This is an official form from the Washinton Judicial System, which complies with all applicable laws and statutes. USLF amends and updates the forms as is required by Washington statutes and law.
This is an official form from the Washinton Judicial System, which complies with all applicable laws and statutes. USLF amends and updates the forms as is required by Washington statutes and law.
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Who is a respondent for the purposes of an appeal? A 'respondent' is a person other than the appellant who was a party to the proceedings in the lower court and who is affected by the appeal or a person who is permitted by the appeal court to be a party to the appeal (CPR 52.1(3)(e)).
Respondent's notice (b) wishes to ask the appeal court to uphold the decision of the lower court for reasons different from or additional to those given by the lower court, must file a respondent's notice. (3) Where the respondent seeks permission from the appeal court it must be requested in the respondent's notice.
The right to ask a court or other official body to consider changing a decision that you disagree with. Synonyms and related words. + Court cases and legal processes.
The respondent is the party against whom a petition is filed, especially one on appeal. The respondent can be either the plaintiff or the defendant from the court below, as either party can appeal the decision thereby making themselves the petitioner and their adversary the respondent.
Use this form ('appellant's notice') for all appeals and permissions to appeal (except for small-claims track appeals and appeals to the Family Division of the High Court).
The record in an appeal is the official account of what went on at the hearing or the trial that is being appealed. A party designates the record by listing what items to include in a Notice Designating Record on Appeal form (Sample Form F).
An appeal is heard within 21 days of a decision to grant permission to appeal; the result of the appeal is given immediately after the end of the hearing with reasons given later or, if judgment is reserved, the result of the appeal and the reasons are given within 2 weeks of the end of the hearing.
In most cases permission to appeal to the Court of Appeal is required. The lower court may grant permission, but this is unusual as it is a way of saying that the judge accepts the decision may not be right. More often, permission is refused and one has to apply for permission from the Court of Appeal itself.
A case can be between two individuals, two companies or a company and an individual. The parties involved in a case are either a claimant (respondent) or defendant (appellant). The name of the person bringing the action comes first followed by the name of the defendant, e.g. Smith v Jones.