Appellee REDUCE COST BOND Appellant asks the Court to 2025

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Appellee is the party against whom the appeal is filed and responds to and defends the appeal. The appellee is also referred to as the respondent . In contrast, the appellant is the party who appeals a lower court s judgment or order to a higher court.
An appellate court can affirm a previous ruling from a lower court , meaning it agrees with the lower courts ruling on the subject of the appeal . This is also referred to as upholding the previous courts decision. Courts, administrative boards, and other similar bodies have used affirm to mean approve.
If you lose your appeal, either you or the surety will pay the courts the full bond amount, including the amount of any judgment. If you are unable to pay, the collateral you presented upon purchasing the bond will be seized and signed over to the complainant.
Put simply, the purpose of an appeal bond is to maintain the status quo during appeal whereby the surety insurer issues a guarantee on behalf of the appellant to the appellee that if the judgment is affirmed, the surety will pay the appellee if the appellant is unable to.
It can modify the judgment, so that the decision of the lower court remains but with some change in it. The appellate court can also reverse the judgment of the lower court in part or entirely.
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Reversal can occur when the decision of a court of appeal is that the judgment of a lower court was incorrect. The result of reversal is that the lower court which tried the case is instructed to vacate the original judgment and retry the case.
Also known as affirming a verdict, an appellate court rules against the party that filed the appeal (appellant) when it upholds a verdict. In doing so, an appellate court is not necessarily saying that it would have made the same ruling as the trial court. It is also not saying that there were no errors.

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