Home (Reversed)
Home  
 
 
Home » Law » Reversed


 

Reversed

Law ReverseReversible error

Reversed: Reversed means that the appellate court overturned the trial court's decision.

 


reversed: a ruling made by an appellate court disapproving the judgment entered or action taken by the lower court.

A reversed onus of proof (q.v.) which applies to applications for bail for some drug offences.
solvent
Able to pay all debts when they are due.

This reversed the military situation and by the early 1960s Saigon was under enormous pressure.

A bill in the nature of a bill of review, is one brought by a person not bound by a decree, praying that the same may be examined and reversed; as where a decree is made against a person who has no interest at all in the matter in dispute, ...

'If any person shall feloniously steal, take away, alter, falsify, or otherwise avoid, any record, writ, process, or other proceedings in any of the courts of the United States, by means whereof any judgment shall be reversed, made void, ...

It refers to the jury's ruling reversed in favour of the loosing party of the lawsuit,by the judge, because he feels that the points considered by the jury were not based on the facts and evidences and was doing injustice to the party.

Delirium may be reversed; dementia, once set in, rarely is. Further, delirium can require emergency medical attention whereas those that suffer from dementia do not generally require emergency treatment although the dementia can evolve to the point ...

the decision of a court of appeal ruling that the judgment of a lower court was incorrect and is therefore reversed.

The proportion is now reversed. During the year 1900, for instance, the state board of law examiners in New York examined 899 applicants for admission to the bar of that state.

Remand: The decision of an appellate court to send a case back to the trial court with instructions on how to correctly decide the case; often used with the term "reversed.

procedural : of or relating to procedure [sentence reversed as result of error in sentencing "National Law Journal"] compare substantive proÂ-ceÂ-durÂ-alÂ-ly adv ...

Supreme Court began to relax rules prohibiting the possession, sale, and distribution of obscene material, often called pornography, but in 1973 that trend was reversed.

A party to a lawsuit who appeals a losing decision to a higher court in an effort to have it modified or reversed.
appellate court
A higher court that reviews the decision of a lower court when a losing party files for an appeal.

YEAR AND DAY.
This period of time is particularly recognized in the law. For example, when a judgment is reversed, a party, notwithstanding the lapse of time mentioned in... more ...

Appellant A party to a lawsuit who appeals to a higher court in an effort to have a losing decision modified or reversed.
Need Legal Help?
Get Informed ...

retrial
n. a new trial granted upon the motion of the losing party, based on obvious error, bias or newly discovered evidence, or after mistrial or reversed by an appeals court.

In the United States, an earlier move to eliminate capital punishment has now been reversed and more and more states are resorting to capital punishment for serious offenses such as murder
Back To Top ...

Also known as the death penalty, capital punishment has been banned in many coutries. In the United States, an earlier move to eliminate capital punishment has now been reversed and more and more states are resorting to capital punishment for ...

An error committed during a trial that was corrected or was not serious enough to affect the outcome of a trial and therefore was not sufficiently harmful (prejudicial) to be reversed on appeal.
Hearing Proceedings ...

R, in reference to a criminal matter in a Commonwealth Realm, means Rex (The King) or Regina (The Queen), as such actions are brought in the name of the Monarch; for example, R v Brown. Case names with the parties reversed usually do not cite 'R' for ...

Harmless error - An error committed during a trial that was corrected or was not serious enough to affect the outcome of a trial and therefore was not sufficiently harmful (prejudicial) to be reversed on appeal.

Usually, decisions of the trier of facts are not overturned except in the egregious circumstances when the lower court may be reversed by an appellate tribunal, i.e.

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

Law ReverseReversible error

 
 rssRSS