assigned to _a_ judge, singular, implies or dictates only one judge at once.
On Sun, Sep 24, 2017 at 1:03 PM, Kerim Aydin <ke...@u.washington.edu> wrote: > > > On Sat, 23 Sep 2017, Kerim Aydin wrote: >> And if there happen to ever to be two judges assigned to a case, the >> following: >> At any time, each CFJ is either open (default), suspended, or >> assigned exactly one judgement. >> says nothing about, if two judgements are delivered, if the first one >> prevents the second one from being delivered, or the second one replaces >> the first one... > > Oh never mind on this part, it's here (R591). First to judgement stops the > second one from judging - so it turns into a judges' race... (of course > easily winnable by the Prime Minister by judging when e assigns emself the > case): > When a CFJ is open and assigned to a judge, that judge CAN > assign a valid judgement to it by announcement, > > > -- >From V.J. Rada