Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Experts in judicial ethics and appellate procedure said that almost everything about the exchange was extraordinary.
Once the trials were over, rules of appellate procedure limited the ways the two men could attack their convictions and sentences.
"There is now a meaningful appellate procedure, I believe," Criser said yesterday.
In United States appellate procedure, an appeal is a petition for review of a case that has been decided by a court of law.
The appellate procedure in the United States takes place in appellate court, which makes its judgment based only on the record of the original case.
Under the ordinary rules of appellate procedure, pretrial orders lack finality and are not appealable unless they come within a few recognized exceptions.
Indeed, 3742 was enacted in 1984 with full knowledge of the cross-appeal rule, which had been a firmly entrenched rule of appellate procedure.
During his tenor , extensive reforms were implemented in the court structure and to simplify civil, criminal and appellate procedures.
This website includes links to the court's published and unpublished opinions, court-specific rules of appellate procedure, and general operating procedures.
The rules for conducting a lawsuit; there are rules of civil procedure, criminal procedure, evidence, bankruptcy, and appellate procedure.
The clerk's responsibilities include monitoring the caseflow through the supreme court and the court of appeals and making recommendations for improvements in appellate procedure.
Prior to 1967, some aspects of appellate procedure were covered in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
"It's really a vehicle to say, 'We disagree with you,' " Mark R. Kravitz, an expert in appellate procedure, said of yesterday's opinion.
In 1933, Congress authorized the Supreme Court to prescribe rules of criminal appellate procedure, which included any proceeding after the entry of a verdict or plea.
Experts in appellate procedure said it would be a marked departure for the court to take the Microsoft case directly if it presented a long laundry list of appeals issues.
Appellate procedures in the United States rely on the submission of written briefs by each side followed by limited oral argument, upon which a strict time limit is placed.
Appellate procedure is the body of law that sets out the rules and standards that courts follow when adjudicating a request to change an official decision of a trial or administrative court.
Unlike other states that have statewide rules of appellate procedure, there is no set of appellate rules shared by all four departments beyond those contained in the CPLR.
Finally, Stewart is the chairman of the Advisory Committee on the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure of the Judicial Conference of the United States.
The issue of unpublished decisions has been described as the most controversial to be faced by the Advisory Committee on the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure in the 1990s and 2000s.
In overturning that ruling in an opinion by Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, the majority said the appeals court had abused its discretion in an "extraordinary departure from standard appellate procedures."
From 2004 to 2006, federal judges debated whether the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure (FRAP) should be amended so that unpublished cases in all circuits could be cited as precedent.
As relevant to this case, the rules of appellate procedure required the government to notify the district court and Greenlaw that it was seeking an increase in Greenlaw's sentence by filing its own notice of appeal.
As a result of a bill pushed through the Legislature at the suggestion of Chief Justice Phil S. Gibson in 1941, appellate procedure in California is governed primarily by the CRC.
Under Singapore's appellate procedure, an appeal to the Privy Council may be made in any criminal or civil matter where application for leave to appeal has been made and such leave granted by the Privy Council.