A
Abstract of title - A chronological
summary of all official records and recorded documents affecting
the title to a parcel of real property.
Acceptance - The taking and receiving of anything in good
faith with the intention of retaining it.
Accomplice - 1. A partner in a crime. 2. A person who knowingly
and voluntarily participates with another in a criminal activity.
Accretion - The increase or accumulation of land by natural
causes, as out of a lake or river.
Acknowledgment - A formal declaration before an authorized
official by the person who executed an instrument that it is
his free act and deed; the certificate of the official on such
instrument attesting that it was so acknowledged.
Acquittal - A release, absolution, or discharge of an obligation
or liability. In criminal law the finding of not guilty.
Action Case - Cause, suit, or controversy disputed or contested
before a court of justice.
Additur - An increase by a judge in the amount of damages
awarded by a jury.
Adjective law - Also, procedural law. That body of law which
governs the process of protecting the rights under substantive
law.
Adjudication - Giving or pronouncing a judgment or decree.
Also the judgment given.
Administrative agencies - Agencies created by the legislative
branch of government to administer laws pertaining to specific
areas such as taxes, transportation, and labor.
Administrator - 1. One who administers the estate of a person
who dies without a will. 2. A court official.
Admiralty law - Also, maritime law. That body of law relating
to ships, shipping, marine commerce and navigation, transportation
of persons or property by sea, etc.
Admissible evidence - Evidence that can be legally and properly
introduced in a civil or criminal trial.
Admonish - To advise or caution. For example the court may
caution or admonish counsel for wrong practices.
Advance sheets - Paperback pamphlets published by law book
publishers weekly or monthly which contain reporter cases,
including correct volume number and page number. When there
are sufficient cases, they are replaced by a bound volume.
Adversary proceeding - One having opposing parties such as
a plaintiff and a defendant. Individual lawsuit(s) brought
within a bankruptcy proceeding.
Adverse possession - Method of acquiring real property under
certain conditions by possession for a statutory period.
Affiant - The person who makes and subscribes an affidavit.
Affidavit - A voluntary, written, or printed declaration of
facts, confirmed by oath of the party making it before a person
with authority to administer the oath.
Affirmation - A solemn and formal declaration that an affidavit
is true. This is substituted for an oath in certain cases.
Affirmative defense - A defense raised in a responsive pleading
(answer) relating a new matter as a defense to the complaint;
affirmative defenses might include contributory negligence
or estopped in civil actions; in criminal cases insanity, duress,
or self-defense might be used.
Affirmed - In the practice of appellate courts, the word means
that the decision of the trial court is correct.
Agreement - Mutual consent.
Aid and Abet - To actively, knowingly, or intentionally assist
another person in the commission or attempted commission of
a crime.
Alien - A foreign-born person who has not qualified as a citizen
of the country.
Allegation - A statement of the issues in a written document
(a pleading) which a person is prepared to prove in court.
Alteration - Changing or making different.
Alternative dispute resolution - Settling a dispute without
a full, formal trial. Methods include mediation, conciliation,
arbitration, and settlement, among others.
American Bar Association - A national association of lawyers
whose primary purpose is improvement of lawyers and the administration
of justice.
American Law Reports - A publication which reports cases from
all United States jurisdictions by subject matter.
Ancillary - A proceeding which is auxiliary or subordinate
to another proceeding. In probate, a proceeding in a state
where a decedent owned property but was not domiciled.
Annotations - Remarks, notes, case summaries, or commentaries
following statutes which describe interpretations of the statute.
Answer - A formal, written statement by the defendant in a
lawsuit which answers each allegation contained in the complaint.
Answers to Interrogatories - A formal written statement by
a party to a lawsuit which answers each question or interrogatory
propounded by the other party. These answers must be acknowledged
before a notary public or other person authorized to take acknowledgments.
Antitrust acts - Federal and state statutes to protect trade
and commerce from unlawful restraints, price discriminations,
price fixing, and monopolies.
Appeal - A proceeding brought to a higher court to review
a lower court decision.
Appeal Bond - A guaranty by the appealing party insuring that
court costs will be paid.
Appearance - The act of coming into court as a party to a
suit either in person or through an attorney.
Appendix - Supplementary materials added to the end of a document.
Appellate court - A court having jurisdiction to hear appeals
and review a trial court's procedure.
Appellee - (See respondent) The party against whom an appeal
is taken.
Arbitration - The hearing of a dispute by an impartial third
person or persons (chosen by the parties), whose award the
parties agree to accept.
Arbitrator - A private, disinterested person chosen by the
parties in arbitration to hear evidence concerning the dispute
and to make an award based on the evidence.
Arraignment - The hearing at which the accused is brought
before the court to plead to the criminal charge in the indictment.
He may plead "guilty," "not guilty," or
where permitted "nolo contendere." (See preliminary
hearing.)
Arrest - To take into custody by legal authority.
Assault - Threat to inflict injury with an apparent ability
to do so. Also, any intentional display of force that would
give the victim reason to fear or expect immediate bodily harm.
Assignment - The transfer to another person of any property,
real or personal.
Assumption of risk - A doctrine under which a person may not
recover for an injury received when he has voluntarily exposed
himself to a known danger.
At issue - The time in a lawsuit when the complaining party
has stated their claim and the other side has responded with
a denial and the matter is ready to be tried.
Attachment - Taking a person's property to satisfy a court-ordered
debt.
Attorney-at-law - An advocate, counsel, or official agent
employed in preparing, managing, and trying cases in the courts.
Attorney-in-fact - A private person (who is not necessarily
a lawyer) authorized by another to act in his or her place,
either for some particular purpose, as to do a specific act,
or for the transaction of business in general, not of legal
character. This authority is conferred by an instrument in
writing, called a "letter of attorney," or more commonly "power
of attorney."
Attorney of record - The principal attorney in a lawsuit,
who signs all formal documents relating to the suit.
B
Bail - Money or other security (such as a bail bond) provided
to the court to temporarily allow a person's release from jail
and assure their appearance in court. "Bail" and "Bond" are
often used interchangeably. (Applies mainly to state courts.)
Bail bond - An obligation signed by the accused to secure
his or her presence at the trial. This obligation means that
the accused may lose money by not properly appearing for the
trial. Often referred to simply as "bond."
Bailiff - An officer of the court responsible for keeping
order and maintaining appropriate courtroom decorum and has
custody of the jury.
Bankruptcy - Refers to statutes and judicial proceedings involving
persons or businesses that cannot pay their debts and seek
the assistance of the court in getting a fresh start. Under
the protection of the bankruptcy court, debtors may be released
from or "discharged" from their debts, perhaps by
paying a portion of each debt. Bankruptcy judges preside over
these proceedings. The person with the debts is called the
debtor and the people or companies to whom the debtor owes
money are called creditors.
Bankruptcy Judge - The judge who determines whether a debtor
is entitled to a discharge in bankruptcy.
Bankruptcy law - The area of federal law dealing with the
handling of bankrupt persons or businesses.
Bar - 1. Historically, the partition separating the general
public from the space occupied by the judges, lawyers, and
other participants in a trial. 2. More commonly, the term means
the who body of lawyers.
Bar examination - A state examination taken by prospective
lawyers in order to be admitted and licensed to practice law.
Battery - A beating, or wrongful physical violence. The actual
threat to use force is an "assault;" the use of it
is a battery, which usually includes an assault.
Bench - The seat occupied by the judge. More broadly, the
court itself.
Bench trial - (Also known as court trial.) Trial without a
jury in which a judge decides the facts.
Bench warrant - An order issued by a judge for the arrest
of a person.
Beneficiary - Someone named to receive property or benefits
in a will. In a trust, a person who is to receive benefits
from the trust.
Bequeath - To give a gift to someone through a will.
Bequests - Gifts made in a will.
Best evidence - Primary evidence; the best evidence available.
Evidence short of this is "secondary." That is, an
original letter is "best evidence," and a photocopy
is "secondary evidence."
Beyond a reasonable doubt - The standard in a criminal case
requiring that the jury be satisfied to a moral certainty that
every element of a crime has been proven by the prosecution.
This standard of proof does not require that the state establish
absolute certainty by eliminating all doubt, but it does require
that the evidence be so conclusive that all reasonable doubts
are removed from the mind of the ordinary person.
Bill of particulars - A statement of the details of the charge
made against the defendant.
Bind over - To hold a person for trial on bond (bail) or in
jail. If the judicial official conducting a hearing finds probable
cause to believe the accused committed a crime, the official
will bind over the accused, normally by setting bail for the
accused's appearance at trial. (This is a state court procedure.)
