Praecipe is a legal term for an order.
praecipe (or spelled precipe) - A written order directing the issurance of a specified writ. writ- a written order, under seal, issued by a court, and commanding the person to whom it is addressed to do or not to do a certain act.
A "praecipe to reissue summons" is a legal document filed in court requesting that a summons be reissued to a defendant in a lawsuit. This typically occurs when the original summons was not served properly or has expired. The praecipe outlines the reasons for the reissuance and is accompanied by the necessary information to issue a new summons. It is a procedural step to ensure that the defendant is properly notified of the legal action against them.
It can, but not always. Withdraw can also mean take.
Praecipe to discontinue means simply the case has ended and/or is closed. If it is a praecipe to discontinue without prejudice, then theoretically, the plaintiff could refile the suit later. If it is praecipe to discontinue with prejudice, it means the case is closed for ever. If it is a praecipe to settle and discontinue, the case is also closed forever. If it is simply a praecipe to discontinue, (and nothing further) it could be any of the above depending upon the facts.
A "praecipe" is a legal document filed to request a court action or to initiate a specific procedure. When the state files a praecipe for a contested final probation revocation hearing, it means that the state is formally asking the court to schedule a hearing to determine whether a probationer's probation should be revoked due to alleged violations. This hearing allows both the state and the probationer to present evidence and arguments regarding the probation violations in question.
to take away
Separate yourself from it
To extract, take out, withdraw
To extract, take out, withdraw
Rescind
I am assuming the phrase is used in relation to a legal claim, in which case it means to withdraw the claim without the right to refile it at a later time. This is contrasted with "withdraw without prejudice" which would, obviously, mean that the right to refile the claim remains.
to take away