Petitioner definition

Petitioner means a person who seeks enforcement of an order for return of a child under the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction or enforcement of a child custody determination.
Petitioner or “applicant” means any party who, by written petition, application, or other filing, applies for or seeks relief from the board.
Petitioner means an individual applying for expungement under this chapter.

Examples of Petitioner in a sentence

  • Petitioner assures that the Charter School shall be a public, nonsectarian, nonreligious, nonprofit school organized and operated under the laws of the State of Georgia.

  • This Charter sets forth the entire agreement between the Petitioner, and the SCSC with respect to the subject matter of this Charter.

  • The SCSC grants this Charter to Petitioner to operate the Charter School for a five-year term beginning on July 1, 2023 and expiring on June 30, 2028.

  • Petitioner further assures that the Charter School shall not be home-based; however, this does not preclude the Charter School from using virtual-based instruction in a remote setting.

  • The Petitioner shall retain ownership, including all incumbent responsibilities of an operational state charter school, of all records for a period of one year from the later of the date the charter contract expired, the date the charter contract was terminated, or the date the state charter school ceased operations.


More Definitions of Petitioner

Petitioner means a person that institutes a proceeding under section 281a.
Petitioner means the party filing a petition under Iowa Code section 20.13 or 20.14.
Petitioner means the party requesting the fee arbitration.
Petitioner means a person who files a petition alleging that an individual is a person requiring treatment;
Petitioner means an individual on whose behalf a confidential intermediary is appointed pursuant to subsection (2).
Petitioner means a party who files a petition.
Petitioner means a person who has submitted a petition to EPA (or to a predecessor agency).