Bond (See bail bond.) - A written agreement by which a person
insures he will pay a certain sum of money if he does not perform
certain duties property.
Bound supplement - A supplement to a book or books to update
the service bound in permanent form.
Booking - The process of photographing, fingerprinting, and
recording identifying data of a suspect. This process follows
the arrest.
Breach - The breaking or violating of a law, right, or duty,
either by commission or omission. The failure of one part to
carry out any condition of a contract.
Breach of contract - An unjustified failure to perform when
performance is due.
Brief - A written argument by counsel arguing a case, which
contains a summary of the facts of the case, pertinent laws,
and an argument of how the law applies to the fact situation.
Also called a memorandum of law.
Burden of proof - In the law of evidence, the necessity or
duty of affirmatively proving a fact or facts in dispute on
an issue raised between the parties in a lawsuit. The responsibility
of proving a point (the burden of proof). It deals with which
side must establish a point or points. (See standard of proof.)
Burglary - The act of illegal entry with the intent to steal.
Business bankruptcy - A proceeding under the Bankruptcy Code
filed by a business entity.
Bylaws - Rules or laws adopted by an association or corporation
to govern its actions.
C
Capital crime - A crime punishable by death.
Calendar - A list of cases scheduled for hearing in court.
Canons of ethics - Standards of ethical conduct for attorneys.
Capacity - Having legal authority or mental ability. Being
of sound mind.
Caption - Heading or introductory party of a pleading.
Case law - Law established by previous decisions of appellate
courts, particularly the United States Supreme Court. (See
stare decisis in Foreign Words Glossary.)
Cases - General term for an action, cause, suit, or controversy,
at law or in equity; questions contested before a court of
justice.
Cause - A lawsuit, litigation, or action. Any question, civil
or criminal, litigated or contested before a court of justice.
Cause of action - The fact or facts which give a person a
right to relief in court.
Caveat - A warning; a note of caution.
Censure - An official reprimand or condemnation of an attorney.
(See disbarment or suspension.)
Certificate of Title - Document issued by Registrar of Titles
for real estate registered under the Torrens System, which
is considered conclusive evidence of the present ownership
and state of the title to the property described therein.
Certification - 1. Written attestation. 2. Authorized declaration
verifying that an instrument is a true and correct copy of
the original.
Certiorari - A writ of review issued by a higher court to
a lower court. A means of getting an appellate court to review
a lower court's decision. If an appellate court grants a writ
of certiorari, it agrees to take the appeal. (Sometimes referred
to as "granting cert.")
Challenge - An objection, such as when an attorney objects
at a hearing to the seating of a particular person on a civil
or criminal jury.
Challenge for cause - A request from a party to a judge that
a certain prospective juror not be allowed to be a member of
a jury because of specified causes or reasons. (Also, see peremptory
challenge.)
Chambers - A judge's private office. A hearing in chambers
takes place in the judge's office outside of the presence of
the jury and the public.
Change of venue - Moving a lawsuit or criminal trial to another
place for trial. (See venue.)
Charge to the jury - The judge's instructions to the jury
concerning the law that applies to the facts of the case on
trial.
Chief judge - Presiding or administrative judge in a court.
Chattel - An article of personal property.
Child - Offspring of parentage; progeny.
Chronological - Arranged in the order in which events happened;
according to date.
Circumstantial evidence - All evidence except eyewitness testimony.
One example is physical evidence, such as fingerprints, from
which an inference can be drawn.
Citation - A writ or order issued by a court commanding the
person named therein to appear at the time and place named;
also the written reference to legal authorities, precedents,
reported cases, etc., in briefs or other legal documents.
Citators - A set of books which provides the subsequent history
of reported decisions through a form of abbreviations or words.
Most widely used are Chopart's Citations.
Civil - Relating to private rights and remedies sought by
civil actions as contrasted with criminal proceedings.
Civil action - An action brought to enforce or protect private
rights.
Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) - A commission which promotes
and regulates the civil air transport industry in the U.S.
and between the U.S. and foreign countries.
Civil law - Law based on a series of written codes or laws.
Civil procedure - The rules and process by which a civil case
is tried and appealed, including the preparations for trial,
the rules of evidence and trial conduct, and the procedure
for pursuing appeals.
Civil Service Commission - A federal agency which regulates
the hiring of government employees.
Claim - A debt owing by a debtor to another person or business.
In probate parlance, the term used for debts of the decedent
and a procedure that must be followed by a creditor to obtain
payment from his estate.
Class action - A lawsuit brought by one or more persons on
behalf of a larger group.
Clayton Act - A federal law which is an amendment to the Sherman
Act dealing with antitrust regulations and unfair trade practices.
Clean air acts - Federal and state environmental statutes
enacted to regulate and control air pollution.
Clear and convincing evidence - Standard of proof commonly
used in civil lawsuits and in regulatory agency cases. It governs
the amount of proof that must be offered in order for the plaintiff
to win the case.
Clemency or executive clemency - Act of grace or mercy by
the president or governor to ease the consequences of a criminal
act, accusation, or conviction. (Sometimes known as commutation
or pardon.)
Clerk of Court - Administrator or chief clerical officer of
the court.
Closing argument - The closing statement, by counsel, to the
trier of facts after all parties have concluded their presentation
of evidence.
Code of Federal Regulations - An annual publication which
contains the cumulative executive agency regulations.
Code of Professional - The rules of conduct that govern the
legal profession Responsibility .
Codicil - An amendment to a will.
Collate - To arrange in order; verify arrangement of pages
before binding or fastening; put together.
Collective mark - Trademark or service mark used by members
of a cooperative, an association, or other collective group
or organization.
Commit - To send a person to prison, asylum, or reformatory
by a court order.
Common law - Also case law. Law established by subject matter
heard in earlier cases.
Commutation - The reduction of a sentence, as from death to
life imprisonment.
Comparative fault - A rule in admiralty law where each vessel
involved in a collision is required to pay a share of the total
damages in proportion to its percentage of fault.
Comparative negligence - The rule under which negligence is
measured by percentage, and damages are diminished in proportion
to the amount of negligence attributable to the person seeking
recovery.
Complainant - The party who complains or sues; one who applies
to the court for legal redress. (See also plaintiff.)
Complaint - 1. The legal document that usually begins a civil
lawsuit. It states the facts and identifies the action the
court is asked to take. 2. Formal written charge that a person
has committed a criminal offense.
Conciliation - A form of alternative dispute resolution in
which the parties bring their dispute to a neutral third party,
who helps lower tensions, improve communications, and explore
possible solutions. Conciliation is similar to mediation, but
is may be less formal.
Concurrent sentences - Sentences for more than one crime that
are to be served at the same time, rather than one after the
other. (See also cumulative or consecutive sentences.)
Condemnation - The legal process by which the government takes
private land for public use, paying the owners a fair price.
(See eminent domain.)
Conformed copy - An exact copy of a document on which has
been written things that could not or were not copied, i.e.,
a written signature is replaced on the conformed copy with
a notation that it was signed by the parties.
Consecutive sentences - Successive sentences, one beginning
at the expiration of another, imposed against a person convicted
of two or more violations. (See also cumulative or concurrent
sentences.)
Consent - Agreement; voluntary acceptance of the wish of another.
Conservatorship - Legal right given to a person to manage
the property and financial affairs of a person deemed incapable
of doing that for himself or herself. (See also guardianship.)
Consideration - The price bargained for and paid for a promise,
goods, or real estate.
Constitution - The fundamental law of a nation or state which
establishes the character and basic principles of the government.
Constitutional law - Law set forth in the Constitution of
the United States and the state constitutions.
Consumer bankruptcy - A proceeding under the Bankruptcy Code
filed by an individual (or husband and wife) who is not in
business.
Contempt of court - Willful disobedience of a judge's command
or of an official court order.
Continuance - Postponement of a legal proceeding to a later
date.
Contract - An agreement between two or more persons which
creates an obligation to do or not to do a particular thing.
A legally enforceable agreement between two or more competent
parties made either orally or in writing.
Contributory negligence - The rule of law under which an act
or omission of plaintiff is a contributing cause of injury
and a bar to recovery.
Conveyance - Instrument transferring title of land for one
person or group of persons to another.
Conviction - A judgment of guilt against a criminal defendant.
Corroborating evidence - Supplementary evidence that tends
to strengthen or confirm the initial evidence.
Counsel - A legal adviser; a term used to refer to lawyers
in a case.
Counterclaim - A claim made by the defendant in a civil lawsuit
against the plaintiff. In essence, a counter lawsuit within
a lawsuit.
Court - A body in government to which the administration of
justice is delegated.
Court-appointed attorney - Attorney appointed by the court
to represent a defendant, usually with respect to criminal
charges and without the defendant having to pay for the representation.
