Form with which the secretary of a corporation notifies all necessary parties of the date, time, and place of a special meeting of the board of directors.
Form with which the secretary of a corporation notifies all necessary parties of the date, time, and place of a special meeting of the board of directors.
A word count of 400 words will result in around four-fifths of a page single spaced and and one and three-fifths of a page double spaced. Although it can vary, with a conventional page setup—Times New Roman or Arial 12 point font and default margins—400 words should be the same across most word processing software.
The Court of Appeals is New York State's highest court and court of last resort in most cases. The Court, which sits in Albany, is composed of a chief judge and six associate judges, each appointed by the governor, with the advice and consent of the senate, to a 14-year term of office.
Rule 202.70. 11-d - Limitations on Depositions (a) Unless otherwise stipulated to by the parties or ordered by the court: (1) the number of depositions taken by plaintiffs, or by defendants, or by third-party defendants, shall be limited to 10; and (2) depositions shall be limited to 7 hours per deponent.
22 CRR-NY 202.8-CRR (1) affidavits, affirmations, briefs and memoranda of law in chief shall be limited to 7,000 words each; (2) reply affidavits, affirmations, and memoranda shall be no more than 4,200 words and shall not contain any arguments that do not respond or relate to those made in the memoranda in chief.
Specifically, pursuant to Uniform Rule 202.7 (f), upon an application for an order to show cause that seeks a temporary restraining order, the application must contain an affirmation demonstrating that there will be significant prejudice to the party seeking the restraining order by the giving of notice.
A form that is filed in New York state court and served on all parties confirming that the parties have completed necessary discovery proceedings and the case is trial ready (CPLR 3402(a)). It is the paper that gets the case on the court's trial calendar.
If a settlement can't be reached, a “Note of Issue” is filed, which tells the court that the case is ready to go on the trial calendar. After the Note of Issue is filed, you enter the pre-trial stage. This is when we start preparing to actually go to trial.
Once your attorney prepares and files a "Note of Issue" your case will sit on the trial calendar for many months. When your case is finally called, your attorney will need to appear for a pre-trial conference with the trial assignment judge.
Within 20 days after service of a note of issue and certificate of readiness, any party to the action or special proceeding may move to vacate the note of issue, upon affidavit showing in what respects the case is not ready for trial, and the court may vacate the note of issue if it appears that a material fact in the ...
Note of Issue: A document that must be filed with the court in order to place a matter on the trial calendar. See also Certificate of Readiness.