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Objection
It refers to disagreement or unsatisfaction of the judgement or specific course of action by court, in formal writing and format.

Objection: The verbal response of a lawyer when something inappropriate is happening during a trial or deposition. It is one of many steps involved in protecting the record.

Continuing Objection An objection to certain questions or testimony during a trial which has been overruled by the judge, ...

objection
n. a lawyer's protest about the legal propriety of a question which has been asked of a witness by the opposing attorney, with the purpose of making the trial judge decide if the question can be asked.

objection - The act of a party used to call the Court's attention to improper evidence or procedure.

OBJECTION
Statement by an attorney taking exception to testimony or the attempted admission of evidence and opposing its consideration as evidence.

Objection - The act of taking exception to some statement or procedure in trial. Used to call the Court's attention to improper evidence or procedure.

objection: A reason that an attorney interrupts a witness to talk to the judge.

objection to dischargeability A trustee's or creditor's objection to the debtor being released from personal liability for certain dischargeable debts. Common reasons include allegations that the debt to be discharged was incurred ...

Objection
A request to the court to determine that a line of questioning, procedure, or evidence is improper and should not be received by the court.

OBJECTION - A protest or exception made by a party against an action by the opposing party.

Objection
The process by which one party takes exception to some statement or procedure. An objection is either sustained (allowed) or overruled by the judge.

Objection - The process by which one party tries to prevent the introduction of evidence or the use of a procedure at a hearing. An objection is either sustained (allowed) or overruled by the judge.

objection A statement by counsel, taking exception to testimony, or to the attempted introduction of evidence.

objection: A formal protest made by a party over testimony or evidence that the other side tries to introduce.

Term: Objection
Definition: A request to the court to determine that a line of questioning, procedure, or evidence is improper and should not be received by the court.

Objection
Occupational Safety And Health Act (OSHA)
Occupational Safety And Health Review Commission ...

Objection
A formal notice that is served upon an OMA stating an individual's intention to legally oppose the making of the order.

Objections
Objections are the first step in appealing a Family Court support order.

The objections to the competency (q. v.) of a witness are four-fold. The first ground is the want of understanding; a second is defect of religious principles; a third arises from the conviction of certain crimes, or infamy of character; ...

Conscientious objection
Definition - Noun
: objection on moral or religious grounds (as to military service or bearing arms)
Pronunciation"kän-chE-'en-ch&s- ...

Challenge -An objection, such as when an attorney objects at a hearing to the seating of a particular person on a civil or criminal jury.

Challenge -An objection, such as when an legal-law123hotlegaltopics.com"attorney objects at a hearing to the seating of a particular person on a civil or criminal jury.

Of late years other objections have been expressed; serious omissions have been pointed out in the Code; it has not given to personal property the importance which it has acquired in the course of the 19th century; ...

What makes this objectionable is not that the lawyer cannot be trusted to represent his new client's case zealously but that the new client may gain an unfair advantage by his lawyer's having had prior access to facts about his old client that could ...

to remove a statement from the record of the court proceedings by order of the judge due to impropriety of a question, answer or comment to which there has been an objection.

Propter affectum, because of some presumed or actual partiality in the juryman who is made the subject of the objection; on this ground a juror may be objected to if he is related to either within the ninth degree, or is so connected by affinity; ...

It is also improper to raise an objection during an opening statement.

Overrule: In a trial, to overrule means to reject an objection.
Oxycodone Hydrochloride: This drug is categorized as an agonist opioid, a powerful group of analgesics that work by blocking signals to pain receptors in the brain.

If the examining attorney assigned to an application raises no objections to registration, or if the applicant overcomes all objections, the examining attorney will approve the mark for publication.

Objection to the legality of a vote about to be cast. See Ballot. 3. Objection to a cause being tried before a particular judge on account of alleged bias, prejudice, interest, or other disqualification. 4.

Allegedly damaging errors in the admission of evidence are reviewable on appeal if an objection was made during the trial. In their final summing up, the attorneys may make any assertion that is supported to some degree by evidence.

Exception - A formal objection of an action of the court, during the trial of a case, in refusing a request or overruling an objection; ...

Words to which objection has been taken by the Speaker over the years include blackguard, coward, git, guttersnipe, hooligan, rat, swine, stoolpigeon and traitor. The Speaker will direct an MP who has used unparliamentary language to withdraw it.

The request usually takes the form of an objection, and the refusal is stated by the judge in the words objection overruled. The exception is duly recorded and may possibly form the basis for a future appeal from the court's decision in the case.

Another, more specific objection to the term, held by Richard Stallman, is that the term is confusing [3].

Peremptory Challenge
A formal objection to a potential juror for which no specific reason is given, unlike a challenge for cause.
Perfection:
An action that has to be taken before a security interest is secured.

Sustain - A court ruling upholding an objection or a motion.
- T -
Tangible Personal Property Memorandum (TPPM) - A legal document that is referred to in a will and used to guide the distribution of tangible personal property.

Sustain - A court ruling upholding an objection or a motion.
For legal advise regarding Sustain, you can contact our legal staff via phone (800) 341-2684 or email myweblawyer@aol.com .

OVERRULE - A judge's decision (usually made during trials or motions hearings) to not allow an objection to prevail. Also, this can refer to a decision by a higher (appellate) court that a lower court's decision was in error.

Counter-Claim - A document filed in response to a Claim. The document sets out fully the grounds of opposition or objection i.e. which allegations in the Claim the opponent disputes and which he does not.

Exceptions- Declarations by either side in a civil or criminal case reserving the right to appeal a judge's ruling upon a motion. Also, in regulatory cases, objections by either side to points made by the other side or to rulings by the agency or ...

If organic matter decays when there is no oxygen present (anaerobic conditions or putrefaction), undesirable tastes and odors are produced. Decay of organic matter when oxygen is present (aerobic conditions) tends to produce much less objectionable ...

For example, a child who leaves her parents' home and becomes entirely self-supporting without their objection is considered emancipated, while a child who goes to stay with a friend or relative and gets a part-time job is not.

See also: Law, State, Court, Person, Right

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