Yes. When a civil suit has been filed, the defendant must be served, or receive official notice of the law suit. The courts will often make up a calendar of law suits that have not been served within a certain amount of time, and will essentially tell the plaintiffs that if their case has not been served by the time the calendar is heard, their case will be dismissed.
There is no such thing as a Northern Ireland Calendar.
its a small fruity thing
A court 'calender' is a planning document which tracks various cases before the court. A "dismissal calender" implies that this is a list of cases up for dismissal by the court for one reason or another (e.g.: cases were requested dismissed by the principals or their attornies - no acitivity before the court within a certain length of time indicates they are 'dead' or 'moot' - etc).
Dismissal is a noun.
The sheep on the chinese calendar means you are very curious that is one thing
what is constuitive dismissal
Why bother? The best thing to do is put it behind you and move on.
If you stipulate as to the reason for dismissal, you HAVE agreed.
The only thing I found that works is the print preview. If you go to print preview your calendar will look like the 2003 version and it will print that way. But you can't view it that way just on the calendar itself.
dismissal.
the command is dismiss for the dismissal of the boy scout.
Summary dismissal is dismissal by an employer for gross misconduct and usually means that an employee will not receive any pay in lieu of notice.