Technically, the judge wouldn't formally dismiss the case during the pre-motion conference. She'd get to ask attorneys about their rationale, and she might strongly indicate whether proceeding to filing a motion to dismiss would be advisable. If a dismissal motion were to be filed, the judge might not hold any kind of hearing; she might instead simply issue a written ruling. Holding a formal courtroom hearing on top of the motion is up to the judge; it's not a requirement.Is it possible that during or after the Judge's Mandatory Pretrial Conference, the case could be dismissed?
Or would it still have to go through the formality of being in the courtroom?
And what would happen if Abdin's lawyers don't respond in time?
![]()
If Abdin's lawyers fail to file their answer to the defendants' pre-motion letter by the stated deadline, the defense could file for a default judgment against Abdin. In many cases, professional courtesy often grants opposing counsel some grace before moving for a default judgment. However, filing late likely wouldn't positively dispose the judge toward the plaintiff if the case were to move forward.
Last edited: