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Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Financial, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.03 sec. |
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To make accessible, visible, or available; to submit to review, examination, or inquiry through the elimination of restrictions or impediments. To open a judgment means to render it capable of reexamination by removing or relaxing the bar of its finality. A judgment is ordinarily opened at the insistence of a party who is able to show good cause as to why the execution of the judgment would be inequitable. To open a court is to formally announce, ordinarily through the bailiff, that the session has commenced and that the business before the tribunal will proceed. The term open is also used as an adjective in reference to that which is patent, visible, apparent, or notorious, such as a defect in a product, or conduct such as lewdness. TO OPEN, OPENING. To open a case is to make a statement of the pleadings in
a case, which is called the opening.
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? References in periodicals archive |
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An unidentified woman stopped a crime spree in Columbia, South Carolina, on January 13, by taking a gun out of her car's glove compartment and opening fire on Harold Jeffcoat, a man who was attempting to steal the car. Jonathan Banks, 17, is accused of opening fire at 3-year-old Kaitlyn Avila, her father and her 6-year-old sister on Sept. In November 2001 the deputy military judge advocate general admitted that there is a "vast difference" in the guidelines for opening fire between Central Command (the West Bank) and Southern Command (the Gaza Strip). |
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