Court costs - The expenses of prosecuting or defending a lawsuit,
other than the attorney fees. An amount of money may be awarded
to the successful party (and may be recoverable from the losing
party) as reimbursement for court costs.
Court of original jurisdiction - A court where a matter is
initiated and heard in the first instance; a trial court.
Court reporter - A person who transcribes by shorthand or
stenographically takes down testimony during court proceedings,
a deposition, or other trial-related proceeding.
Court rules - Regulations governing practice and procedure
in the various courts.
Creditor - A person to whom a debt is owed by another.
Crime - An act in violation of the penal laws of a state or
the United States. A positive or negative act in violation
of penal law.
Criminal justice system - The network of courts and tribunals
which deal with criminal law and its enforcement.
Cross-claim - A pleading which asserts a claim arising out
of the same subject action as the original complaint against
a co-party, i.e., one co-defendant cross claims against another
co-defendant for contribution for any damages assessed against
him.
Cross-examination - The questioning of a witness produced
by the other side.
Cumulative sentences - Sentences for two or more crimes to
run consecutively, rather than concurrently.
Custody - Detaining of a person by lawful process or authority
to assure his or her appearance to any hearing; the jailing
or imprisonment of a person convicted of a crime.
D
Damages - Money awarded by a court to a person injured by
the unlawful actor negligence of another person.
Debtor - One who owes a debt to another; a person filing for
relief under theBankruptcy Code.
Decision - The opinion of the court in concluding a case at
law.
Declaratory judgment - A statutory remedy for judicial determination
of a controversy where plaintiff is in doubt about his legal
rights.
Decree - An order of the court. A final decree is one that
fully and finally disposes of the litigation. (See interlocutory.)
Defamation - That which tends to injure a person's reputation.
(See libel and slander.)
Default - Failure of the defendant to appear and answer the
summons and complaint.
Default judgment - A judgment entered against a party who
fails to appear in court or respond to the charges.
Defendant - The person defending or denying a suit.
Defense of property - Affirmative defense in criminal law
or tort law where force was used to protect one's property.
Deficient - Incomplete; defective; not sufficient in quantity
or force.
Defunct - A corporation no longer operative; having ceased
to exist.
Demurrer - A pleading filed by the defendant that the complaint
as filed is not sufficient to require an answer.
Dependent - One who derives existence and support from another.
Deposition - Testimony of a witness or a party taken under
oath outside the courtroom, the transcript of which becomes
a part of the court's file.
Digest - An index or compilation of abstracts of reported
cases into one, set forth under proper law topic headings or
titles and usually in alphabetical arrangement.
Direct evidence - Proof of facts by witnesses who saw acts
done or heard words spoken.
Direct examination - The first questioning of witnesses by
the party on whose behalf they are called.
Directed verdict - In a case in which the plaintiff has failed
to present on the facts of his case proper evidence for jury
consideration, the trial judge may order the entry of a verdict
without allowing the jury to consider it.
Disbarment - Form of discipline of a lawyer resulting in the
loss (often permanently) of that lawyer's right to practice
law. (See censure or suspension.)
Discharge - The name given to the bankruptcy court's formal
discharge of a debtor's debts. In probate, the release of the
estate's representative from fiduciary responsibility.
Disclaim - To refuse a gift made in a will.
Discovery - The name given pretrial devices for obtaining
facts and information about the case.
Dismissal - The termination of a lawsuit. (See with prejudice
and without prejudice.)
Dissent To disagree - An appellate court opinion setting forth
the minority view and outlining the disagreement of one or
more judges with the decision of the majority.
Dissolution - The termination; process of dissolving or winding
up something.
Diversity of citizenship - The condition when the party on
one side of a lawsuit is a citizen of one state and the other
party is a citizen of another state; such cases are under the
jurisdiction of federal courts.
Diversion - The process of removing some minor criminal, traffic,
or juvenile cases from the full judicial process, on the condition
that the accused undergo some sort of rehabilitation or make
restitution for damages.
Docket - An abstract or listing of all pleadings filed in
a case; the book containing such entries; trial docket is a
list of or calendar of cases to be tried in a certain term.
Docket control - A system for keeping track of deadlines and
court dates for both litigation and non-litigation matters.
Domicile - The place where a person has his permanent home
to which he intends to return.
Double jeopardy - Putting a person on trial more than once
for the same crime. It is forbidden by the Fifth Amendment
to the United States Constitution.
Due process of law - The right of all persons to receive the
guarantees and safeguards of the law and the judicial process.
It includes such constitutional requirements as adequate notice,
assistance of counsel, and the rights to remain silent, to
a speedy and public trial, to an impartial jury, and to confront
and secure witnesses.
E
Elements of a crime - Specific factors that define a crime
which the prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable doubt
in order to obtain a conviction: (1) that a crime has actually
occurred, (2) that the accused intended the crime to happen,
and (3) a timely relationship between the first two factors.
Eminent Domain - The power of the government to take private
property for public use through condemnation.
En Banc - All the judges of a court sitting together. Appellate
courts can consist of a dozen or more judges, but often they
hear cases in panels of three judges. If a case is heard or
reheard by the full court, it is heard en banc.
Encyclopedia - A book or series of books arranged alphabetically
by topics containing information on areas of law, including
citations to support the information.
Enjoining - An order by the court telling a person to stop
performing a specific act.
Entity - A person or legally recognized organization.
Entrapment - The act of inducing a person to commit a crime
so that a criminal charge will be brought against him.
Entry - A statement of conclusion reached by the court and
placed in the court record.
Environment - The conditions, influences, or forces which
affect the desirability and value of property, as well as the
effect on people's lives.
Environmental Protection (EPA) - A federal agency created
to permit coordinated and environment effective governmental
action to preserve the quality of the Agency
Equal Protection of the Law - The guarantee in the Fourteenth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that all persons be treated
equally by the law.
Equity - Justice administered according to fairness; the spirit
or habit of fairness in dealing with other persons.
Escheat - The process by which a deceased person's property
goes to the state if no heir can be found.
Escrow - Money or a written instrument such as a deed that,
by agreement between two parties, is held by a neutral third
party (held in escrow) until all conditions of the agreement
are met.
Esquire- In the United States the title commonly appended
after the name of an attorney. In English law a title of dignity
next above gentleman and below knight. Title also given to
barristers at law and others. Abbreviated: Esq.
Estate - A person's property.
Estate tax - Generally, a tax on the privilege of transferring
property to others after a person's death. In addition to federal
estate taxes, many states have their own estate taxes.
Estoppel - An impediment that prevents a person from asserting
or doing something contrary to his own previous assertion or
act.
Ethics - Of or relating to moral action and conduct; professionally
right; conforming to professional standards.
Evidence - Information presented in testimony or in documents
that is used to persuade the fact finder (judge or jury) to
decide the case for one side or the other.
Exceptions - Declarations by either side in a civil or criminal
case reserving the right to appeal a judge's ruling upon a
motion. Also, in regulatory cases, objections by either side
to points made by the other side or to rulings by the agency
or one of its hearing officers.
Exclusionary Rule - The rule preventing illegally obtained
evidence to be used in any trial.
Execute - To complete; to sign; to carry out according to
its terms.
Executor - A personal representative, named in a will, who
administers an estate.
Exempt property - All the property of a debtor which is not
attachable under the Bankruptcy Code or the state statute.
Exhibit - A document or other item introduced as evidence
during a trial or hearing.
Exonerate - Removal of a charge, responsibility, or duty.
Ex parte - On behalf of only one party, without notice to
any other party. For example, a request for a search warrant
is an ex parte proceeding, since the person subject to the
search is not notified of the proceeding and is not present
at the hearing.
Ex parte proceeding - Action circumstances which render a
crime less aggravated, heinous, or reprehensible than it would
otherwise be.
Expungement -The process by which the record of criminal conviction
is destroyed or sealed.
Extradition -The surrender of an accused criminal by one state
to the jurisdiction of another.
F
Fair market value - The value for which a reasonable seller
would sell an item of property and for which a reasonable buyer
would buy it.
Family law - Those areas of the law pertaining to families,
i.e., marriage, divorce, child custody, juvenile, paternity,
etc.
Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) - A federal agency which regulates
air commerce to promote aviation Administration safety.
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) - A federal agency which
investigates all violations of federal investigation laws.
Federal Communications (FCC) - A federal agency which regulates
interstate and foreign Commission communications by wire and
radio.
Federal Deposit Insurance (FDIC) - An agency which insures
deposits in banking institutions in Corporation the event of
financial failure.
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service - An agency which
provides mediators to assist in labor-management disputes.
