In 2008 Judge Judy's net worth was $95 Million.
In 2008 Judge Judy's net worth was $95 Million.
Judge Joe Brown's net worth is estimated to be around $30 million, largely accrued from his career as a television judge, attorney, and producer. While exact figures for his annual income can vary, he reportedly earned approximately $20 million during his time on the bench of "Judge Joe Brown" from 1998 to 2013. However, his specific net pay can fluctuate based on various factors, including investments and other ventures.
Return on equity, Net Profitability ratio, Acid Test
Net WorthWhile there is no doubt that the preference shareholders are the owners of the firm, the real owners are the ordinary shareholders who bear all the risk, participate in the management and are entitled to all the profits remaining after all possible claims of preference shareholders are met in full.Thus it can be said that,Average Ordinary Shareholders Equity = Net Worth Of CompanyReturn on Net Worth = Net Profit After Tax - Preference DividendAverage Equity of the Ordinary Shareholders Equity or Net WorthIt is probably the single most important ratio to judge whether the firm has earned satisfactory return for its equity shareholders or not. Its adequacy is judge by8 Comparing with the past records of the same firm8 Inter-firm comparison8 Comparison with the overall industry average
If you are talking about the dotted line seen continuing off the court, parallel to the net, then that line is an off-court continuation of the 10-foot line. This line is a reference point that many hitters use to judge distance from the net as well as the boundary line that the back row players cannot jump in front of. By continuing this line off the court, it enables player that might be slightly out of the court to avoid penalties or judge distance to the net.
Judge Judy Scheindlin is reported to be the highest paid TV court Judge. Having earned her reputation as a stern but fair New York Family Court judge the August 24, 2008 issue of Parade reports her annual salary at $45M. She takes a no-nonsense approach to settling disputes and has a distinguished professional background. At the link provided below click on "Profiles of Justice" for her very interesting biography.
Line judge or linesman or something along those lines. They stand at the back (opposite the net) left corner of each side of the court.
People are not listed in the Fortune 500 list, companies are. People are listed in the Forbes 400 list and this woman's net worth does not come close to the threshold.
The high court judge is in the pay scale of Rs.80000.With this the net pay iclusive of H.R.A(if didn't avail quarters),D.A,travel allowance and other stipendary allowance comes in the range of around Rs.2,50,000 or more every month.
Tennis officials are referred to by their function during a tennis match. A tennis official who watches for "out" balls on the baseline would be referred to as a "baseline judge" or "line judge" or "line umpire" or "linesman". A linesman who watches for "out" balls during the serve may be referred to as the "service linesman/umpire". Though rarely used, anymore, a line judge who sits near the net to determine whether a served ball hits the net (i.e., a "net" or "let" call) is a "net judge". The "chair umpire" is the primary "line judge", and may overrule the other linesmen. There is also a tennis official called a "(tournament or court) supervisor", who is only seen when there is a problem on the court, such as potentially bad weather, darkness, medical problems, or otherwise called on by the chair umpire or by a player, though it is very rare that this ever occurs. Generally speaking, the supervisor does not interfere with or overrule calls made by the chair umpire. In amateur USTA matches, a "Roving Umpire" or "Rover" performs all these duties, though he/she is intended to resolve problems or questions, not make line calls. For further information, refer to the 2009 USTA "Friend at Court" link, below.
4 fingers is the signal for four hits, a violation giving a point to the opposing team. A team is allowed only 3 hits to get the ball over the net.