whats my next action when medicare rejects a claim for adjudication? should i refile or is it a write off
Department of Labor (DOL) Office of Workers’ Compensation (OWC)
DOL and OWC
Double Jeopardy is a question of criminal law. You cannot bring criminal suit twice for the same claim or action based on the same set of facts. The issue you are referring to in a civil suit is called res judicata. This says that once a claim has been adjudicated it cannot be brought again for the same action. So if the case is brought in another state, then the claim has been adjudicated on "the same set of facts". Therefore it cannot be brought. Issues of subject-matter and personal jurisdiction and venue, are all considered before any case is adjudicated because they won't be able to bring that case again in a trial court based on the same set of facts, i.e. the same claim.
When something is non adjudicated it means it has not been legally decided. It is not binding, because it is not legally done.
Judged
Synonyms for 'adjudicated' include judged, determined, decided, and resolved.
NO. you still have a conviction. That would depend on how your case was adjudicated. Were you convicted of the charges, or were they dismissed?
no
Yes.
Adjudicated means the case is done: it has been convicted either by the defendant pleading guilty or found guilty by the Judge/jury.
"Decided" as a dispute. When a judge decides a case, it is said that the judge has adjudicated the case. (It is possible for legal disputes to be settled by arbiters other than actual judges.)