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  2. Motion to set aside judgment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motion_to_set_aside_judgment

    In law, a motion to set aside judgment is an application to overturn or set aside a court's judgment, verdict or other final ruling in a case. [1] [2] Such a motion is proposed by a party who is dissatisfied with the result of a case. Motions may be made at any time after entry of judgment, and in some circumstances years after the case has ...

  3. Set-aside - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Set-aside

    wildflowers. Set-aside was an incentive scheme introduced by the European Economic Community (EEC) in 1988 (Regulation (EEC) 1272/88), [1] to (i) help reduce the large and costly surpluses produced in Europe under the guaranteed price system of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP); and (ii) to deliver some environmental benefits following considerable damage to agricultural ecosystems and ...

  4. Suspension of the rules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suspension_of_the_rules

    In United States parliamentary procedure, a suspension of the rules allows a deliberative assembly to set aside its normal rules to do something that it could not do otherwise. However, there are rules that cannot be suspended.

  5. Rescission (contract law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rescission_(contract_law)

    Furthermore, a minority of common law jurisdictions, like South Africa, use the term "rescission" for what other jurisdictions call "reversing", "overturning" or "overruling" a court judgment. In this sense, the term means to be set aside or make void, on application to the court that granted the judgment or to a higher court. Applications to ...

  6. Judge in Trump's civil fraud case says he won't recuse ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/judge-trumps-civil-fraud-case...

    The New York judge who ordered Donald Trump to pay a nearly $500 million civil fraud judgment said Thursday he won’t step aside from the case, rebuffing concerns that the verdict was influenced ...

  7. Motion (legal) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motion_(legal)

    A "motion to dismiss" asks the court to decide that a claim, even if true as stated, is not one for which the law offers a legal remedy.As an example, a claim that the defendant failed to greet the plaintiff while passing the latter on the street, insofar as no legal duty to do so may exist, would be dismissed for failure to state a valid claim: the court must assume the truth of the factual ...

  8. Did you know the IRS taxes your bank account? Don’t get ...

    www.aol.com/finance/did-know-irs-taxes-bank...

    If you don’t receive a 1099-INT automatically, that doesn’t mean you’re off the hook. Try checking your year-end financial statements or calling your bank to confirm what you earned.

  9. Vacated judgment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacated_judgment

    A vacated judgment (also known as vacatur relief) is a legal judgment that legally voids a previous legal judgment. A vacated judgment is usually the result of the judgment of an appellate court, which overturns, reverses, or sets aside the judgment of a lower court.