extraordinary fees - meaning and definition. What is extraordinary fees
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What (who) is extraordinary fees - definition

COURT ORDER DIRECTING A GOVERNMENT OR OTHER COURT
Extraordinary writ; Extraordinary remedy

extraordinary fees      
n. attorneys' fees claimed, usually in the administration of a dead person's estate, for work beyond the normal, including filing collection suits, preparing tax returns or requiring unusual effort beneficial to the estate. This claim is in addition to the usual statutory or court-approved legal fees. The attorney must submit proof of time, effort and benefit to justify the claim, and the final determination is at the judge's discretion. See also: attorney's fee probate
Grotte aux Fées (Switzerland)         
CAVE
Grotte aux Fées; Grotte aux Fees (Switzerland)
The Grotte aux Fées ("Cave of the Fairies") in the cliffs above Saint-Maurice, Switzerland is a natural limestone solution show cave, featuring a high underground waterfall, claimed as the world's highest waterfall in a show cave. The cave was the first show cave in Switzerland.
Le lac des fées         
OPERA BY DANIEL FRANÇOIS ESPRIT AUBER
Le lac des fees; Le Lac des fées
Le lac des fées (The Fairy Lake) is a grand opera in five acts composed by Daniel Auber to a French libretto by Eugène Scribe and Mélesville (the pen name of Anne-Honoré-Joseph Duveyrier). The story is set in the Harz Mountains and based on a German ballad.

Wikipedia

Prerogative writ

"Prerogative writ" is a historic term for a writ (official order) that directs the behavior of another arm of government, such as an agency, official, or other court. It was originally available only to the Crown under English law, and reflected the discretionary prerogative and extraordinary power of the monarch. The term may be considered antiquated, and the traditional six comprising writs are often called the extraordinary writs and described as extraordinary remedies.

Six writs are traditionally classified as prerogative writs:

  • certiorari, an order by a higher court directing a lower court to send the record in a given case for review;
  • habeas corpus, a demand that a prisoner be taken before the court to determine whether there is lawful authority to detain the person;
  • mandamus, an order issued by a higher court to compel or to direct a lower court or a government officer to perform mandatory duties correctly;
  • prohibition, directing a subordinate to stop doing something the law prohibits;
  • procedendo, to send a case from an appellate court to a lower court with an order to proceed to judgment;
  • quo warranto, requiring a person to show by what authority they exercise a power.

Additionally, scire facias, one of the extraordinary writs, was once known as a prerogative writ.