This form is a sample letter in Word format covering the subject matter of the title of the form.
This form is a sample letter in Word format covering the subject matter of the title of the form.
For example, a party can make a motion to ask to allow him or her not to give the other side the discovery that was asked for. If a party thinks that a subpoena asks for documents that have nothing to do with the case, or asks for too much information, the party can make a motion to quash the subpoena.
Running, cycling, jumping, swimming, eating, drinking, playing, writing, typing, moving cars, and throwing a ball are all examples of motion. Sleeping, sitting, standing, lying, a fixed clock, a bottle on a table, and a stopped car are all examples of rest.
If a member moves to fix the time to adjourn when no question is pending and the board has set a date for another meeting the same day or the next day, it is considered a main motion. In the latter example, the motion may be debated and amended and it can have a subsidiary motion attached to it.
A motion is a paper you can file in your case. It asks the court to decide something in your case. For example, if you need more time to answer a complaint against you, you can file a motion to extend the time to answer. If you do not have a case, you cannot file a motion.
We can define motion as the change of position of an object with respect to time. A book falling off a table, water flowing from the tap, rattling windows, etc., all exhibit motion. Even the air that we breathe exhibits motion! Everything in the universe moves.
A motion to vacate (and set aside) judgment essentially asks the court to erase or correct its prior decision (judgment). Under California law, when you vacate judgment, it will be officially wiped off your record.
An Example of Judgment Sampling A group of researchers is interested in learning if the reason why people wear eyeglasses is to read books. Common sense tells us that the efforts of the research group should be focused entirely on people that indeed wear eyeglasses. This process is judgment sampling in action.
Results obtained from a judgment sample are subject to some degree of bias, due to the sample's frame (i.e. the variables that define a population to be studied) and population not being identical. A random sample would provide less bias, but potentially less raw information.
Judgment sampling is prone to researcher bias. Because each sample is based entirely on the judgment of the researcher, there is room for human error that results in researcher bias. Researcher bias, also known as experimenter bias, is when the people performing the research end up influencing the results of a study.
An expert with knowledge of the population decides which units in the population should be sampled. In other words, the expert purposely selects what is considered to be a representative sample. Judgment sampling is subject to the researcher's biases and is perhaps even more biased than haphazard sampling.