If a court decides not to review a case then it actually upholds the decision of the lower court.
When a party to a case wants to request the US Supreme Court review his or her case, the attorney files a "petition for a writ of certiorari." If the Court decides to hear a case, they "grant cert(iorari)" to the petitioner and issue a Writ of Certiorari to the lower courts, ordering all case files for review.For more information, see Related Questions, below.
The Court reviews all the elements of the case and decides when, with whom access, and sometimes even where contact takes place, as well as consider joint physical or Bird Nest Custody. see links
no
I think the answer you want is the Chief Justice, but this only applies when the Chief Justice votes with the majority. Otherwise, the senior Associate Justice among those voting with the majority decides who writes the opinion of the Court.For more information, see Related Questions, below.
A judge has final say on what is or is not admissable in their court. The only recourse if the evidence was refused is to file for an appeal and have the appeals court see if his/her refusal of the evidence was justified. If they find in favor of the judge, you're out of luck. If on the other hand the appeals court decides the evidence should be admissable, the case will most likely be retried with the new evidence presented.
Go to the office of the Clerk Of The Court for the appropriate court and request to see the court file for that particular case. From the court file find out the name of the court stenographer. Contact that person, or company, and request a copy of the transcript. There WILL be a charge for this.
When a case is heard in the Magistrates Court to see if it will stand up, and have enough evidence in a higher court
The information on who the court reporters were for this trial - and indeed ANY trial - are not customarily archived. They can be found in the case records themselves. Go to the Clerk Of The COurt of whichever court the case was tried in and ask to to see the records of the case. Somewhere in the records the Court Reporter or the Court Reporting Company should be named.
File an objection with the court, drawing the court's attention to "the facts" as YOU see them, OR appeal the findings of the case to a higher court.
YES IF:You have liedConcealed assetsConcealed or misrepresented income.The court decides to review spouse or relatives property to see if it actually yoursAnd so on
see related links
get a copy from the case file at court