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Washington State Courts Washington Courts
The Washington Supreme Court and State Law Library will move their offices out of the Temple of Justice on the Capitol Campus in Olympia beginning the first week of July, in advance of a two-year renovation of the 109-year-old building. State lawmakers approved funding for the needed structural upgrades in 2021. . .
https://www.courts.wa.gov/Washington State Courts Name and Case Search
Information on the site is updated every 24 hours at 3:00 am. Please Note: Name and Case information found on the search site is provided for use as reference material and is not the official court record. The official court record is maintained by the court of record. Copies of case file documents are not available on the search site and will ...
https://www.courts.wa.gov/index.cfm?fa=home.contentDisplay&location=nameAndCaseSearchWashington - About This Site
This site is a search engine for cases filed in the municipal, district, superior, and appellate courts of the state of Washington. The search results can point you to the official or complete court record. How can I obtain the complete court record? You can contact the court in which the case was filed to view the court record or to order ...
https://dw.courts.wa.gov/Washington State Appellate Courts
Washington State Appellate Courts' Portal. Monday, July 11, 2022 at 9:00 AM (PST) ATTENTION: Beginning September 1, 2021, WA State Court of Appeals and WA State Supreme Court shifted to word count limits.
https://ac.courts.wa.gov/Courts Home | Clark County
Superior Court Superior Court is the court of general jurisdiction. It is the trial court for all felonies and civil suits involving amounts in excess of $75,000. Superior Court also has jurisdiction in adoption, probate, competency, divorce and juvenile cases. In addition, Superior Court hears appeals from District Court decisions and other administrative hearing decisions.
https://clark.wa.gov/courtsIN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON In the Matter of the ...
But Washington courts have long held to the contrary. In 1939, our Supreme Court held in Rummens v. Guaranty Tr. Co., 199 Wash. 337, 344, 92 P.2d 228 (1939), “The general rule is that executors and administrators alone can bring actions to recover assets belonging to a decedent’s estate or to obtain damages for the conversion of the ...
https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/830970.pdf