The information contained in the question looks like it was copied off a case jacket or a brief notation made on a legal form. Without knowing the context of the case and specifically WHAT the remarks refer to, it is impossible to guess what they might mean. Contact the Clerk Of Court's Office and ask them what it means to them.
The term 'disposition' refers to a court's final determination of a case or issue
It means that whatever the outcome of the court case was - that is the final finding and judgement.
Court Trial
The disposition of an appeal is the judge's final ruling in the case, or what he decides to do to it. The three most common dispositions are: Affirmed, in which the judge agrees with the lower court and the original ruling stands, Reversed, in which the judge disagrees with the lower court and invalidates that opinion, and Remanded, in which the judge sends the case down to a lower court for further action. Cases are often both reversed and remanded.
Converted disposition means that there is a change in the behavior of the person. They appear different from what they always appear to be.
This phrase typically indicates that the specific charge does not have a corresponding disposition in the records or that there is no outcome or resolution linked to that charge. It suggests a lack of information on the final determination or judgment for that particular charge.
abandonment has the same effect as an order of dismissal.
The disposition is the ultimate outcome of a case. What that means in a particular context would depend on the case's unique facts.
The disposition date refers to the date that the case was disposed of, or adjudicated, in court. If you enter a plea, the disposition date will be that day. If you have a trial, the disposition date will be the date that the jury reads their verdict.
Could my friend be go to prison for that.or get probation.
what does the disposition held mean
Not really enough info to answer -BUT- it sounds like it means that a FINAL DISPOSTION has not yet been entered in the case.