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remanding

Remanding is the act of sending a case or a person back to a lower authority or to custody following a decision by a higher court or authority. In criminal procedure, remand commonly refers to detention in custody pending trial. A person may be remanded in custody, or released on bail with conditions. Remand may be ordered to ensure the defendant’s presence at proceedings, to protect the public, or to prevent interference with investigations.

In appellate and civil procedure, remand means returning a case to a lower court for further action.

Variations exist by jurisdiction. In the United States, a federal appellate court may remand a case to

An
appellate
court
may
remand
to
develop
the
record,
apply
a
different
legal
standard,
or
obtain
additional
findings
or
evidence.
Remand
preserves
jurisdiction
in
the
appellate
court
and
is
distinct
from
reversal,
which
terminates
the
case
at
the
appellate
level,
or
dismissal,
which
ends
the
case.
the
district
court
for
further
proceedings
consistent
with
its
ruling,
or
may
remand
after
removal
from
state
court
to
federal
court.
In
other
common
law
systems,
such
as
the
United
Kingdom
and
Canada,
remand
is
used
both
to
describe
detention
before
trial
and
to
describe
remittal
of
a
case
back
to
a
lower
court
for
further
action.