Chapter VIII - RECIPROCAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR ASSISTANCE IN CERTAIN MATTERS AND PROCEDURE FOR ATTACHMENT AND FORFEITURE OF PROPERTY (From Section 111 to Section 124)
Oral arguments and written memorandum protect parties' right to concise submissions while limiting adjournments and regulating relevance. Parties may, after close of evidence, address concise oral arguments and may submit a concise memorandum under distinct headings which shall form part of the record; a copy must be furnished to the opposite party. Adjournments for filing written arguments are not permitted unless the Court records written reasons, and the Court may regulate oral arguments that are not concise or relevant.
Cases where this provision is explicitly mentioned in the judgment/order text; may not be exhaustive. To view the complete list of cases mentioning this section, Click here.
Provisions expressly mentioned in the judgment/order text.
Oral arguments and written memorandum protect parties' right to concise submissions while limiting adjournments and regulating relevance.
Parties may, after close of evidence, address concise oral arguments and may submit a concise memorandum under distinct headings which shall form part of the record; a copy must be furnished to the opposite party. Adjournments for filing written arguments are not permitted unless the Court records written reasons, and the Court may regulate oral arguments that are not concise or relevant.
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