the wrong jurisdiction. A defendant is deemed to consent to the jurisdiction if he does not raise it.
This means that the case is over, no one can refile the case (based on anything made a complaint in the case) and everyone has to pay their own costs (attorney's fees) in the case.
A motion for nonsuit without prejudice is a request made by the plaintiff to dismiss the case voluntarily before a verdict is reached. This means that the plaintiff can potentially refile the case at a later date without being barred by double jeopardy.
Prejudice is a legal term which means there was misconduct on the part of the person who filed the case and they are, therefore, forbidden to refile. Dismissal of a case with prejudice is final, and the plaintiff is barred from taking any further action.
Yes, a judge can dismiss a civil case if there is not enough evidence or if the case does not have legal merit.