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by crazygringo
2222 days ago
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> even if all statements are already known true to the court Can you expand on what that means? In my understanding, courts don't presumptively "already know" anything at all, except law and precedent. The whole point of a suit is that two parties are contesting knowledge, interpretation, or law. Even if a court's judge(s) suppose(s) something to be true, isn't the whole point that the defendent claims it to be false and is therefore entitled to a hearing? |
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Not OP, but the way I understood it was that the court already holds hard evidence confirming the statements to be undoubtedly true.