Same Juan in notes, live link ended.
Here is the re-uploaded 107 https://youtu.be/Ig51Cb__toE
Same Juan in notes, live link ended.
Here is the re-uploaded 107 https://youtu.be/Ig51Cb__toE
>SUA SPONTE
Sua sponte
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In law, sua sponte (Latin: "of his, her, its or their own accord") or suo motu ("on its own motion")[1] describes an act of authority taken without formal prompting from another party. The term is usually applied to actions by a judge taken without a prior motion or request from the parties. The form nostra sponte ("of our own accord") is sometimes used by the court itself, when the action is taken by a multi-member court, such as an appellate court, rather than by a single judge (third parties describing such actions would still refer to them as being taken by the court as a whole and therefore as 'sua sponte'). While usually applied to actions of a court, the term may reasonably be applied to actions by government agencies and individuals acting in official capacity.
One situation in which a party might encourage a judge to move sua sponte occurs when that party is preserving a special appearance (usually to challenge jurisdiction), and therefore cannot make motions on its own behalf without making a general appearance. Common reasons for an action taken sua sponte are when the judge determines that the court does not have subject-matter jurisdiction or that the case should be moved to another judge because of a conflict of interest, even if all parties disagree.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sua_sponte
I know wik isn't that great of a source but it had a better, expanded definition than I found elsewhere.
26 here in W. WA and snowing hard. Better late than never. Got the warm clothes and the sled out. Son and I gonna have fun tomorrow.
Goodnight.
Sorry for late reply. Missed it earlier.
I would be interested in seeing a better example, yes.
Fretless