• Section 13(a) states that foreign judgments are not recognized if they have not been pronounced by a court of competent jurisdiction. (americanbar.org)
  • Presumption as to foreign judgments. (americanbar.org)
  • The proceeds will go to satisfy the judgment, with any remaining amount being returned to the judgment debtor. (wikipedia.org)
  • Furthermore, no extension of the judgment statute of limitations is available against property that the debtor has sold. (wikipedia.org)
  • The fi fa which commands the sheriff or other officer of the state to whom the creditor delivers it to locate, seize, and publicly sell the property of the judgment debtor. (wikipedia.org)
  • The judgment creditor may also seek to execute the money judgment against intangible property, such as bank accounts, accounts receivable, and other debts owed to the judgment debtor by third parties. (wikipedia.org)
  • The creditor must request that the clerk of the court who issued the fi fa follow this up by issuing a "summons in garnishment" directed against the holder of money that is due to the judgment debtor. (wikipedia.org)
  • If a judgment debtor owns real estate, subject to execution, jointly or in common with any other person, the judgment shall be a lien on the interest of the defendant only. (wa.gov)
  • Personal property of the judgment debtor shall be held only from the time it is actually levied upon. (wa.gov)
  • The collection of judgments in Virginia may be accomplished under a number of routes provided under Virginia law, depending on the amount of the judgment and the particular assets that the judgment creditor wishes to pursue. (wikipedia.org)
  • As a result, when a plaintiff wins a case involving the transfer of a domain name, and the defendant is unwilling to voluntarily transfer the domain name, the plaintiff may seek to enforce the judgment in rem by obtaining an enforcement order directing Verisign to transfer the domain name. (wikipedia.org)
  • The leading idea in Enoch is that the Deluge was the first world-judgment, and that the final judgment of the world is to take place at the beginning or at the close of the Messianic kingdom. (wikipedia.org)
  • This act provides that the rule shall fix the maximum amount of time by which a court shall enter written rulings, orders, and judgments and the maximum time by which a case shall be disposed of after filing and final judgment. (mo.gov)
  • [2] In this case, the quality of judgment suffers because the information available is incomplete as a result of exigency, rather than as a result of cultural or personal limitations. (wikipedia.org)
  • If the foreign divorce judgment suffers from any of the defects mentioned in section 13(a) through (f), it would not be recognized in India, and under Indian law, the marriage would survive. (americanbar.org)
  • Chevron now argues that the Ecuadorian legal system suffers from deficiencies that should render the judgment unenforceable. (ssrn.com)
  • And, like Chevron, they are then arguing that the foreign judiciary suffers from inadequacies that should preclude enforcement of a judgment obtained there by the plaintiff - an argument seemingly at odds with the earlier forum non conveniens argument that the same foreign judiciary was adequate and more appropriate. (ssrn.com)
  • These findings refine our understanding of the cognitive processes underpinning moral judgment in older adulthood and highlight the role of subjective probability judgments in negligence attribution. (bvsalud.org)
  • 2.3 If for any reason proceedings for the enforcement of a judgment are transferred, the court will give notice of the transfer to all the parties. (justice.gov.uk)
  • The forum non conveniens doctrine's foreign judicial adequacy standard is lenient, plaintiff-focused and ex ante, whereas the judgment enforcement doctrine's standard is relatively strict, defendant-focused, and ex post. (ssrn.com)
  • The act requires orders and judgments on motions, hearings, and trials for cases filed in circuit courts to be in writing and entered by the court within 30 days after the matter is fully briefed, submitted to the court, and concludes any hearing or trial. (mo.gov)
  • SB 722 - This act establishes a provision of law relating to time requirements for court proceedings, orders, and judgments. (mo.gov)
  • Having obtained what they wished for - a forum non-conveniens dismissal in favor of a foreign judiciary with a supposedly more pro-defendant legal environment than the United States - they are encountering unexpectedly pro-plaintiff outcomes, including substantial judgments against them. (ssrn.com)
  • The result can be a transnational access-to-justice gap: A plaintiff may be denied both court access in the United States and a remedy based on a foreign court judgment. (ssrn.com)
  • The end of history, therefore, was conceived to be the execution of the divine judgment upon all the nations. (wikipedia.org)
  • Execution of judgments: RCW 6.17.020 . (wa.gov)
  • The Committee also adopted an indicative list of cases to be examined during its next dedicated meeting on the execution of judgments, which will take place from 6 to 8 December 2022. (coe.int)
  • The Committee of Ministers oversees the execution of judgments on the basis of information provided by the national authorities concerned, NGOs, National Human Rights Institutions (NHRIs) and other interested parties. (coe.int)
  • The Committee of Ministers continues to supervise the execution of the judgments and friendly settlements concerned and the Russian Federation is obliged to implement them. (coe.int)
  • Generally, a creditor who has obtained a monetary judgment (a ruling from a court under which another party is required to pay money to the creditor) may enforce this judgment through the seizure and forced sale of the debtor's property, through the seizure of money held in the debtor's bank accounts, and through garnishment of the debtor's wages. (wikipedia.org)
  • Whenever a monetary judgment is issued by a Virginia court, the clerk of the court will automatically issue a fi fa once twenty-one days have passed from the entry of the judgment (this is the period of time that the losing party before the court has to obtain relief from the court in the form of a reconsideration or reduction in the judgment entered). (wikipedia.org)
  • Entry of judgments - Superior court - District court - Small claims: RCW 6.01.020 . (wa.gov)
  • The Committee of Ministers has published the case-by-case decisions taken during the Committee's meeting from 20 to 22 September to supervise the implementation of judgments and decisions from the European Court of Human Rights. (coe.int)
