A motion for final judgment is a motion filed with the court that asks for judgment on the case without a trial. The judge presiding over the case has the power to grant a motion for final judgment.
Depending on the type of judgement, a motion for contempt or a garnishment/lien would be the appropriate avenue. If you are unable to file a motion for contempt, it is likely that the required time to comply has not yet passed.
If there was no final judgment there was no divorce.
The distribution should be made as soon as the final judgment is issued.The distribution should be made as soon as the final judgment is issued.The distribution should be made as soon as the final judgment is issued.The distribution should be made as soon as the final judgment is issued.
motion to accelerate
It's a request made after a verdict to stop the verdict from being entered based on a legal ground. Basically the attorney is saying that the judge's verdict is incorrect for a legally specific reason.
It is considered a final judgment in the case and unless appealed becomes the law of the case.
The Plaintiff's motion for summary judgment is asking the court to rule on all pleadings that have been filed in the case. This happens if one of the defendants has filed an response or answer. The Plaintiff will usually ask for judgment when filing a motion for summary judgment.
File a motion to vacate based on that fact. After the judgment is entered there is a SOL for filing that motion.
The Final Judgment - 1913 was released on: USA: 9 June 1913
A judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50 occurs during the trial. a summary judgment motion, by contract, muts be made before the trial commences, and is governed by Rule 56.
The Final Judgement was created in 1991.
"Cross motions" always travel in pairs, as each party files a motion on the same issue and as part of the same process. Cross-motions for summary judgment are part of a pre-trial process in which both parties submit briefs to the judge, arguing that no trial is needed to determine the relevant facts in the case. Cross-motions for summary judgment may occur even if the parties have different versions of the facts. In that event, both motions will be denied. Cross-motions for summary judgment are to be distinguished from "agreed motions for summary judgment" in which the parties present one, agreed motion, claiming that the facts are not in dispute and asking the judge for a decision solely on the law. See also "motion for judgment on the pleadings," also distinguishable from "cross-motions for summary judgment "