Asked by jimmybob
Why might a judge refuse to hear a job-related dispute about how much a company is paying its workers?
(1 point)
Responses
A judge only has authority in his or her own courtroom.
A judge only has authority in his or her own courtroom.
It is considered a moot question.
It is considered a moot question.
It is considered a political question.
It is considered a political question.
Other remedies are considered to be available.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Other remedies are considered to be available.
Why: courts often decline to hear employment pay disputes when parties must first pursue other remedies (for example, arbitration under a contract, or administrative claims before a labor agency) — judges require exhaustion of those remedies before taking the case.
Why: courts often decline to hear employment pay disputes when parties must first pursue other remedies (for example, arbitration under a contract, or administrative claims before a labor agency) — judges require exhaustion of those remedies before taking the case.
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