- remit: refer (a matter or legal case) to another committee or authority or court for decision
- the act of sending an accused person back into custody to await trial (or the continuation of the trial)
- imprison: lock up or confine, in or as in a jail; "The suspects were imprisoned without trial"; "the murderer was incarcerated for the rest of his life"
- The term remand may be used to describe an action by an appellate court in which it remands, or sends back, a case to the trial court or lower appellate court for action.
- The detention of suspects is the process of keeping a person who has been arrested in a police-cell, prison or other detention centre before trial or sentencing. ...
- to put over a criminal proceeding to another date; unlike civil proceedings where an adjournment might be to an unfixed date, a remand requires the court to set a future date when the matter will come back before the court; see Adjournment;
- The period of time before a criminal charge is finally dealt with by the court
- To commit a person to prison, or to release them on bail, during a period of adjournment of a hearing of a criminal charge in the High or District Court. When a case is adjourned the defendant is remanded.
- Held in custody until next court appearance.
- An appeal returned to the regional office or medical facility where the claim originated.
- The process by which a higher court (such as the Supreme Court) sends a case back to a lower court. The lower court then issues a new decision that conforms to the higher court's ruling (return).
- Horizon Adult Remand Centre · Saint Andrew Juvenile Remand Centre
- To return a prisoner to custody until proceedings are resumed or the matter is set for further action.
- The legal term for returning the accused to custody to await further action.
- The period between arrest and trial during which the accused is held in custody or released on bail.
- A remand is an instruction in the Order of a released decision which instructs an agency to reevaluate its action(s), redetermine eligibility, and/or recompute aid entitlements and alleged overpayments, etc. ...
- The committing of an accused, but not convicted, person into custody or to release on bail (with or without conditions) while awaiting a court hearing or trial. ...
- (1.) Send back a case to the trial court or lower appellate court for action or (2.) The imprisonment of criminal suspects awaiting trial or sentencing. A prisoner who is denied, refused or unable to meet the conditions of bail, or who is unable to post bail, may be held in a prison on remand.
- An order by the judge to the bailiff to take a person into custody directly from the court.
- When a defendant is not given the opportunity to leave custody on bail or on his or her own recognizance, or cannot afford to make bail, the individual is held on remand.
- A remand is an action by the FCC to return applications to USAC for further review and decision. (USAC/SLD Web Site: Acronyms and Terms List)
- When the basis of federal jurisdiction is resolved and only state claims remain to be litigated, the federal court must send the matter back to the state trial court. ...
- A legal order that temporarily places a child in the custody of the ACS Commissioner.
- to return from whence it came; when an order sends a cause back to the original court of jurisdiction
- This is when a criminal case is adjourned until further notice. Remand court is the court in which trial dates are set for criminal cases.