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Decision-making statements are also known as conditional statements because they specify conditions with boolean expressions evaluated to a true or false boolean value. If the condition is true, a given block of code will execute; if the condition is false, the block will not execute.
When the court rules on a motion or makes an order or renders a judgment in a matter it has taken under submission, the clerk must immediately notify the parties of the ruling, order, or judgment.
(2002) 101 Cal. App. 4th 135, 141.) A Statement or Decision or memorandum of decision is not appealable.
(of a plan or idea) not certain or agreed, or (of a suggestion or action) said or done in a careful but uncertain way because you do not know if you are right: I have tentative plans to take a trip to Seattle in July. Synonym. provisional.
A statement of decision requires the trial court to state, on the record, or in a subsequent written opinion, why it ruled the way it did on any contested fact. It is essentially the same thing as a statement of the courts findings and its conclusions of fact.
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Judges and lawyers have been supportive of tentative rulings in trial and appellate courts because they focus oral argument and reduce judicial costs associated with hearing unnecessary argument.
At bottom, however, a Statement of Decision is an appellate document. It is the trial courts report to the Court of Appeal of the reasons for the judgment. It is the roadmap by which the reviewing court finds its way from the pleadings to the evidence to the judgment.
A court may modify or reverse a tentative ruling at any time. For more information on tentative rulings, see California Rules of Court, rule 3.1308 and the courts local rules.
The Tentative Ruling states how the Judge intends to rule on the motion. The ruling is based on the papers filed by the parties and the applicable laws. The Court issues the Tentative Ruling after 2:00 pm, one court/business day before the hearing on the motion.
1 Every California judge is familiar with the requirement to issue timely decisions under a constitu- tional provision (Article VI, Section 19) that sets a deadline for judicial decisions: 90 days after the matter is submitted for decision.

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