Apr 08, 2022 · In fact, an Ontario supreme court judge sided with the convoy. When an injunction against honking horns was declared, the court also stated that “provided the terms of this Order are complied with, the defendants and other persons remain at liberty to engage in a peaceful, lawful and safe protest.”
1. Get legal help 2. Find out the facts the Crown will rely on 3. Go through the plea inquiry 4. Tell the court you plead guilty 4. Tell the court you plead guilty When it's time for you to say how you want to plead, the court clerk will stand and ask you to answer the criminal charges against you. This is called being arraigned.
Feb 07, 2022 · The request for an injunction came as part of a proposed class-action lawsuit filed with the Court by lawyer Paul Champ on behalf of client Zexi Li. The proposed class members are “all persons who reside in Ottawa, Ontario, from Bay Street to Elgin Street and Lisgar Street to Wellington Street.”
Jul 07, 2016 · My lawyer believes that everyone deserves Access to Justice and fair legal representation – but for over one hundred other Ontario lawyers, Access to Justice apparently ends if a litigant has evidence of misconduct by a fellow member of the Bar. Donald Best is an Access to Justice & Anti-corruption advocate.
If you are addressing a judge or associate judge of the Superior Court of Justice, you should call him or her “Your Honour” or “Justice/Associate Justice (last name)”. Deputy judges should be called “Your Honour”.
Judges of the Supreme Court of Canada, the Federal Court of Canada, and the Tax Court of Canada should be addressed "The Honourable (first and last names), Judge of the xxxx Court of Canada". BC Supreme Court and Court of Appeal justices can be addressed as "Dear Mr.Dec 1, 2021
When you speak to the judge, say either “Your Honour” or “Justice” before the judge's last name. For example, you can say, ”Justice Smith” or “Your Honour”. You must stand up when a judge enters or leaves the courtroom.
Just show the judge that you have something to say by raising your hand, and wait. When you speak, speak to the judge rather than the person on the other side in the case....Don't be aggressivelisten carefully.if you don't understand, say so.try to give brief, to-the-point answers.
'Your Honour' and 'Hon'ble Court' can be used to address judges in high courts and the Supreme Court. Sir or Madam in subordinate courts and tribunals.Mar 8, 2021
Judges of inferior courts are referred to as "Judge [Surname]" while judges of superior and federal courts are referred to as "Mister/Madam Justice [Surname]," except in Ontario, where all trial judges in referred to as "Mister/Madam Justice".
When it comes to divorce records, Ontario presumes that all civil and family litigation matters are public. The only way to seal a court file and take it out of public eyes requires an Order under section 137(2) of the Courts of Justice Act.Sep 15, 2021
Ontario court addresses are listed on the Ministry of the Attorney General website. The file will give you information such as the date and courtroom for your next appearance or who the court reporter or judge was on any of the previous occasions you appeared in court.
All family appearances scheduled prior to April 4, 2022, will remain as they are scheduled, until a judge directs otherwise....1. INTRODUCTION.Hearings:Mode of Appearance:Settlement ConferenceIn-person, unless otherwise directed by the judgeTrial Management ConferenceVirtual7 more rows•Mar 18, 2022
8 Things You Should Never Say to a Judge While in CourtAnything that sounds memorized. Speak in your own words. ... Anything angry. Keep your calm no matter what. ... 'They didn't tell me … ' ... Any expletives. ... Any of these specific words. ... Anything that's an exaggeration. ... Anything you can't amend. ... Any volunteered information.Apr 15, 2018
FOUR THINGS TO REMEMBER TO WIN A COURT CASETell the Court Everything That It Wants to Know. ... Know the Facts and Questions of Law. ... Present Your Case Convincingly. ... Avoid Lengthy Unreasonable Arguments & Tiresome Cross Examination.
The main purpose behind the use of the term "your honor" as it is used for judges today is still to denote that higher stature and additional respect that judges deserve. Judges occupy positions that require them to give unbiased, honest, consistent, and reliable opinions about legal and criminal matters.Mar 24, 2022
So, judges expect you to give them respect and do what they say. If you don’t want a judge to tell you what to do, you should not be in court. When a judge tells you to do something, it is not like another person telling you.
By law, in cases involving support or property division the other side is allowed to know virtually everything about your financial situation and is is your obligation to tell them. If you don’t give disclosure quickly, judges will assume that either you are hiding you money (see point 5), trying to lie (see point 6), trying to complicate matters or make them more expensive for everyone, or trying to delay. The law gives judges lots of powers to punish people who refuse to make their financial disclosure quickly.
Involve the kids in the fight. Doctors, social-workers, psychologists, mediators, counsellors, teachers, principals, swimming lesson instructors, camp counsellors, judges, lawyers and every other profession that works with kids will tell you that involving the kids in the divorce hurts the kids. It can actually affect a child’s brain development.
Unless you are a Children’s Aid Society that has been court sanctioned to cut off access to a parent because of abuse, you must find a way for the kids to know both parents. It is a child’s legal right to know both parents. Even murderers and rapists get supervised access because children benefit from knowing their parents. Judges actually take custody away from parents who try to destroy the children’s relationship with the other parent.
