On the bench, s/he is always Your Honor. In the office Judge, Sir orr M'aam. No mr or ms or first names unless you are personal friends.
Etiquette is the correct spelling.
No, it is not correct etiquette to send a thank you note to a judge. The judge is there to follow the letter of the law and may give a lesser fine or prison term or give someone a break if it is their first minor offence, but, it's done by the law.
This is a typical response for etiquette.
death
The correct spelling is etiquette (proper manners).
Perhaps you mean etiquette, as in manners?
Normal etiquette would command the same response of "How do you do" you may also smile and tip your hat if you are wearing one.
No, correct and incorrect are not the same thing. Correct means right, proper, appropriate, according to protocol, according to etiquette Incorrect means wrong, mistaken, error, improper, against protocol, not consistent with good etiquette
The correct spelling is "magisterial judge" (also magistrate).
The correct possessive noun is judge's.
The correct response is "you're welcome".
Correct use of e-mail etiquette includes such courtesies as asking a message sender for permission before forwarding the sender's message to others