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Civil Court
General Civil
Plaintiff
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Setting Trial Date
Getting Ready for Trial
Mandatory Settlement Conference
The Trial
Following the Trial
UD: Landlord
(Plaintiff) & Tenant (Defendant)
Overview
Ways to Avoid a UD
Plaintiff: Pursuing a UD Action
Before Filing
Preparing the UD
Filing and Serving
When Defendant Fails to Respond
Defendant: Answering a UD Action
Plaintiff and Defendant: Settling
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Civil Court
Your Day in Court:
The Trial
[Esta página está en español;
Trang này bằng tiếng Việt]
- If
you have a jury trial
-
What are in Limine Motions?
-
What does Preponderance of Evidence mean?
-
How to act in Court
-
Judgment
- If you have a jury trial
What happens in court depends on if you have a
Court Trial or a
Jury Trials. (A Court Trial is with a judge, but not a jury.)
See, "Setting the Trial Date: Jury v. Court Trial."
- Choosing the jury:
In a jury trial, the Judge and the parties choose the jury.
This is called "Voir dire."
A group of people are called for jury service and sent to different
courtrooms. The lawyer (or the party
if they don’t have a lawyer) on each side can ask each person questions.
The questions are to see if they can be fair and open-minded jurors.
It can be hard to tell if a person already has an opinion or
prejudice.
Spend a little time with every juror. Before you go to
Court, write down
some questions that will help you choose jurors for your case.
If one person thinks a person can’t be fair, they can challenge that
juror. The other side can ask them more questions, or try to help that
person as a juror. This can go back and forth. Be ready to ask questions
and to understand this process takes time.
- Fees:
The person who asks for a jury trial must pay the jury fees.
You must pay for every person in the jury every day. If the people on
the jury come from far away, you have to pay their travel expenses.
EVERY DAY before court begins, you have to deposit the fees and travel
expenses for the trial.
- In Limine motions
In general, you make an In Limine Motion at the very beginning of the
trial. This is when you ask to keep information or questions out of the
trial.
There are a lot of reasons to do this. For example, the information
might not be related to the case, or it might give the jurors or the
Judge the wrong idea more than it would inform them.
The Judge decides these motions. Then the next part of the trial starts.
- What does Preponderance of Evidence mean?
You can win if your case is more believable than the other side’s.
Lawyers call this a "preponderance" of the evidence. This just means
that your side of the story is more likely than not. It doesn’t mean
that one side brought in more evidence than the other side. It means
that one side’s evidence was more believable than the other.
The rules for evidence are not the same for civil cases and criminal
cases. In criminal court, you have to prove that a
defendant
is
guilty
"beyond a reasonable doubt". This means that the jury or Judge has to be
sure that the defendant is guilty.
In a civil case, you only have to show a "preponderance of the
evidence". You don’t have to convince the Judge or jury absolutely. They
just have to believe that one side’s story is more believable than the
other.
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- How to act in Court
Judges
and juries expect everyone in a lawsuit to act professionally and be
polite. When you handle your own case, people expect you to act the same
way as the Judge and the lawyers.
A real courtroom is NOT like a TV courtroom. You can’t yell or be
dramatic. If you do, you can get in trouble with the Judge. The jury
might think that you have something to hide. Try to be as comfortable as
possible. But, don’t be too formal or too casual. Be prepared, and
present your case according to the rules.
- Judgment
At the end of the trial, you’ll find out who won the case. If you
have a jury trial, the jury will go to the jury room and talk about the
case. This is called "deliberating."
When they make a decision, the jury will go back to the courtroom. The
clerk will read the decision. The jury can make a decision quickly. Or,
they can take days if the case is complicated.
If the judge decides your case, (called a Court or Bench trial) the
Judge may need time to make a decision and will announce the decision
later.
The decision will be entered in the court records
as a
judgment and it will be official.
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