The law will say how the family’s money should be divided. Unless you have a marriage contract, a cohabitation agreement or some other form of agreement, you can’t change that. Moving assets to keep the court from giving them to another party is illegal. It shows the court that you are willing to break the rules and you need to be taught a lesson.
Don’t think you can get away with lying - especially when the other party has a family lawyer. Family Lawyers get very good at finding out when people are lying. Get caught once, and the court will assume everything you say from then on is a lie. That makes it hard to get your way.
If you have been served, the court can make an order against you, even if you don’t show up. Sticking your head in the sand won’t help you. It will only result in the other party getting what they want because you did not show up to say why that is wrong. Then, even if you weren’t there, the court can enforce the Order against you if you don’t comply with it. It’s like the lottery: you can’t possibly win if you don’t play. But, if you show up and behave yourself , you have a good chance of doing well in Family Court. At the very least, the judge will explain to you why he or she is making the court orders.
If you have a lawyer, your job is to collect the information/evidence we have described above and give it to your lawyer, who will then prepare draft affidavits. You need to read the drafts very carefully to make sure they are accurate.
If you do not have a lawyer, you may need to prepare your affidavits yourself. In this case, you need to:
The best way to overcome this problem is to be polite, be brief, and educate the court about what you want and why you are entitled to it. If you have no idea as to either, the judge who hates family law may become an abusive judge as well. Politely and firmly resist being rushed. But get your points in clearly.
It drives judges nuts when two lawyers, two pro se parties, or any combination of them begin to argue at counsel table as though the judge was not present. Keep your focus on the judge, and generally avoid looking at the other party except for emphasis. Never address the other party directly.
Some counties or individual courts have local rules; many do not. Most judges have their own rules and styles, often never to be found in written form. It never hurts to ask the Court clerk, when the judge is off the bench, whether that courtroom follows any specific preferences, customs, or rules of procedures.#N#The state-wide source for procedural rules impacting California Family Law (and Juvenile cases) are the California Rules of Court, beginning with Rule 5.100. Rule 5.111 is one of the immediately most important, since it deals with initiating common OSC and Motion requests for custody, support, etc., and sets forth the length of declarations, etc. Lengthy declarations for a judge who has possibly 15 minutes to review your materials is always a bad idea - he or she may not read them, and some judges will consider sanctioning you. These rules apply to all family law matters in all California courtrooms.#N#The Riverside County Local Rules pertaining to Family Law cases can be found here. Start with Title 5. I discuss these in more detail below. The Los Angeles Family Court Rules can be accessed here. Basically you ought to go to the County website where your case is filed and look for the local rules for that are applied.
California matrimonial law is immensely complicated. Many lawyers who regularly practice in family court really have little clue what they are doing, in part because the simpler contests arise over and over again and many lawyers learn enough to deal with these simple situations but would be highly stressed in more complicated situations. Many family court lawyers have very little actual trial or even deposition experience. They don't know how to cross-examine witnesses. They only have a glancing familiarity with rules of evidence. Some of these lawyers actually go on to become judges. Other judges may be quite skilled in the criminal arena, for instance, where they were once prosecutors or public defenders. These judges were once real trial lawyers, but that doesn't mean they understand family law. Others may have been quite senior civil litigators who nonetheless rarely if ever handled family law cases.
Clerks and deputies are watching everything that happens in and outside of the courtroom, and are part of the Judge's workday family. Treat them with respect and realize that they are sizing you up as well, and possibly even directly or indirectly reporting to the judge. Don't think you can behave like a jerk outside the Judge's presence (even in the hallways) without it possibly being seen and reported.
Never assume the Court has read your pleadings. But asking the question not only embarrasses the court, if they answer that they have not read it and you wind up getting what you wanted, you are inviting an appeal since appellate courts in California have reversed trial courts for ruling on matters where they've admitted on the record they've not read it.
It does happen that the Court has prejudged the case before any oral presentation. It can be very difficult to understand why a bench officer may seem to have already decided your case, before you open your mouth. This is why I've observed that everything you write, and say, matters.
Tell the Truth. If your lawyer doubts you in the consultation, or doesn't think you have a case, while that may change over time, getting over an initial disbelief is very hard. You have to prove your case. Your attorney is not your witness. They are your advocate - but you are responsible for coming up with proof.
If you don't pay your lawyer on the day of trial, or however you have agreed to, then while he or she may be obligated by other ethical duties to do his/her best, they won't be motivated by sympathy for you, and it will show in court.
Most people hired attorneys because they don't want to sit in court. Well, truth be told, neither do I. The difference between lawyer and client is that the lawyer expects it to take a long time and understands. The client typically thinks it's unjustified. So, your hard truth is that each case takes time. Be patient.
Credibility is one of the most important things in this world - and most important in a courtroom. If you care enough only to wear sweats to the courthouse, then the judge will see that you don't care, and that will be reflected in their desire to help you, listen to you, and decide in your favor. Step it up.
While juries usually get it right, sometimes, it's not about whether a particular matter is emotional or simple, complicated or straightforward. Sometimes people make decisions on who has the nicer suit, or who is more pleasant to deal with. So even if your case is good or even if it's not so strong.
While lawyers can certainly take your money and your time and we can file a case that will be very hard to win, if you don't care enough about your life to get a contract, the judge is not very likely to be on your side. At least, not automatically. Oral contracts are extremely hard to prove. What are the terms.