Federal Register - A daily publication which contains federal
administrative rules and regulations.
Federal Supplement - Books which gives the government certain
control and power to regulate discharge of pollutants into
the nation's waters in an effort to achieve clean waters.
Federal Unemployment Tax - A tax levied on employers based
on employee wages paid. (FUTA tax)
Felony - A serious criminal offense. Under federal law any
offense punishable by death or imprisonment for a term exceeding
one year.
Fiduciary - A person or institution who manages money or property
for another and who must exercise a standard care imposed by
law, i.e., personal representative or executor of an estate,
a trustee, etc.
File - To place a paper in the official custody of the clerk
of court/court administrator to enter into the files or records
of a case.
Filing Fee - The fee required for filing various documents.
Finding - Formal conclusion by a judge or regulatory agency
on issues of fact. Also, a conclusion by a jury regarding a
fact.
Food and Drug Adminstration (FDA) - A federal agency which
sets safety and quality standards for food, drugs, cosmetics,
and household substances.
Foreclosure - A court proceeding upon default in a mortgage
to vest title in the mortgagee.
Forfeiture - A cancellation. A legal action whereby a contract
purchaser following default loses all his interest in the property.
Fraud - A false representation of a matter of fact which is
intended to deceive another.
G
Garnishment - A legal proceeding in which a debtor's money,
in the possession of another (called the garnishee) is applied
to the debts of the debtor, such as when an employer garnishes
a debtor's wages.
General jurisdiction - Refers to courts that have no limit
on the types of criminal and civil cases they may hear.
Good time - A reduction in sentenced time in prison as a reward
for good behavior. It usually is one third to one half of the
maximum sentence.
Government Printing Office - The federal agency in charge
of printing, binding, and selling of all government communications.
Grand Jury - A jury of inquiry whose duty it is to receive
complaints and accusations in criminal matters and if appropriate
issue a formal indictment.
Grantor - The person who sets up a trust. Also referred to
as "settlor."
Grievance - In labor law a complaint filed by an employee
regarding working conditions to be resolved by procedural machinery
provided in the union contract. An injury, injustice, or wrong
which gives ground for complaint.
Guardian - A person appointed by will or by law to assume
responsibility for incompetent adults or minor children. If
a parent dies, this will usually be the other parent. If both
die, it probably will be a close relative.
Guardianship - Legal right given to a person to be responsible
for the food, housing, health care, and other necessities of
a person deemed incapable of providing these necessities for
himself or herself.
H
Habeas corpus - The name of a writ having for its object
to bring a person before a court.
Harmless error - An error committed during a trial that was
corrected or was not serious enough to affect the outcome of
a trial and therefore was not sufficiently harmful (prejudicial)
to be reversed on appeal.
Headnote - A brief summary of a legal rule or significant
facts in a case, which along with other headnotes, precedes
the printed opinion in reports.
Hearing - A formal proceeding (generally less formal than
a trial) with definite issues of law or of fact to be heard.
Hearings are used extensively by legislative and administrative
agencies.
Hearsay - Statements by a witness who did not see or hear
the incident in question but heard about it from someone else.
Hearsay is usually not admissible as evidence in court.
Hostile witness - A witness whose testimony is not favorable
to the party who calls him or her as a witness. A hostile witness
may be asked leading questions and may be cross-examined by
the party who calls him or her to the stand.
Hung jury - A jury whose members cannot agree upon a verdict.
I
Immigrants - Persons who come into a foreign country or region
to live.
Immigration - The entry of foreign persons into a country
to live permanently.
Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) - A federal agency
which regulates immigration and naturalization of aliens.
Immunity - Grant by the court, which assures someone will
not face prosecution in return for providing criminal evidence.
Impeachment - A criminal proceeding against a public official.
Impeachment of a witness - An attack on the credibility (believability)
of a witness, through evidence introduced for that purpose.
Implied contract - A contract not created or evidenced by
the explicit agreement of the parties but one inferred by law;
as the use of electric power in your home implies a contract
with the light company.
Inadmissible - That which, under the rules of evidence, cannot
be admitted or received as evidence.
Incapacity - Lack of legal ability to act; disability, incompetence;
lack of adequate power.
Incarceration - Imprisonment in a jail or penitentiary.
Incompetent - One who lacks ability, legal qualification,
or fitness to manage his own affairs.
Independent executor - A special kind of executor, permitted
by the laws of certain states, who performs the duties of an
executor without intervention by the court.
Indeterminate sentence - A sentence of imprisonment to a specified
minimum and maximum period of time, specifically authorized
by statute, subject to termination by a parole board or other
authorized agency after the prisoner has served the minimum
term.
Indictment - A written accusation by a grand jury charging
a person with a crime. (See information.)
Indigent - Needy or impoverished. A defendant who can demonstrate
his or her indigence to the court may be assigned a court-appointed
attorney at public expense.
Initial appearance - The defendant comes before a judge within
hours of the arrest to determine whether or not there is probable
cause for his or her arrest.
Information - Accusatory document, filed by the prosecutor,
detailing the charges against the defendant. An alternative
to an indictment, it serves to bring a defendant to trial.
Infraction - A violation of law not punishable by imprisonment.
Minor traffic offenses generally are considered infractions.
Inheritance tax - A state tax on property that an heir or
beneficiary under a will receives from a deceased person's
estate. The heir or beneficiary pays this tax.
Injunction - A prohibitive order or remedy issued by the court
at the suit of the complaining party, which forbids the defendant
to do some act which he is threatening or attempting to do.
Conversely, it may require him to perform an act which he is
obligated to perform but refuses to do.
Insolvent - When the total debt of an entity is greater than
all of its property.
Instructions - Judge's explanation to the jury before it begins
deliberations of the question it must answer and the applicable
law governing the case. (Also referred to as charge.)
Intangible assets - Nonphysical items such as stock certificates,
bonds, bank accounts, and pension benefits that have value
and must be taken into account in estate planning.
Intentional tort - Wrong perpetrated by one who intends to
break the law.
Interlocutory - Temporary; provisional; interim; not final.
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) - The federal agency which
administers the tax laws of the United States.
Interrogatories - A set or series of written questions propounded
to a party, witness, or other person having information or
interest in a case; a discovery device.
Interstate Commerce (ICC) - A federal agency which regulates
all transportation in Commission interstate commerce.
Intervention - An action by which a third person who may be
affected by a lawsuit is permitted to become a party to the
suit.
Involuntary bankruptcy - A proceeding initiated by creditors
requesting the bankruptcy court to place a debtor in liquidation.
Issue - 1. The disputed pint in a disagreement between parties
in a lawsuit. 2. To send out officially, as in to issue an
order.
J
Joint and several liability - A legal doctrine that makes
each of the parties who are responsible for an injury, liable
for all the damages awarded in a lawsuit if the other parties
responsible cannot pay.
Joint tenancy - A form of legal co-ownership of property (also
known as survivorship). At the death of one co-owner, the surviving
co-owner becomes sole owner of the property. Tenancy by the
entirety is a special form of joint tenancy between a husband
and wife.
Judge - A presiding officer of the court.
Judgment - The official and authentic decision of a court
of justice upon the rights and claims of parties to an action
or suit submitted to the court for determination. (See also
summary judgment.)
Judgment debtor - One who owes money as a result of a judgment
in favor of a creditor.
Judicial lien - A lien obtained by judgment or other judicial
process against a debtor.
Judicial review - The authority of a court to review the official
actions of other branches of government. Also, the authority
to declare unconstitutional the actions of other branches.
Judiciary - The branch of government invested with judicial
power to interpret and apply the law; the court system; the
body of judges; then bench.
Jurat - Certificate of person and officer before whom a writing
is sworn to.
Jurisdiction - The power or authority of a court to hear and
try a case; the geographic area in which a court has power
or the types of cases it has power to hear.
Jurisprudence - The study of law and the structure of the
legal system.
Jury - A certain number of men and women selected according
to law and sworn to try a question of fact or indict a person
for public offense.
Jury Administrator - The court officer responsible for choosing
the panel of persons to serve as potential jurors for a particular
court term.
Justiciable - Issues and claims capable of being properly
examined in court.
K
Key number system - A research aid developed by West Publishing
Company which classifies digests of cases in to various law
topics and subtopics which are given paragraph numbers called "Key
Numbers." Each key number for a given topic helps the
researcher quickly find all references to the legal matter
being researched.
L
Lapsed gift - A gift made in a will to a person who has died
prior to the will-makers death.
Larceny - Obtaining property by fraud or deceit.
Law - The combination of those rules and principles of conduct
promulgated by legislative authority, derived from court decisions
and established by local custom.
