Home (Reporters)
Home  
 
 
Home » Law » Reporters


 

Reporters

Law ReporterRepresentation

Reporters: Books which contain court decisions.
The Legal Dictionary has taken steps to ensure that all legal, law, and court terms contained in our legal dictionary are correct.

 


Reporters - Books which contain court decisions.
For legal advise regarding Reporters, you can contact our legal staff via phone (800) 341-2684 or email myweblawyer@aol.com .

Reporters Books which contain court decisions.
Request for admission Also, Request to Admit. Written statements of facts concerning a case which are submitted to an adverse party and which that party must admit or deny; a discovery device.

Reporters - Books which contain court decisions.
repossession - The procedure in which a bank or lending institution takes property that has been pledged as collateral on a unpaid loan.

Court Reporters - court personnel who record trial proceedings word-for-word. Reporters who use a stenotype machine must be able to write at least 225 spoken words per minute. Those who use a stenomask must be able to record 250 words a minute.

A team of Times reporters wrote a series of articles on U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War based on the top secret information in the Pentagon Papers.

the published decisions of appeals courts in all states and federal courts, which are found in federal, state and regional series (called "reporters") which are constantly updated with pamphlets called "advance sheets" which are soon followed by ...

In the House of Commons the Hansard reporters sit in a gallery above the Speaker and take down every word that is said in the Chamber. In the Westminster Hall Chamber they sit next to the Chairman.

Until recently, court reporters had to manually type out the transcript from their shorthand notes.

Judicial decisions go through three different stages of printing: slip opinions, advance sheets, and final bound reporters.

statutes enacted which declare that communications between news reporters and informants are confidential and privileged and thus cannot be testified to in court. This is similar to the doctor-patient, lawyer-client or priest-parishioner privilege.

There are two different reporters that contain Alaska Supreme Court opinions: the Alaska Reporter and the Pacific Reporter. The Alaska Reporter contains only opinions from the Alaska Supreme Court.

The modern term is "reporters", which term is used to describe sets of books containing compilations of court opinions in the United States by region, e.g.

Case 1) A cause of action, lawsuit, or the right to sue (as in, "Do I have a case?"). 2) A written decision of a court that is reported in official "reporters" and can be cited as precedent for other cases.
Need Legal Help?
Get Informed ...

The ruling was a victory for the media, but left the plaintiff with the difficult task of obtaining the sources for the allegedly libelous information—sources that reporters often hold confidential.

3. In some of the states the reporters are appointed by authority of law; in others, they are volunteers.

COURT REPORTING AND RECORDING BOARD OF REVIEW -- A Board appointed by the Supreme Court to administer the certification of court reporters and recorders.

See also: Court, Law, Reporter, State, Case

Law ReporterRepresentation

 
 rssRSS