litigants in English

noun
1
a person involved in a lawsuit.
So judges and magistrates are not subject to litigation from disgruntled litigants .
noun
    litigator

Use "litigants" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "litigants" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "litigants", or refer to the context using the word "litigants" in the English Dictionary.

1. The first concerned litigants in person.

2. Litigants are mostly untroubled by the rising costs of justice.

3. It is unclear whether or not he also continued acting for other litigants.

4. Litigants still do not seem eager to save costs by mediating their disputes.

5. Introduction: Surrogate’s Court Accountings are the least understood amongst litigants and the lay public

6. There may well be such an order in the case of litigants in person.

7. These cases are too costly and too risky for most lawyers and most litigants.

8. This is an important development, which allows litigants before domestic courts effectively to subpoena the Commission.

9. Such men spoke in court on behalf of litigants and also stood surety for them when required.

10. A public Adjuster is a self-employed person who is hired by litigants to determine or settle

11. To Accede to the request of the defendants would put the access to justice by most litigants out of reach

12. 29 Such men spoke in court on behalf of litigants and also stood surety for them when required.

13. Litigants should benefit from changes recommended by the Civil Justice Review to speed up and simplify civil cases.

14. (24) Limitation of Adducing evidence plays an important role in deciding whether the litigants should bear the risk of unfair decision.

15. This deprived litigants of access to the United States' courts, although some had cases already pending before the federal courts.

16. The defendants sought an order under a United States statutory provision dealing specifically with assistance to litigants in foreign courts.

17. The text of the Convention drew no distinction between evidence obtained from third parties and that obtained from litigants themselves.

18. This would give greater predictability to litigants and presumably effect a reduction in the amount of judicial time devoted to these matters.

19. Enhanced pecuniary jurisdiction will accelerate the justice delivery system, besides making access easier for litigants without having to travel outside the Union Territory.

20. The personalized nature of disputes caused litigants to pursue all possible legal strategies even when it would have been more rational to compromise.

21. The Ultimate Sanction: State High Court Affirms Liability Judgment for 'Egregious' Discovery Violations This ruling sends a strong signal to Wisconsin litigants—and, perhaps more …

22. Form DC-411, BILL OF PArticulars is designed to primarily to assist pro se litigants in complying with a court’s order to produce a bill of pArticulars

23. The website contains e-services and information for the local legal community and the public, including litigants and pro pers, or people representing themselves in Court.

24. Media reports abound with examples —politicians lying about their actions, accountants and lawyers overstating corporate profits, advertisers misleading consumers, litigants cheating insurance companies, just to name a few.

25. Each year, litigants in hundreds of cases petition the Supreme Court seeking a “writ of certiorari” — agreement of the court to hear an appeal from a lower court.

26. Any litigation is a costly affair : court fees , expenses for preparing a case , expenses in the courts , additional miscellaneous expenses , lawyers ' fees all these have to be incurred by the litigants .

27. Adjudication: A legal process by which an arbiter or judge reviews the evidence and arguments by the parties to an action to reach a decision which will determine the litigants’ rights and obligations to each other

28. The Adjudicated meaning simply refers to the formal legal process by which a judge or arbiter reviews evidence (including legal reasoning offered by litigants or opposing parties) to come to a decision in a legal matter

29. The Assize of Clarendon 1166); (b) the edicts or enactments made at such sessions; (c) the forms of action or procedures instituted by such edicts and available as writs to would-be litigants in the royal court (e.g

30. Therefore, the situation which the Nigerian judiciary and of course all heads of courts must exert their efforts to Amelioratethe delay justice which causes on the crying, helpless and eager justice-seeking litigants loss of hope in the judiciary or our courts.

31. Alufe & Alufe-Elohim Chambers January 28 · "It has become a fashion for litigants to resort to their right to fair hearing on appeal as if it is a magic wand to cure all their inadequacies at the trial court

32. ‘This Apparatchik added looking at the academics who were commanded to attend: ‘If there is anyone here against democracy, I shall smash his face’.’ ‘Clearly, there is no place in all of this for court painters to undertake ‘influential interventions’ on behalf of bewildered litigants, …

33. Judge Jurden’s opinion– though the first in Delaware to squarely address Champerty and maintenance in the context of modern litigation finance arrangements – is consistent with the trend in Delaware (and elsewhere) towards protecting litigants who utilize litigation finance from any disadvantage as a result.

34. State has some forms available on the web for most common Complaints for lawyers and self-representing litigants; if a petitioner cannot find an appropriate form in their state, they often can modify a form from another state to fit his or her request

35. Albert Alschuler has referred to pretrial conferences as "Cajolery Conferences," (204) and he has cautioned that "a judge who has gained familiarity with the facts of a case during his pretrial activities is unlikely to relish the prospect of hearing the evidence again at trial."(205) Judith Resnik has pointed to the danger that, in a judicially supervised settlement negotiation, "litigants