Law Blank - A printed legal form available for preparing documents.
Law Clerk - In the United States, usually a law school student
employed by a law firm to do research and other tasks. In the
courts, a lawyer (or law school student) employed to do legal
research.
Lawsuit - An action or proceeding in a civil court; term used
for a suit or action between two private parties in a court
of law.
Leading question - A question that suggests the answer desired
of the witness. A party generally may not ask one's own witness
leading questions. Leading questions may be asked only of hostile
witnesses and on cross-examination.
Legal aid - Professional legal services available usually
to persons or organizations unable to afford such services.
Legal process - A formal paper that is legally valid; something
issuing from the court, usually a command such as a writ or
mandate.
Legal texts - Books that cover specific areas of the law,
usually dealing with a single topic.
Legislation - The act of giving or enacting laws; the power
to make laws via legislation in contrast to court-made laws.
Legitimate - That which is legal, lawful, recognized by law
or according to law.
Leniency - Recommendation for a sentence less than the maximum
allowed.
Letters of Administration - Legal document issued by a court
that shows an administrator's legal right to take control of
assets in the deceased person's name.
Letters Testamentary - Legal document issued by a court that
shows an executor's legal right to take control of assets in
the deceased person's name.
Liable - Legally responsible.
Libel - Published defamation which tends to injure a person's
reputation.
Licensing boards - State agencies created to regulate the
issuance of licenses, i.e., to contractors, cosmetologists,
realtors, etc.
Lien - An encumbrance or legal burden upon property.
Limine - (See "in limine" in Foreign Words Glossary).
Limited Jurisdiction - Refers to courts that are limited in
the types of criminal and civil cases they may hear. For example,
traffic violations generally are heard by limited jurisdiction
courts.
Litigant - A party to a lawsuit.
Litigation - A lawsuit; a legal action, including all proceedings
therein.
Living trust - A trust set up and in effect during the lifetime
of the grantor. (Also called inter vivos trust.)
Loose-leaf services - Loose-leaf replacement pages provided
by a publisher in areas of the law where changes occur at a
rapid rate.
M
Magistrate (See U.S. Magistrate Judge.) - Judicial officer
exercising some of the functions of a judge. It also refers
in a general way to a judge.
Malfeasance - The commission of an unlawful act.
Malicious prosecution - An action instituted with intention
of injuring the defendant and without probable cause, and which
terminates in favor of the person prosecuted.
Malpractice - Any professional misconduct.
Manslaughter - The unlawful killing of another without intent
to kill; either voluntary (upon a sudden impulse); or involuntary
(during the commission of an unlawful act not ordinarily expected
to result in great bodily harm). (See also murder.)
Marshal - The executive officer of the federal court.
Martindale-Hubbell Law - A publication of several volumes
which contains names, addresses, Director specialties, and
rating of United States lawyers; also includes digests of state
and foreign statutory law.
Mediation - A form of alternative dispute resolution in which
the parties bring their dispute to a neutral third party, who
helps them agree on a settlement.
Memorandum - An informal note or instrument embodying something
the parties desire to have in written evidence.
Memorialized - In writing.
Merger - The absorption of one thing or right into another.
Minor - A person under the age of legal competence.
Minute book - A book maintained by the courtroom deputy (bailiff),
which contains minute entries of all hearings and trial conducted
by the judge.
Minutes - Memorandum of a transaction or proceeding.
Miranda warning - Requirement that police tell a suspect in
their custody of his or her constitutional rights before they
question him or her. So named as a result of the Miranda v.
Arizona ruling by the United States Supreme Court.
Misdemeanor - A criminal offense lesser than a felony and
generally punishable by fine or by imprisonment other than
in a penitentiary.
Misfeasance - Improper performance of an act which a person
might lawfully do.
Mistrial - An invalid trial, caused by fundamental error.
When a mistrial is declared, the trial must start again from
the selection of the jury.
Mitigating circumstances - Those which do not constitute a
justification or excuse for an offense but which may be considered
as reasons for reducing the degree of blame.
Mittimus - The name of an order in writing, issuing from a
court and directing the sheriff or other officer to convey
a person to a prison, asylum, or reformatory, and directing
the jailer or other appropriate official to receive and safely
keep the person until his or her fate shall be determined by
due course of law.
Mitigation - A reduction, abatement, or diminution of a penalty
or punishment imposed by law.
Moot - A moot case or a moot point is one not subject to a
judicial determination because it involves an abstract question
or a pretended controversy that has not yet actually arisen
or has already passed. Mootness usually refers to a court's
refusal to consider a case because the issue involved has been
resolved prior to the court's decision, leaving nothing that
would be affected by the court's decision.
Motion - An application made to a court or judge which requests
a ruling or order in favor of the applicant.
Motion in Limine - A motion made by counsel requesting that
information which might be prejudicial not be allowed to be
heard in a case.
Murder - The unlawful killing of a human being with deliberate
intent to kill: (1) murder in the first degree is characterized
by premeditation; (2) murder in the second degree is characterized
by a sudden and instantaneous intent to kill or to cause injury
without caring whether the injury kills or not.
Mutual assent - A meeting of the minds; agreement.
N
National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) - A federal agency
which prevents and remedies unfair labor practices by employers
and labor organizations
Naturalization - Process by which a person acquires nationality
after birth and becomes entitled to privileges of citizenship.
Negligence - Failure to use care which a reasonable and prudent
person would use under similar circumstances.
Negotiation - The process of submission and consideration
of offers until an acceptable offer is made and accepted.
Next friend - One acting without formal appointment as guardian
for the benefit of an infant, a person of unsound mind not
judicially declared incompetent, or other person under some
disability.
No Bill - This phrase, endorsed by a grand jury on the written
indictment submitted to it for its approval, means that the
evidence was found insufficient to indict.
No-contest Clause - Language in a will that provides that
a person who makes a legal challenge to the will's validity
will be disinherited.
No-fault Proceedings - A civil case in which parties may resolve
their dispute without a formal finding of error or fault.
Noise Control Act - A act which gives government agencies
the right to promulgate standards and regulations relating
to abatement of noise emissions, i.e., requirement that autos
and like vehicles must have mufflers.
Nonfeasance - Nonperformance of an act which should be performed;
omission to perform a required duty or total neglect of duty.
Nonjury trial - Trial before the court but without a jury.
Notary Public - A public officer whose function it is to administer
oaths, to attest and certify documents, and to take acknowledgments.
Notice - Formal notification to the party that has been sued
in a civil case of the fact that the lawsuit has been filed.
Also, any form of notification of a legal proceeding.
Notice to creditors - A notice given by the bankruptcy court
to all creditors of a meeting of creditors.
Nuncupative will - An oral (unwritten) will.
O
Oath - A solemn pledge made under a sense of responsibility
in attestation of the truth of a statement or in verification
of a statement made.
Objection - The process by which one party takes exception
to some statement or procedure. An objection is either sustained
(allowed) or overruled by the judge.
Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA) - A federal law
designed to develop and occupational safety and health standards
promote .
Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission - The agency
established by OSHA to adjudicate enforcement actions under
the Act.
Official reports - The publication of cumulated court decisions
of state or federal courts in advance sheets and bound volumes
as provided by statutory authority.
On a person's own recognizance - Release of a person from
custody without the payment of any bail or posting of bond,
upon the promise to return to court.
Opening statement - The initial statement made by attorneys
for each side, outlining the facts each intends to establish
during the trial.
Opinion - A judge's written explanation of a decision of the
court or of a majority of judges. A dissenting opinion disagrees
with the majority opinion because of the reasoning and/or the
principles of law on which the decision is based. A concurring
opinion agrees with the decision of the court but offers further
comment. (A per curiam opinion is an unsigned opinion "of
the court.")
Oral argument - Presentation of a case before a court by spoken
argument; usually with respect to a presentation of a case
to an appellate court where a time limit might be set for oral
argument.
Order - A mandate, command, or direction authoritatively given.
Direction of a court or judge made in writing.
Ordinance - A rule established by authority; may be a municipal
statute of a city council, regulating such matters as zoning,
building, safety, matters of municipality, etc.
Overrule - A judge's decision not to allow an objection. Also,
a decision by a higher court finding that a lower court decision
was in error.
P
Paperbound supplement - A temporary supplement to a book
or books to update the serve.
Paralegal - Also, legal assistant. A person with legal skills
who works under the supervision of a lawyer.
Pardon - An act of grace from governing power which mitigates
punishment and restores rights and privileges forfeited on
account of the offense.
Parol evidence - Oral or verbal evidence; evidence given by
word of mouth in court.
Parole - Supervised release of a prisoner from imprisonment
on certain prescribed conditions which entitle him to termination
of his sentence.
