res judicata

NOUN
  1. a matter already settled in court; cannot be raised again
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How To Use res judicata In A Sentence

  • The doctrine of res judicata prevents relitigation of matters that have already been determined by a court of competent jurisdiction.
  • The whole doctrine of res judicata was based on considerations of judicial policy, was of great importance but was not paramount.
  • Res judicata has both positive and negative values. The positive value excludes the retrial, while the negative value is the logical premise of the retrial.
  • The principle of Res judicata is one of the fundamental rules and values, and is also the ultimate safeguard for the judicial power to be the supreme mechanism to solve the social disorders.
  • The principle of Res judicata is one of the fundamental rules and values, and is also the ultimate safeguard for the judicial power to be the supreme mechanism to solve the social disorders.
  • Res judicata has both positive and negative values. The positive value excludes the retrial, while the negative value is the logical premise of the retrial.
  • The whole doctrine of res judicata was based on considerations of judicial policy, was of great importance but was not paramount.
  • Four months later, Oreck sued Dyson for false advertising of its newest model, again attacking the “no loss of suction” claim; this was dismissed on res judicata grounds. Archive 2009-03-01
  • In order to guarantee judicial authority, raise litigious benefits and safeguard human rights, it is obviously important to emphasize the study of res judicata theory of criminal judgments.
  • Res judicata is the essence of the rule of law in safeguarding national stability and judicial magistrate's authority.
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