No. Affidavits are like deposition testimony - a sworn statement under oath. Therefore, an affidavit is part of the Discovery Process.
After the affidavit, the next step in legal proceedings is typically a rebuttal affidavit. This allows the opposing party to address and dispute the claims made in the initial affidavit.
The man was pleading insanity, but he was nevertheless convicted as "guilty."
The court typically does not have a specific deadline to rebut an affidavit. The party opposing the affidavit may do so at any time before or during the court hearing where the affidavit is being considered. It is up to the judge's discretion to determine the relevance and credibility of the evidence presented in the affidavit.
Your honor, this witness is contradicting his own sworn affidavit that was submitted to the grand jury!
Yes, a witness is typically required for an affidavit to be considered legal. The witness must observe the signing of the affidavit by the affiant and sign the document themselves to attest to the proper execution of the affidavit.
A responsive pleading is one that responds to what another party has filed. An answer responds to a complaint. An opposition to a motion to dismiss responds to a motion to dismiss. An affidavit and reply must be filed to a motion to dismiss a case.
Contract, power of attorney, affidavit, bail, writ, decree, court order, evidence, judgment, docket, and pleading are only a few of thousands of legal terms.
Pleading,
It isnÕt clear how Hector responded to the pleading of his parents. Since we donÕt know who Hector is and why his parents were pleading with him and what they were pleading for.
In a sense you are pleading for an answer.
After the affidavit, the next step in legal proceedings is typically a rebuttal affidavit. This allows the opposing party to address and dispute the claims made in the initial affidavit.
Do you mean an affidavit? It is a statement of something that you sign as to its truth.
The prisoner was pleading for his life.
Pleading Guilty was created in 1993.
Pleading - Elgar - was created in 1908.
The man was pleading insanity, but he was nevertheless convicted as "guilty."
The purpose of pleading is to make an emotional appeal to someone. Pleading in legal terms is a formal statement of the cause of an action.