Party - A person, business, or government agency actively
involved in the prosecution of defense of a legal proceeding.
Patent - A grant to an inventor of the right to exclude others
for a limited time from make, using, or selling his invention
in the United States.
Patent and Trademark Office - The federal agency which examines
and issues patents and registers trademarks.
Peremptory challenge - Request by a party that a judge not
allow a certain prospective juror as a member of the jury.
No reason or cause need be stated. (See challenge for cause.)
Periodical - A publication which appears regularly but less
often than daily.
Perjury - The criminal offense of making a false statement
under oath.
Permanent injunction - A court order requiring that some action
be taken, or that some party refrain from taking action. It
differs from forms of temporary relief, such as a temporary
restraining order or preliminary injunction.
Per se doctrine - Under this doctrine an activity such as
price fixing can be declared as a violation of the antitrust
laws without necessity of a court inquiring into the reasonableness
of the activity.
Personal property - Anything a person owns other than real
estate.
Personal recognizance - In criminal proceedings, the pretrial
release of a defendant without bail upon his or her promise
to return to court. (See also recognizance.)
Personal representative - The person who administers an estate.
If named in a will, that person's title is an executor. If
there is no valid will, that person's title is an administrator.
Person in need of supervision - Juvenile found to have committed
a "status offense" rather than a crime that would
provide a basis for a finding of delinquency. (See status offense.)
Petitioner - The person filing an action in a court of original
jurisdiction. Also, the person who appeals the judgment of
a lower court. (See respondent.)
Plaintiff - A person who brings an action; the party who complains
or sues in a civil action. (See complainant.)
Plea - The first pleading by a criminal defendant, the defendant's
declaration in open court that he or she is guilty or not guilty.
The defendant's answer to the charges made in the indictment
or information.
Plea bargaining - Process where the accused and the prosecutor
in a criminal case work out a satisfactory disposition of the
case, usually by the accused agreeing to plead guilty to a
lesser offense. Such bargains are not binding on the court.
Also referred to as plea negotiating.
Pleadings - The written statements of fact and law filed by
the parties to a lawsuit.
Pocket parts - Supplements to law books in pamphlet form which
are inserted in a pocket inside the back cover of the books
to keep them current.
Polling the jury - The act, after a jury verdict has been
announced, of asking jurors individually whether they agree
with the verdict.
Post-trial - Refers to items happening after the trial, i.e.,
post-trial motions or post-trial discovery.
Pour-Over will - A will that leaves some or all estate assets
to a trust established before the will-maker's death.
Power - Authority to do. One has the power to do something
if he is of legal age. Also, used as "powers," the
term refers to authority granted by one person to another,
i.e., powers given an executor in a will or an agent in a power
of attorney.
Power of attorney - An formal instrument authorizing another
to act as one's agent or attorney.
Precedent - Laws established by previous cases which must
be followed in cases involving identical circumstances. (See
stare decisis in Foreign Words Glossary.)
Preinjunction - Court order requiring action or forbidding
action until a decision can be made whether to issue a permanent
injunction. It differs from a temporary restraining order.
Preliminary hearing - Also, preliminary examination. A hearing
by a judge to determine whether a person charged with a crime
should be held for trial. (See arraignment.)
Preponderance of the proof - Greater weight of the evidence,
the common standard of evidence in civil cases.
Presentence report - A report to the sentencing judge containing
background information about the crime and the defendant to
assist the judge in making his or her sentencing decision.
Presentment - Declaration or document issued by a grand jury
that either makes a neutral report or notes misdeeds by officials
charged with specified public duties. It ordinarily does not
include a formal charge of crime. A presentment differs from
an indictment.
Pretermitted child - A child born after a will is executed,
who is not provided for by the will. Most states have laws
that provide for a share of estate property to go to such children.
Pretrial conference - Conference among the opposing attorneys
and the judge called at the discretion of the court to narrow
the issues to be tried and to make a final effort to settle
the case without a trial.
Prima facie case - A case that is sufficient and has the minimum
amount of evidence necessary to allow it to continue in the
judicial process. (See prima facie in the Foreign Words Glossary.)
Primary authority - Constitutions, codes, statutes, ordinances,
and case law sources.
Private law - That law, such as a contract between two persons
or a real estate transaction, which applies only to the persons
who subject themselves to it.
Privilege - A benefit or advantage to certain persons beyond
the advantages of other persons, i.e., an exemption, immunity,
power, etc.
Probable cause - A reasonable belief that a crime has or is
being committed; the basis for all lawful searches, seizures,
and arrests.
Probate - Court proceeding by which a will is proved valid
or invalid. Term used to mean all proceedings pertaining to
the administration of estates such as the process by which
assets are gathered; applied to pay debts, taxes, and expenses
of administration; and distributed to those designated as beneficiaries
in the will. Conducted in states courts.
Probate court - The court with authority to supervise estate
administration.
Probate estate - Estate property that may be disposed of by
a will. (See estate.)
Probation - An alternative to imprisonment allowing a person
found guilty of an offense to stay in the community, usually
under conditions and under the supervision of a probation officer.
A violation of probation can lead to its revocation and to
imprisonment.
Product liability - Legal responsibility of manufacturers
and sellers to buyers, users, and bystanders for damages or
injuries suffered because of defects in goods.
Promisee - An individual to whom a promise is made.
Promisor - An individual who makes a promise.
Promissory estoppel - A promise which estops the promisee
from asserting or taking certain action.
Property tax - A tax levied on land and buildings (real estate)
and on personal property.
Proprietor - Owner; person who has legal right or title to
anything.
Prosecutor - A trial lawyer representing the government in
a criminal case and the interests of the state in civil matters.
In criminal cases, the prosecutor has the responsibility of
deciding who and when to prosecute.
Proximate cause - The last negligent act which contributes
to an injury. A person generally is liable only if an injury
was proximately caused by his or her action or by his or her
failure to act when he or she had a duty to act.
Proxy - The instrument authorizing one person to represent,
act, and vote for another at a shareholders' meeting of a corporation.
Public law - That law such as traffic ordinances or zoning
ordinances which applies to the public.
Public defender - Government lawyer who provides free legal
defense services to a poor person accused of a crime.
Public Service Commission - Also, Public Utilities Commission.
A state agency which regulates utilities.
Punitive damages - Money award given to punish the defendant
or wrongdoer.
Purchase agreement or purchase offer - Also, sales agreement
and earnest money contract. Agreement between buyer and seller
of property which sets forth in general the price and terms
of a proposed sale.
Putative - Alleged; supposed; reputed.
Q
Quash - To vacate or void a summons, subpoena, etc.
Quasi-contract - An obligation created by the law in the absence
of an agreement or contract; not based upon the intentions
or expressions of the parties.
Quasi-criminal action - A classification of actions such as
violation of a city ordinance that is not also violation of
a criminal statute, which are wrongs against the public punishable
through fines but are not usually indictable offenses.
Quiet title action - A court proceeding to remove a cloud
on the title to real property.
Quitclaim deed - A deed without warranty of title which passes
whatever title the grantor has to another.
R
Real property - Land, buildings, and whatever is attached
or affixed to the land. Generally synonymous with the words "real
estate."
Reasonable doubt - An accused person is entitled to acquittal
if, in the minds of the jury, his or her guilt has not been
proved beyond a "reasonable doubt;" that state of
minds of jurors in which they cannot say they feel an abiding
conviction as to the truth of the charge.
Reasonable person - A phrase used to denote a hypothetical
person who exercises qualities of attention, knowledge; intelligence,
and judgment that society requires of its members for the protection
of their own interest and the interests of others. Thus, the
test of negligence is based on either a failure to do something
that a reasonable person, guided by considerations that ordinarily
regulate conduct, would do, or on the doing of something that
a reasonable and prudent (wise) person would not do.
Rebut - Evidence disproving other evidence previously given
or reestablishing the credibility of challenged evidence. (See
rejoinder.)
Recognizance - An obligation entered into before a court whereby
the recognizor acknowledges that he will do a specific act
required by law.
Record - All the documents and evidence plus transcripts of
oral proceedings in a case.
Recuse - The process by which a judge is disqualified from
hearing a case, on his or her own motion or upon the objection
of either party.
Re-direct examination - Opportunity to present rebuttal evidence
after one's evidence has been subjected to cross-examination.
Redress - To set right; to remedy; to compensate; to remove
the causes of a grievance.
Referee - A person to whom the court refers a pending case
to take testimony, hear the parties, and report back to the
court. A referee is an officer with judicial powers who serves
as an arm of the court.
Rehearing - Another hearing of a civil or criminal case by
the same court in which the case was originally heard.
