Why is long arm jurisdiction an issue for those who create or post Web pages?
who the hell cares stupid topic anyways
US District Courts have original jurisdiction in most cases of general jurisdiction; however the US Supreme Court has original jurisdiction in a limited class of cases, such as those involving disputes between the states.
You need to check the laws in your jurisdiction to see if common law marriage is recognized and follow those particular requirements.You need to check the laws in your jurisdiction to see if common law marriage is recognized and follow those particular requirements.You need to check the laws in your jurisdiction to see if common law marriage is recognized and follow those particular requirements.You need to check the laws in your jurisdiction to see if common law marriage is recognized and follow those particular requirements.
A city police officer's jurisdiction covers only those streets and areas that are inside of the city limits. Typically, a local police officer cannot legally conduct police business outside of his or her jurisdiction.
No, no one can make changes to your webpages, or anyone's webpages, by using the browser's View Source function, ever. That is merely there to show the user, usually a developer, the code behind the page displayed (or parsed by PHP pages, etc). They cannot make changes to your site this way. Those changes require access to your web server/host.
The police will issue a citation to those whom are illegally parked.
Those are called browsers; examples include FireFox, Google Chrome, Opera, Safari.
Those to which a State is a party and those affecting ambassadors, other public ministers, and your mother.
US District Courts have original jurisdiction in most cases of general jurisdiction; however the US Supreme Court has original jurisdiction in a limited class of cases, such as those involving disputes between the states.
A review court is one which has appellate jurisdiction rather original jurisdiction over cases. Courts with original jurisdiction hear cases at the trial level only. Courts with appellate jurisdiction cannot hear trials. They only review decisions made by trial courts to ensure that those decisions were correctly rendered.
This special process varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. It generally relies upon religious records (e.g., baptismal records) and/or sworn affidavits of those present at the birth.
There is no Spraly Island. Please check spelling