[
US
/ˈdɑkət/
]
[ UK /dˈɒkɪt/ ]
[ UK /dˈɒkɪt/ ]
NOUN
- a temporally organized plan for matters to be attended to
- (law) the calendar of a court; the list of cases to be tried or a summary of the court's activities
VERB
- make a summary or abstract of a legal document and inscribe it in a list
-
place on the docket for legal action
Only 5 of the 120 cases docketed were tried
How To Use docket In A Sentence
- Rocket Docket Rudolph was pushing the Steere case through on greased skids; Marta doubted even a murder in the office would slow him down. ROUGH JUSTICE
- The topic was on the docket of one of the industry's biggest trade shows.
- When he received a docket earlier this year telling him he had a package to pick up at the Post Office, he thought it was probably some parts for his refrigerator.
- If yes, provide details of each case or proceeding on an attached sheet, including caption, court and index or docket number, the particulars, and the disposition.
- As Ron Katznelson reports, there were 23,000+ appeals filed in FY 2008, and only about 6,500 were docketed to the Board. Appeals "Skyrocket" at the USPTO
- So I signed Kevin's docket, then we got the trolley into the van, secured it to the bulkhead, and closed the roller door. THE SCHEME FOR FULL EMPLOYMENT
- So why did he take it upon himself to destroy those documents when other types of patient records from that period were left intact and similar dispatch dockets in other blood banks were not destroyed?
- The electronic case lookup is an innovation of Probate Judge Merri Rudd and her staff, allowing the public access to docket information on all cases filed between 1978 and now. Mjh's blog — 2007 — October
- On the docket next month is a New Hampshire law dealing with abortion and minors.
- Inevitably, there was a docket to sign, which Rob described as unimportant but necessary, and at last I could continue my journey. THE SCHEME FOR FULL EMPLOYMENT