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Motion to Continue Jury Trial Due to COVID
A Motion to Continue Criminal Trial due to Concern over the pandemic. In a case where jury pool is hard to come by, a motion to continue the jury trial until pandemic slows down and the jury pool grows.
MOTION TO CONTINUE MOTIONS DEADLINE
MOTION TO CONTINUE MOTIONS DEADLINE
Motion to Continue Trial
A simple motion to continue a trial in misdemeanor case when Attorney was just recently hired
MOTION TO CONTINUE TRIAL
District Attorney submits a motion to continue the jury trial.
MOTION TO CONTINUE TRIAL AND MOTION TO EXTEND PRETRIAL MOTION DEADLINE
MOTION TO CONTINUE TRIAL AND MOTION TO EXTEND PRETRIAL MOTION DEADLINE
Motion to Continue Trial and Motion to Extend Pre-Trial Motion Deadline (1st Request)
Defendant’s 1st request to continue trial and extend motions deadline, in the US District Court for the District of Arizona. Defense reasons was more time needed to investigate.
Motion to Continue Trial and Pretrial Motions Dates
Motion to Continue Trial and Pretrial Motions Dates
Motion to Continue Trial Date and Pretrial Motions Deadline
Motion to continue trail date, and set deadlines for pretrial motions.
Motion to Continue Trial Need of Expert
Motion to Continue Trial Need of Expert
Motion to Continue Trial to Afford Full DNA Testing and to Investigate Offense and Mitigation
Motion to continue trail, or request new trial date. In order to do so motion must provide suitable reasons, like involvement of new evidence.
Motion to Declare A.R.S. 13-4431 and 4433(b)-(e) and Arizona Procedure Rule 39(b)11 Unconstitutional
Motion to Declare A.R.S. 13-4431 and 4433(b)-(e) and Arizona Procedure Rule 39(b)11 Unconstitutional
Motion to Declare Defendant Indigent for Purposes Other Than Attorney Fees
Motion to declare the defendant indigent for cost for reasons other than attorneys fees. – Criminal Law Legal Document – Experts and Evidence
Attorney’s fee is a chiefly United States term for compensation for legal services performed by an attorney for a client, in or out of court. It may be an hourly, flat-rate or contingent fee.
If you win the case the owner filed against you, you can then collect the attorneys’ fees you spent from the responsible subcontractor. You can also recover your attorneys’ fees for pursuing a lawsuit you had to file because of someone else’s mistake.