0 All my colleagues here call it a "statement of appeal" by which a party to a civil case, when dissatisfied with the judgment of the court of first trial, brings the case to a court of higher jurisdiction (also called the court of appeal). 02br 02br 00I know in Chinese we call it a Shang Su Zhuang. I looked this up in a Chinese English Legal Dictionary (edited by some Chinese of course) and only to find the expressions "appellate petition" and "Petition for appeal" rather than "statement of appeal" as we commonly use. 02br 02br 00this is confusing. so i'd like to hear your comments. 02br 02br 00remind you: this may not be so specilized legal query. for a native speaker, maybe s/he can hear this in news or magazines. so please give your comments whether a lawyer or not. 02br 02br 00tks 0-
Top answer
0 Petition for a writ of certiorari (used mainly for the Supreme Court, I think) 02br 02br 05000 02br 02br 00You can also "file an appeal". html
— Julielai
0 Petition for a writ of certiorari (used mainly for the Supreme Court, I think) 02br 02br 05000 02br 02br 00You can also "file an appeal".
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0 Petition for a writ of certiorari (used mainly for the Supreme Court, I think) 02br 02br 05000 02br 02br 00You can also "file an appeal". (used for the more common cases) 02br 02br 00See [url="05100"]appeals and writs[/url] 02br 02br 02br 00PS I'm not a lawyer 0230hrefhttp://www.law.cornell