Registered mark - Trademark with the words "Registered
in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office" or the letter "R" enclosed
within a circle.
Rejoinder - Opportunity for the side that opened the case
to offer limited response to evidence presented during the
rebuttal by the opposing side. (See rebut.)
Remand - To send a dispute back to the court where it was
originally heard. Usually it is an appellate court that remands
a case for proceedings in the trial court consistent with the
appellate court's ruling.
Remedy - Legal or judicial means by which a right or privilege
is enforced or the violation of a right or privilege is prevented,
redressed, or compensated.
Remittitur - The reduction by a judge of the damages awarded
by a jury.
Removal - The transfer of a state case to federal court for
trial; in civil cases, because the parties are from different
states; in criminal and some civil cases, because there is
a significant possibility that there could not be a fair trial
in state court.
Replacement volumes - Volumes which replace books and their
pocket parts when the pocket parts cause the books to become
too bulky.
Replevin - An action for the recovery of a possession that
has been wrongfully taken.
Reply - The response by a party to charges raised in a pleading
by the other party.
Reporters - Books which contain court decisions.
Request for admission Also, Request to Admit. - Written statements
of facts concerning a case which are submitted to an adverse
party and which that party must admit or deny; a discovery
device.
Request for production of documents - A direction or command
served upon another party for production of specified documents
for review with respect to a suit; a discovery devise.
Request to admit See, Request for Admission.
Rescission - The unmaking or undoing of a contract; repeal.
Research - A careful hunting for facts or truth about a subject;
inquiry; investigation.
Resolution - The formal adoption of a motion.
Respondent - The person against whom an appeal is taken. (See
petitioner.)
Rest - A party is said to "rest" or "rest its
case" when it has presented all the evidence it intends
to offer.
Restatement - A publication which tells what the law is in
a particular field, as compiled from statutes and decisions.
Restitution - Act of restoring anything to its rightful owner;
the act of restoring someone to an economic position he enjoyed
before he suffered a loss.
Retainer - Act of the client in employing the attorney or
counsel, and also denotes the fee which the client pays when
he or she retains the attorney to act for them.
Return - A report to a judge by police on the implementation
of an arrest or search warrant. Also, a report to a judge in
reply to a subpoena, civil or criminal.
Reverse - An action of a higher court in setting aside or
revoking a lower court decision.
Reversible error - A procedural error during a trial or hearing
sufficiently harmful to justify reversing the judgment of a
lower court.
Revocable trust - A trust that the grantor may change or revoke.
Revoke - To cancel or nullify a legal document.
Right of way - The right of a party to pass over the land
of another.
Robinson-Patman Act - An amendment to the Clayton Act which
deals with price discrimination.
Robbery - Felonious taking of another's property, from his
or her person or immediate presence and against his or her
will, by means of force or fear. (See larceny.)
Rules - Established standards, guides, or regulations set
up by authority.
Rules of evidence - Standards governing whether evidence in
a civil or criminal case is admissible.
S
Search warrant - A written order issued by a judge that directs
a law enforcement officer to search a specific area for a particular
piece of evidence.
Seal - To mark a document with a seal; to authenticate or
make binding by affixing a seal. Court seal, corporate seal.
Secondary authority - Legal encyclopedias, treatises, legal
texts, law review articles, and citators. Writings which set
forth the opinion of the writer as to the law.
Secured debts - In bankruptcy, a debt is secured if the debtor
gave the creditor a right to repossess the property or goods
used as collateral.
Securities an Exchange Commission (SEC) - A federal agency
which monitors the securities industry.
Self-defense - The claim that an act otherwise criminal was
legally justifiable because it was necessary to protect a person
or property from the threat or action of another.
Self-incrimination, privilege against: - The constitutional
right of people to refuse to give testimony against themselves
that could subject them to criminal prosecution. The right
is guaranteed in the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution
. Asserting the right is often referred to as "taking
the Fifth."
Self-proving will - A will whose validity does not have to
be testified to in court by the witnesses to it, since the
witnesses executed an affidavit reflecting proper execution
of the will prior to the maker's death.
Sentence - The punishment ordered by a court for a defendant
convicted of a crime. (See concurrent and consecutive sentences.)
Sentence Report - (See Presentence Report.)
Sequester - To separate. Sometimes juries are separated from
outside influences during their deliberations. For example,
this may occur during a highly publicized trial.
Sequestration of witnesses - Keeping all witnesses (except
plaintiff and defendant) out of the courtroom except for their
time on the stand, and cautioning them not to discuss their
testimony with other witnesses. Also referred to as "separation
of witnesses."
Service of process - The delivering of writs, summonses, and
subpoenas by delivering them to the party named in the document.
Also referred to as "service."
Settlement - An agreement between the parties disposing of
a lawsuit.
Settlor - The person who sets up a trust. Also referred to
as "grantor."
Shepardizing - Method for finding subsequent development of
a legal theory by tracing status of a case as legal authority.
Sheriff - The executive officer of local court in some areas.
In other jurisdictions the sheriff is the chief law enforcement
officer of a county.
Sherman Act - The basic antitrust statute prohibiting any
unreasonable interference, conspiracy, restraint of trade,
or monopolies with respect to interstate commerce.
Sidebar - A conference between the judge and lawyers, usually
in the courtroom, out of earshot of the jury and spectators.
Slander - Spoken defamation which tends to injure a person's
reputation. (See libel.)
Small Business (SBA) - A federal agency which provides assistance
of all kinds, Administration including loans, to small businesses.
Small Claims Court - A state court that handles civil claims
for small amounts of money. People often represent themselves
rather than hire an attorney.
Social Security - A system of federal old-age pensions for
employed persons begun in 1935. A portion of the payment is
deducted from the employee's salary and an equal portion is
contributed by the employer.
Social Security Administration - The federal agency which
administers the national social security program.
Social Security Tax - A payroll deduction based on gross wages
paid; this amount is matched by the employer as required by
the Federal Insurance Contribution Act (FICA).
Sovereign Immunity - The doctrine that the government, state
or federal, is immune to lawsuit unless it give its consent.
Specific performance - A remedy requiring a person who has
breached a contract to perform specifically what he or she
has agreed to do. Specific performance is ordered when damages
would be inadequate compensation.
Speedy Trial Act - Federal law establishing time limits for
carrying out major events, i.e. indictment, arraignment, etc.,
in a criminal prosecution.
Spendthrift trust - A trust set up for the benefit of someone
who the grantor believes would be incapable of managing his
or her own financial affairs.
Standard of proof - Indicates the degree to which the point
must be proven. In a civil case, the burden of proof rests
with the plaintiff, who must establish his or her case by such
standards of proof as a "preponderance of evidence" or "clear
and convincing evidence." (See burden of proof.)
Standing - The legal right to bring a lawsuit. Only a person
with something at stake has standing to bring a lawsuit.
Status offenders - Youths charged with the status of being
beyond the control of their legal guardian or are habitually
disobedient, truant from school, or having committed other
acts that would not be a crime if committed by an adult, i.e.,
smoking. Also referred to as minors or children in need of
supervision.
Statute - Legislative enactment; it may be a single act of
a legislature or a body of acts which are collected and arranged
for a session of a legislature. (See statutory law.)
Statute of frauds - A statutory requirement that certain contracts
must be in writing.
Statute of limitations - A statute which limits the right
of a plaintiff to file an action unless it is done within a
specified time period after the occurrence which gives rise
to the right to sue.
Statutory - Relating to a statute; created or defined by a
law.
Statutory construction - Process by which a court seeks to
interpret the meaning and scope of legislation.
Statutory law - Laws promulgated by Congress and state legislatures.
(See case law and common law.)
Statutory research - Research of legislation enacted by a
state or the United States.
Stay - A court order halting a judicial proceeding.
Stipulation - An agreement between the parties involved in
a suit regulating matters incidental to trial.
Strict liability - Concept applied by the courts in product
liability cases that when a manufacturer presents his goods
for public sale, he is representing that they are suitable
for their intended use.
Strike - Highlighting in the record of a case, evidence that
has been improperly offered and will not be relied upon.
Subject research - Research of matter by determining all law
related to that matter by finding everything on the subject.
Subpoena - A command to appear at a certain time and place
to give testimony upon a certain matter.
Subpoena Duces Tecum - A court order commanding a witness
to bring certain documents or records to court.
Substantive criminal law - Law with the purpose of prevention
of harm to society which prescribed punishment for specific
offenses. The basic law of rights and duties as opposed to "remedial
law" which provides methods of enforcement.
Substantive law - The statutory or written law that governs
rights and obligations of those who are subject to it.
