Filing (Legal)

In law, filing is the act of submitting a document to the clerk of a court for the court's immediate consideration, for storage in the court's files, or both. Courts will not consider motions unless an appropriate memorandum or brief is filed before the appropriate deadline. Usually a filing fee is paid at the same time; such filing fees are one part of the variety of charges that are known as court costs. Filing may also refer to submission of a form to a government agency, with or without an accompanying fee. Filing fees are controversial because they impede access to justice. Although American litigants complain about fees all the time (for example, it costs $300 to file a document in court in Los Angeles), the American system is considered to be quite plaintiff-friendly by lawyers. Many legal systems have filing fees for complaints that are proportional to the amount in controversy. That is, the bigger the damages, the bigger the fee! Even when one seeks a waiver for grossly unfair fees, courts tend to waive only the amount in excess of the plaintiff's total assets, with the perverse result that just to initiate a meritorious case, an already severely injured or damaged plaintiff may have to go bankrupt.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
omar mukhtar
shangri la (knopfler album)
the z society
castiglione della pescaia
167 (number)
jeff chandler (actor)
canning dock
sniff 'n' the tears
see monster
bunker hill monument
jamal badawi
te whanga lagoon
cofer black
asakura
western college program
exit strategy
awatere river
one foot in the blues
margin of litigation
brick by brick
amanda mckittrick ros
badminton, south gloucestershire
fourth grade rats
kamhlaba
james f. schenk
stuck in wonderamaland
michael z. williamson
bernard jensen
paavo haavikko
noam elkies
fred a. hartley, jr.
cofradia
vinyl (album)
today (song)
list of unusual personal names
hi fi sci fi
abstract semantic graph
abibatou traor
satyagraha (opera)
vav
clarence f. leary
yud
townsend cromwell
elsa, yukon