  • 72 Final Resolutions were adopted by the Committee in respect of 137 judgments and decisions from the European Court, concerning 28 different member states. (coe.int)
  • Under Article 46 of the European Convention on Human Rights, judgments from the European Court of Human Rights are binding on the states concerned. (coe.int)
  • European Court of Human Rights judgments in cases of human rights violations have led to the improvement of people's lives across Council of Europe member states. (coe.int)
  • The Supreme Court has categorically held that the courts in India will not inquire whether the foreign judgment is supported by evidence or otherwise correct because the binding character of the judgment may be displaced only by establishing that the case falls within the above-referenced exceptions. (americanbar.org)
  • Interpreting section 13 in a general context, the Supreme Court has held that the competence contemplated in it is in an international sense, and not merely by the law of the foreign state delivering the judgment. (americanbar.org)
  • The Supreme Court further observed that certain rules of private international law are recognized as common to civilized jurisdictions and these common rules have been adopted to adjudicate disputes involving international elements to effectuate judgments of foreign courts. (americanbar.org)
  • If you do not file a protest, you will not be able to seek a declaratory judgment in court at a later date. (irs.gov)
  • 2.1 An application to enforce a judgment in the County Court may be made an any County Court hearing centre, unless an enactment, rule or practice direction provides otherwise. (justice.gov.uk)
  • Part 52 and Practice Directions 52A and 52B provide to which court or judge an appeal against the judgment or order, or an application for permission to appeal, must be made. (justice.gov.uk)
  • A party may seek to compel issuance of an order or judgment and the setting of a hearing or trial upon a failure, refusal, or neglect of a judge or commissioner of the court to comply with the time standards set forth in this act or as established by the Missouri Supreme Court. (mo.gov)
  • (a) The court, at the conclusion of the hearing, or thereafter as the circumstances of the case may require, shall find and enter a judgment that the minor is or is not delinquent. (touchngo.com)
  • THE International Relations department says it will study the judgement of the South Gauteng High Court before deciding on the next course of action. (newzimbabwe.com)
  • The plaintiffs then refiled the suit in Ecuador, and a court there entered a multi-billion dollar judgment against Chevron Corporation, which had merged with Texaco. (ssrn.com)
  • In its disparaging sense the term value judgment implies a conclusion is insular, one-sided, and not objective - contrasting with judgments based upon deliberation, balance, and public evidence. (wikipedia.org)
  • In its positive sense, a recommendation to make a value judgment is an admonition to consider carefully, to avoid whim and impetuousness, and search for consonance with one's deeper convictions, and to search for an objective, verifiable , public, and consensual set of evidence for the opinion . (wikipedia.org)
  • 5 So don't make judgments about anyone ahead of time-before the Lord returns. (biblia.com)
  • Value judgment also can refer to a tentative judgment based on a considered appraisal of the information at hand, taken to be incomplete and evolving-for example, a value judgment on whether to launch a military attack or as to procedure in a medical emergency. (wikipedia.org)
  • To obtain a lien on real property in the state of Virginia, the judgment creditor must "docket" the lien in the public records office of the city or county where that property is physically located. (wikipedia.org)
  • Virginia is an important jurisdiction for enforcing judgments related to internet domain names because Verisign, the registry for the .com and .net TLDs, is headquartered in the state. (wikipedia.org)
  • This divine judgment is to take place, according to the Biblical view, on earth, and is intended to be particularly a vindication of Israel. (wikipedia.org)
  • The creditor will then have to seek a new writ, which will be granted so long as the underlying judgment remains in force. (wikipedia.org)
  • It can be used either in a positive sense, signifying that a judgment must be made taking a value system into account, or in a disparaging sense, signifying a judgment made by personal whim rather than objective thought or evidence. (wikipedia.org)
  • Section 14 creates a rebuttable presumption of competence (e.g., personal and subject matter jurisdiction) that the courts will rely on in recognizing the foreign judgment. (americanbar.org)
  • Graham said that AOL, the Dulles-based subsidiary of Time Warner Inc., has won tens of millions of dollars in judgments against more than 30 spammers under the federal law and a similar Virginia law. (foxnews.com)
  • So a natural extension of the term value judgment is to include declarations seen one way from one value system but may be seen differently from another. (wikipedia.org)
  • As used in this chapter, real estate shall not include the vendor's interest under a real estate contract for judgments rendered after August 23, 1983. (wa.gov)
  • The "Book of the Dead" (Nekyia) in the Odyssey depicts judgment in the afterlife by Minos, the "radiant son of Zeus" who in his mortal life had been king of Crete. (wikipedia.org)
  • The divine judgment described in the Testament of Abraham is one concerning all souls in the life to come. (wikipedia.org)
  • After that, I claim that transcendental statements are to be understood departing from the Kantian model for reflective judgments to conclude that the very sense of transcendental philosophy is the acknowledgment by the subject of her autonomy regarding the norms that govern her experience of the world. (bvsalud.org)
  • This Day of Judgment ("Day of the Lord") is portrayed vividly in the Book of Jubilees and particularly in Enoch. (wikipedia.org)
  • It is necessary to note that the conclusiveness of a foreign judgment cannot be questioned on grounds other than the exceptions mentioned in section 13. (americanbar.org)
  • The government should improve access to education" is a value judgment (that education is good). (wikipedia.org)
  • The doctrine of a forensic judgment in the unseen world, by which the eternal lot of departed souls is determined, was also widely prevalent in pre-Christian times. (wikipedia.org)
  • There is also a divine judgment which takes place in this world and is continual. (wikipedia.org)