Summary judgment - A judgment given on the basis of pleadings,
affidavits, and exhibits presented for the record without any
need for a trial. It is used when there is no dispute as to
the facts of the case and one party is entitled to a judgment
as a matter of law.
Summons - Instrument used to commence a civil action or special
proceeding; the means of acquiring jurisdiction over a party.
Support trust - A trust that instructs the trustee to spend
only as much income and principal (the assets held in the trust)
as needed for the beneficiary's support.
Suppress - To forbid the use of evidence at a trial because
t is improper or was improperly obtained. (See also exclusionary
rule.)
Surety Bond - A bond purchased at the expense of the estate
to insure the executor's proper performance. Also referred
to as "fidelity bond."
Survivorship - (See joint tenancy.)
Suspension - A temporary loss of the right to practice law
by an attorney. (See disbarment or censure.)
Sustain - A court ruling upholding an objection or a motion.
T
Tangible Personal Property Memorandum (TPPM) - A legal document
that is referred to in a will and used to guide the distribution
of tangible personal property.
Taxable income - The income against which tax rates are applied
to compute tax paid; gross income of businesses or adjusted
gross income of individuals less deductions and exemptions.
Tax Court of the United States - A judicial body which hears
cases concerning federal tax laws.
Temporary relief - Any form of action by a court granting
one of the parties an order to protect its interest pending
further action by the court.
Temporary restraining order - An emergency remedy of brief
duration issued by a court only in exceptional circumstances,
usually when immediate or irreparable damages or loss might
result before the opposition could take action.
Tender of performance - An offer or attempt to do what is
required under a contract or under the law.
Testamentary capacity - The legal ability to make a will.
Testamentary trust - A trust set up by a will.
Testator - Person who makes a will (Female: testatrix).
Testimony - The evidence given by a witness under oath. It
does not include evidence from documents and other physical
evidence.
Third party complaint - A petition filed by a defendant against
a third party (not presently a party to the suit) which alleges
that the third party is liable for all or part of the damages
plaintiff may win from defendant.
Title - Legal ownership of property, usually real property
or automobiles.
Tort - A private or civil wrong or injury for which the court
provides a remedy through an action for damages.
Trademark - A word, name, symbol, or devise used by a manufacturer
to distinguish his goods from those sold by others.
Transcript - A written, word-for-word record of what was said.
Usually refers to a record of a trial, hearing, or other proceeding
which has been transcribed from a recording or from shorthand.
Transmittal form - Form required in certain courts for transmitting
documents for filing.
Treatise - A formal and systematic book or writing containing
a narrative statement on a field of law.
Trial - A judicial examination of issues between parties to
an action.
Trial brief - A written document prepared for and used by
an attorney at trial. It contains the issues to be tried, synopsis
of evidence to be presented and case and statutory authority
to substantiate the attorney's position at trial.
Trust - A legal device used to manage real or personal property,
established by one person (grantor or settlor) for the benefit
of another (beneficiary). (See trustee.)
Trust agreement or declaration - The legal document that sets
up a living trust. Testamentary trusts are set up in a will.
Trustee - The person or institution that manages the property
put in trust.
Truth in lending - Statutes which provide that precise and
meaningful cost of credit information be provided to the credit
customer.
U
Unfair labor practice - Actions by the employer which interfere
with, restrain, coerce, or threaten employees with respect
to their rights.
Uniform Commercial Code (U.C.C.) - A uniform law governing
commercial transactions. The U.C.C. has been adopted by all
states except Louisiana.
Uniform Laws - Annotated Annotated uniform and model acts
approved by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform
State Laws.
Unilateral contract - An agreement by which one undertakes
an express performance without receiving any express promise
of performance from the other.
Union - An organization of workers formed for the purpose
of collective bargaining.
United States Attorney - A federal district attorney appointed
by the President to prosecute for all offenses committed against
the United States; to prosecute or defend for the government
all civil actions in which it is concerned and perform all
duties of the district to which he/she is assigned.
United States Bankruptcy Court - The judicial body which hears
matters pertaining to bankruptcy and reorganization.
United States Court of Appeals - Courts which hear appeals
from federal district courts, bankruptcy courts, and tax courts.
United States Court of Claims - Court which hears actions
against the U.S. Government.
United States Court of Military Appeals - Court which hears
appeals from court marshal decisions .
United States Court of Customs & Patent Appeals - Court
which hears appeals from all U.S. customs courts.
United States Court of International Trade - Court which hears
cases concerning federal tariff laws.
United States District Courts - Courts which try both criminal
and civil actions and admiralty cases.
United States Magistrate Judge - Courts given authority by
28 U.S.C. s 636. This court hears all preliminary criminal
matters, but does not conduct felony trials, and any pretrial
civil matters referred by the district court. If all parties
consent, criminal misdemeanor and civil trials can be heard
by this court.
United States Marshal's Service - Agency which serves civil
and criminal process in federal courts.
United States Postal Service - The federal office which provides
mail delivery to individuals and businesses within the United
States.
United States Reports - Publication of court decisions of
the United States Supreme Court.
United States Supreme Court - The highest court in the land,
established by U.S. Constitution.
Unlawful detainer - A detention of real estate without the
consent of the owner or other person entitled to its possession.
Unliquidated debt - Remaining not determined; unassessed or
unsettled; in dispute as to the proper amount.
Unsecured debts - In bankruptcy, debts such as open accounts
at department stores for which the debtor has not pledged collateral
to guarantee payment.
Urban - A city or town.
Usury - Extraction of interest on a loan above the maximum
rate permitted by statute.
V
Vacate - To set aside.
Venire - A writ summoning persons to court to act as jurors.
(See venire facias in Foreign Words Glossary.)
Venue - Authority of a court to hear a matter based on geographical
location.
Verdict - A conclusion, as to fact or law, that forms the
basis for the court's judgment. (See directed verdict.)
Veterans' Administration (VA) - The federal agency which administers
a system of benefits for veterans and their dependents.
Visa - An official endorsement on a document or passport denoting
that the bearer may proceed.
Void - Invalid; a void agreement is one for which there is
no remedy.
Voidable - Capable of being declared invalid; a voidable contract
is one where a person may avoid his obligation, as a contract
between an adult and a minor.
Voir dire - The preliminary examination made in court of a
witness or juror to determine his competency or interest in
a matter. Literally, to speak the truth.
Voluntary bankruptcy - A proceeding by which a debtor voluntarily
asks for a discharge of his debts under the Bankruptcy Code.
W
Wage Earner's Plan - Also, Chapter 13. A chapter of the Bankruptcy
Code which allows a debtor to file a wage earner's plan for
payment of a percentage of his debts from future earnings.
Waiver - Intentionally given up a right.
Waiver of immunity - A means authorized by statute by which
a witness, before testifying or producing evidence, may relinquish
the right to refuse to testify against himself or herself,
thereby making it possible for his or her testimony to be used
against him or her in future proceedings.
Warrant - Most commonly, a court order authorizing law enforcement
officers to make an arrest or conduct a search. An application
seeking a warrant must be accompanied by an affidavit which
establishes probable cause by detailing the facts upon which
the request is based.
Warranty - A promise that a proposition of fact is true.
Warranty deed - A deed which guarantees that the title conveyed
is good and its transfer rightful.
Water rights - The right to use water.
Will - A legal declaration that disposes of a person's property
when that person dies.
Withholding - A tax deducted from a salary, wage, or other
income on behalf of the government at the time of payment of
wages to the person who pays it.
With prejudice - A declaration which dismisses all rights.
A judgment barring the right to bring or maintain an action
on the same claim or cause.
Without prejudice - A declaration that no rights or privileges
of the party concerned are waived or lost. In a dismissal these
words maintain the right to bring a subsequent suit on the
same claim.
Witness - One who personally sees or perceives a thing; one
who testifies as to what he has seen, heard, or otherwise observed.
Words and Phrases Legally Defined - A set of books in dictionary
form which lists judicial determinations of a word or phrase.
Worker's compensation - A state agency which handles claims
of workers injured on their jobs.
Writ - A judicial order directing a person to do something.
Writ of certiorari - An order issued by the Supreme Court
directing the lower court to transmit records for a case for
which it will hear on appeal. (See certiorari in Foreign Words
Glossary.)
Writ of execution - An order of the court evidencing debt
of one party to another and commanding the court officer to
take property in satisfaction of the debt.
Writ of garnishment - An order of the court whereby property,
money, or credits in the possession of another person may be
seized and applied to pay a debtor's debt. It is used as an
incident to or auxiliary of a judgment rendered in a principal
action.
Z
Zoning Commission - Local agencies with jurisdiction to regulate
use of properties within their geographic area. |