What does error to the court mean?
A mistake in a court proceeding concerning a Matter of Law or fact, which might provide a ground for a review of the judgment rendered in the proceeding. The nature of the error dictates the availability of a legal remedy.
What are three examples of judicial error?
Ever since I wrote my past blog on correcting judicial errors, I have gotten a lot of questions from readers and interested clientele alike about how judicial errors can be addressed and amended. When it comes down to it, there are essentially three types of judicial error:1) Clerical, 2) Legal and 3) Matters of Law.

What is an error correcting court?
A court of error correction is one that will accept just about any appeal (assuming it has appellate jurisdiction and the issues are properly preserved) in which it perceives that a materially erroneous ruling may have been made.
What is considered an error of law?
An “error of law” generally means that the judge in your case applied the wrong rule or “legal standard” to the facts of your case. This can occur if a trial court did not follow either the statute or case law in your state that is supposed to apply in your case’s circumstances.
What does filed in error mean?

Related Definitions Filing Error means an error in submission of a filing to the Electronic Filing System, e.g., a filing with an incorrect case number, with an incorrect docket entry or with the wrong PDF file attached to a docket entry. Sample 1.
Can judges make mistakes?
The judge must have made a mistake in applying the law to the facts of the case or must have reached a decision that is clearly unjust. Family court cases are also sometimes reversed based upon decisions to include or exclude certain evidence by the court.
How do you correct errors on a legal document?
Proper Error Correction Procedure
- Draw line through entry (thin pen line). Make sure that the inaccurate information is still legible.
- Initial and date the entry.
- State the reason for the error (i.e. in the margin or above the note if room).
- Document the correct information.
Do judges make mistakes?
What does it mean when a judge erred?
1. to make a mistake; be incorrect. 2. to stray from the right course or accepted standards; sin. 3. to act with bias, esp favourable bias: to err on the side of justice.
What is a defendant in error?
The defendant in error is the party against whom a petition for a writ of error has been filed.
How do you tell a judge he is wrong?
“You’re wrong (or words to that effect)” Never, ever tell a judge that he or she is wrong or mistaken. Instead, respectfully tell the judge WHY he or she may be wrong or mistaken.
Do typos matter in legal documents?
Like the one that will inevitably end up in this column, they’re usually just embarrassing. But typos in court documents raise another problem: they can make the court question your credibility. In short, typos are to a court what brown M&Ms were to Van Halen.
What are some of the reasons for paperwork errors?
The 7 most common paperwork mistakes… and how to solve them!
- 1 | You have too much paper coming into your house.
- 2 | You don’t have anywhere to store your daily paperwork.
- 3 | You’re not doing a daily sort.
- 4 | You’re not sure what to keep and what to throw out.
- 5 | Your paperwork systems are too simple.
What does in error mean in law?
The party who files a petition for a writ of error is called the “plaintiff in error.” The plaintiff in error files a petition for a writ of error because he or she believes that the trial court has made an error of law and the judgment should be reversed.
What is considered a legal error?
A mistake in judgment or deviation from the truth, in matters of fact and from the law in matters of judgment.
How do you win a judge’s favor?
How to Persuade a Judge
- Your arguments must make logical sense.
- Know your audience.
- Know your case.
- Know your adversary’s case.
- Never overstate your case.
- If possible lead with the strongest argument.
- Select the most easily defensible position that favors your case.
- Don’t’ try to defend the indefensible.