Remand \Re*mand"\ (r?-m?nd"), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Remanded}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Remanding}.] [F. remander to send word again, L. remandare; pref. re- re- + mandare to commit, order, send word. See {Mandate}.] To recommit; to send back.
Remand it to its former place. --South.
Then were they remanded to the cage again. --Bunyan.
Remand \Re*mand"\, n. The act of remanding; the order for recommitment.
The court could order higher rates, overrule the company's request or simply remand the case back to the Louisiana Public Service Commission.
Under Spanish law, a judge can remand someone facing charges if there are reasons to suspect he will attempt to flee or destroy evidence.
A report by Judge Stephen Tumim, the chief inspector of prisons, welcomed some aspects of the Wolds regime but criticised the absence of constructive activity for prisoners on remand.
It follows the opening of the Wolds remand prison, Humberside, last year.
There is the slight feeling of having been there before. In Red there are two characters, both of them women in a remand cell beneath a Crown court and both of them charged with a murder of a kind.
The Risley remand center, designed to hold just over 500 men in single cells, now accommodates 600 men and 140 women awaiting trial.