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Civil Procedure
Final judgment rule
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By congressional statute the federal courts of appeals are permitted, in the usual case, to exercise their ...
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The federal circuit courts of appeals have generally recognized that a party suffers real hardship when the district court erroneously orders it to disclose privileged information. Review of the disclosure order after final judgment is usually an insufficient remedy; once the information has been disclosed, it can never again be fully confidential. Consequently, the courts have struggled to provide a mechanism by which such orders can be immediately appealed. However, privilege orders presenting novel questions of law or issues of first impression do not clearly fit within the doctrinal requirements of the most common methods of interlocutory review. Appellate courts have therefore applied varying exceptions or extensions to those requirements in an effort to encompass such privilege or...
... I describes the traditional "final judgment rule" and explains why the rule causes particular hards...
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Trial court must divide all marital debt to be a final judgment under Rule 75(F) of the Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure.
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Modification of sentence; final judgment; law of the case; mandate rule; community control; medical release
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... to review the order prior to entry of final judgment in the case. Pp. 263-270. (a) The policy... order" exception to the final judgment rule, a trial court order must (1) "conclusively determ...
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In a case involving multiple claims or parties, a trial courts journal entry must be a judgment or final order and comply with Rule 54(B) of the Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure to be appealable.
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A judgment is void when it changes a prior final judgment on the basis of an ex parte letter from a party explaining why the final judgment is wrong. Civil Rule 60, motion to vacate, reconsideration.
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MARYLAND COURT OF APPEALS
Civil Procedure, Severance: Severance of parties under Maryland Rule 2-213 was inappropriate when a final judgment as to all parties had not been entered. Renee Kennedy, et al. v. Lasting Paints, Inc., et al., No. 88, September Term, 2007. RecordFax No. 8-0507-21, 28 pages.
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Pursuant to Local Rule No. 14, this document constitutes a final judgment entry and the time period for further appeal commences from the date of filing with the clerk. R.C. 2953.08(B)(2) does not authorize a prosecuting attorney to appeal the modification of a sentence granting judicial release for a felony of the third, fourth or fifth degree.