Rehearing - Another hearing of a civil or criminal case by the same court in which the case was originally heard. For legal advise regarding Rehearing, you can contact our legal staff via phone (800) 341-2684 or email myweblawyer@aol.com .
Rehearing (n) A Rehearing is the conductance of a second hearing of a case, upon the petition or request made by a party to the suit, on a new ground discovered later which has relevance to the hearing already done. Legal-Explanations.com Home ...
rehearing n. conducting a hearing again based on the motion of one of the parties to a lawsuit, petition or criminal prosecution, usually by the court or agency which originally heard the matter.
Rehearing A re-trial or reconsideration of a case or an issue by the court at the request of a party. Release A written document evidencing the satisfaction of a debt; the giving up of some right, claim or interest.
Rehearing - Another hearing of a civil or criminal case or motion by the same court in which the matter was originally decided in order to bring to the court's attention an error, omission, or oversight in the first consideration.
REHEARING. A second consideration which the court gives to a cause, on a second argument.
Term: Rehearing Definition: A re-trial or reconsideration of a case or an issue by the court at the request of a party.
Petition for rehearing A request to the Supreme Court to rehear a matter that the Court decided. Appellate Rule 506 discusses the basis for this petition. Petition for review ...
Motions are made in court all the time for many purposes: to continue (postpone) a trial to a later date, to get a modification of an order, for temporary child support, for a judgment, for dismissal of the opposing party's case, for a rehearing, ...
[2] Appellate courts in the United States sometimes grant rehearing en banc to reconsider a decision of a panel of the court (a panel generally consisting of only three judges) where the case concerns a matter of exceptional public importance or the ...
compare certiorari new trial rehearing The scope of an appeal is limited. The higher court will review only matters that were objected to or argued in the lower court during the trial. No new evidence can be presented on appeal.
See also: Case, Hearing, State, Court, Judge
 
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