An "ex parte" decision is made by a judge when only one, or neither, of the parties involved in a case are present. In the US both parties must be able to state their case, so the "ex parte" decision can only be temporary.
Well, no one is going to complain if the law or judge's decision turns out to be on your side, matching your opinion. To me, though, it is justice if both sides are unhappy with the outcome.
"The judge kill its case" could mean the judge ruled in a way that it harmed the case in a way that it could not be won. It might also mean the judge dismissed the case.
You mean why does a judge wear a gown. You'll get a better answer that way.
The initials jj after someone's name does not mean the person is a judge. The reference of jj appears to be a nickname, not a professional symbol or organization.
judge awaiting pretrail letigations
parte dos: part two
Part.
but where?
"Que Parte" means "which part" in English.
Where are you from?
on this part or side
of what part could also mean where from (are you)
Part.
suger hive
"quiero de la parte posterior" means "I want from the part in the back."
The proper way to write it in Spanish would be: "en serio, de qué parte..." it means: << Seriously, where from... >>
"Yo le digo de tu parte..." "I will tell her/him on your behalf" Be careful... :)