Dictionary
appellant
noun
A litigant or party that is making an appeal in court.
synonyms
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Expressing surprise that Hallam himself had not mentioned the existence of his phone or the fact that he had been taking pictures with it to his legal team, she said: "We would have thought the appellant [Hallam] would have alerted the defence team that he had been taking photos on a new phone, which would have helped establish his whereabouts".
There is no known account of an appellant suffering as a result of putting his case and, as a result, the EID seems to have gained people's trust.Not everyone is convinced.
In April 2010 the government made that harder by adopting new rules stopping legal aid for most challenges brought purely in the public interest (ie, the appellant has nothing to gain personally), to cut down the number of adverse judicial decisions.
Would it not be better, the appellant wondered, if the districts were drawn to include more balanced numbers of Democrats and Republicans, so candidates in the general election have to appeal to the broad centre?And where the Warren and Burger courts were inclined to grant the federal government broad leeway, the Roberts court has taken a narrower view of federal power and racial preferences.
Appointed governor to Richard II in February 1381, Warwick joined the nobles who sought to impose their authority on the king and was one of the lords appellant in 1388.
Hassan Koyuncu, 18, was the only appellant to request a suspended sentence in place of the 12 months in a young offenders' institution originally imposed for his burglary in Tottenham from a Comet store.
A person who has suffered in the way that the appellant has suffered, and has struggled to cope with the consequences of his suffering in the way he has struggled, has the right to tell the world about it.
As a result of Oxford's defeat, Richard was forced to submit to the Merciless Parliament of 1388 and to the five lords appellant who controlled the realm until 1389, when the king asserted his authority by proclaiming his minority at an end.
If no appellant has standing, Windsor would get her money back but no one else would benefit immediately, and DOMA would still be the law of the land.
After the government demanded encryption keys that would give it unfettered access to every Lavabit account, the company's founder, Ladar Levison — the appellant, whose identity is technically under seal — shut the company down two months ago and vowed to "continue to fight for the Constitution".
I am a longtime practitioner before the federal appeals courts, arguing mostly large, complicated negligence cases in which the appellant is a hotel or a restaurant chain engaged in interstate commerce, and which has been successfully sued by an employee or victim of what is often some terrible mishap.
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