New Jersey | Supreme Court of the United States | United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit | Supreme Court of India | Newark, New Jersey | High Court | Princeton, New Jersey | Jersey | 101st Airborne Division | Lake Superior | Royal Court Theatre | High Court of Justice | International Criminal Court | Football League First Division | Atlantic City, New Jersey | New York Supreme Court | Hoboken, New Jersey | NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship | Football League Second Division | High Court of Australia | Supreme Court of Canada | Joy Division | Jersey City, New Jersey | Governor of New Jersey | European Court of Human Rights | United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit | New Jersey General Assembly | International Court of Justice | United States District Court for the Southern District of New York | Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States |
If Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) comes to power by 2014, none of the 9 justices in the Appellate Division of Supreme Court of Bangladesh will be appointed as chief justice after mandatory retirement of current chief justice Md.
1958 • The Tweed Commission Report proposed reform through centralization of court administration, simplification of court structure, and continued supervision of the courts by the Judicial Conference and the Appellate Division.
The injunction was upheld unanimously by the Appellate Division.
M.T. v J.T., 140 N.J. 77, 355 A.2d 204, 205 (NJ Super. Ct. 1976), is a 1976 New Jersey Superior Court case which affirmed the validity of a marriage of a trans woman to a man, and in particular legally recognized the woman's post-operative gender of the plaintiff.
She was then assigned by Chief Justice Stuart Rabner to the Appellate Division, effective August 1, 2009, having previously served on the Appellate Division in a temporary capacity from March through May 2009.
Those buildings are designated New York City landmarks, as is the Appellate Division of the New York Supreme Court of New York State, between them.
In 1996, a New Jersey Superior Court judge ruled that the mall's requirement of a $1 million liability insurance policy had to be waived to allow supporters of then-presidential candidate Ralph Nader to distribute campaign literature.