About 180,000 results
Open links in new tab
  1. Willoughby Municipal Court -

    Judge Marisa Cornachio is serving in her second judicial term as Judge of the Willoughby Municipal Court. She has been elected twice since 2018. Judge Cornachio administers the busiest single-judge …

  2. JUDGE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

    The meaning of JUDGE is one who makes judgments. How to use judge in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Judge.

  3. Municipal Courts - Clerk of Courts

    List of and links to the three Municipal Courts in Lake County, Ohio.

  4. Judge - Wikipedia

    A judge is a person who presides over court proceedings, either alone or as a part of a judicial panel.

  5. JUDGE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary

    To judge a competition is to decide officially who has won. Judging by their home, they seem to be quite wealthy. All three judges found him guilty of professional misconduct. A panel of judges chose six …

  6. Judge - definition of judge by The Free Dictionary

    To act or decide as a judge. n. 1. One who judges, especially: a. One who makes estimates as to worth, quality, or fitness: a good judge of used cars; a poor judge of character. b. Law A public official who …

  7. Judge - Definition, Examples, Cases, Processes

    Jun 7, 2015 · Judge defined and explained with examples. A judge is a public official with the authority to hear and decide cases in a court of law.

  8. judge | Wex | US Law | LII / Legal Information Institute

    Judges hear cases presented by parties involved in legal disputes and make decisions or judgments based on the facts and evidence presented, as well as the applicable laws and legal precedents. …

  9. What Is a Judge's Role in Court? - FindLaw

    Apr 16, 2024 · Most people know that a judge presides over court proceedings. But the judge’s role changes based on your case type. It also depends on the court your case is in. In a bench trial, …

  10. How Courts Work - American Bar Association

    Judges don't arrest people or try to prove them guilty. Judges are like umpires in baseball or referees in football or basketball. Their role is to see that the rules of court procedures are followed by both sides.