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.
If the Plaintiff or the Prosecutor disagreed with the judge's decision to dismiss the charges against the plaintiff/defendant, they might characterize the judge's decision as "unjust" meaning they did not agree with the judge's legal reasoning for doing so. OR -- in an employment situation -- it might refer to the dismissal of an empolyee under conditions that were not according to prevailing law or procedure.
A motion by a debtor to dismiss a case under Section 1307 B means that any debt not settled under Chapter 7 bankruptcy, can be dismissed. But, this is only under certain conditions.
no
Under Section 5 of Limitation Act you can approach the Court
No. A judge may consider a letter but is under no obligation to consider it.No. A judge may consider a letter but is under no obligation to consider it.No. A judge may consider a letter but is under no obligation to consider it.No. A judge may consider a letter but is under no obligation to consider it.
Yes. The judge may speak with the child but is under no obligation to rule according to the child's preferences.Yes. The judge may speak with the child but is under no obligation to rule according to the child's preferences.Yes. The judge may speak with the child but is under no obligation to rule according to the child's preferences.Yes. The judge may speak with the child but is under no obligation to rule according to the child's preferences.
If you lied under oath, then yes. You could be charged with perjury.
A debtor can dismiss a Chapter 13 bankruptcy at any time without a fee, except perhaps for any remaining attorney's fees that have not been paid under the Chapter 13 plan. A debtor cannot voluntarily dismiss a Chapter 7 without filing a motion wiht the court. Even then, the debtor must be able to demonstrate that no prejudice to creditor if the Chapter 7 is dismissed. The debtor can convert the 7 to 13 (which does involve a fee) and then dismiss the Chapter 13.
It can possibly mean different things in different jurisdictions, but in my experience the 'commitment charge' refers to the offense for which the prisoner was originally arrested and booked into detention under.
A judge can overrule a jury when there is a legal error in the jury's decision or if the judge believes the jury's decision is not supported by the evidence presented in the case.
You will have to go to court an explain to the judge why you got caught AGAIN. The judge can put you under house arrest or put you in probation.
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.