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A plaintiff is suing her former tenants for property damage for spray-painting the walls and digging a hole through the kitchen floor; plaintiff claims fraud when he finds out a car will cost more than the advertised price.
A plaintiff is suing her former tenants for property damage for spray-painting the walls and digging a hole through the kitchen floor; plaintiff claims fraud when he finds out a car will cost more than the advertised price.
More episodes
Judge Jerry
S1, EP103A landlady says a tenant owes nearly $5,000 in rent, utilities and damages; a bathtub renovation goes unfinished.
Judge Jerry
S1, EP40A man sues his ex-fiancée for the return of the engagement ring; a car's seller neglects to tell the buyer that the car is in default and repossessed.
Judge Jerry
S1, EP60A woman says her ex-fiancé split without paying his share of the bills; an attempt to help a homeless single mom went awry when, the plaintiff claims, the defendant nearly burned down her kitchen.
Judge Jerry
S1, EP50A woman alleges that the defendants knowingly rented her a home that was fraught with bed bugs; a marriage gone bad has an ex-wife suing her ex-husband for a multitude of expenses.
Judge Jerry
S1, EP125Lester sues Jasmine for failure to remit payment for a car he sold to her, but she says there were a number of damages to the car that he failed to disclose.
Judge Jerry
S1, EP120Ex-roommates call each other a deadbeat and a con artist; a former tenant wants to be compensated for repairs he made to a flooded, moldy basement, and his security deposit.
Judge Jerry
S1, EP105A woman sues her former roommate for back rent as well as eating and drinking her baby's food; two friends engage in a business transaction that turns sour.
Judge Jerry
S1, EP100 "Judge Jerry"The plaintiffs say a used car salesman sold them a damaged car, then repossessed it; a vacation rental among friends turns sour.
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This courtroom series stars former family court judge Judy Sheindlin. Each episode finds Judge Judy presiding over real small-claims cases inside a televised courtroom. Her no-nonsense, wisecracking approach has been unsuccessfully copied by other TV court judges.
The People's Court
A judge hears small-claims cases in this series that served as a template for several similar courtroom series. The litigants in the case agree to drop their lawsuits and have the case heard on the show. Since the show is not a real courtroom, the decision is simply binding arbitration the litigants agree to abide by.
48 Hours
This newsmagazine investigates intriguing crime and justice cases that touch on all aspects of the human experience. Over its long run, the show has helped exonerate wrongly convicted people, driven the reopening -- and resolution -- of cold cases, and changed numerous lives. CBS News correspondents offer an in-depth look into each story, with the emphasis on solving the mystery at its heart. The program and its team have earned critical acclaim, including multiple Emmy, Peabody and Edward R. Murrow Awards.
Hot Bench
Many popular court shows are on TV. How can the genre improve? How about using a three-judge panel? That's the concept of "Hot Bench," created by Judge Judy Sheindlin. After hearing each case, the judges discuss it among themselves before rendering a verdict. The show's title comes from a term describing a court action in which a judge frequently interrupts lawyers with questions.