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Act of God - n. a natural
catastrophe which no one can prevent such as an earthquake, a tidal
wave, a volcanic eruption, a hurricane or a tornado. Acts of God are
significant for two reasons 1) for the havoc and damage they wreak, and
2) because often contracts state that "acts of God" are an excuse for
delay or failure to fulfill a commitment or to complete a construction
project. Many insurance policies exempt coverage for damage caused by
acts of God, which is one time an insurance company gets religion. At
times disputes arise as to whether a violent storm or other disaster
was an act of God (and therefore exempt from a claim) or a foreseeable
natural event. God knows the answer!
Adjuster - n. an employee
(usually a non-lawyer) of an insurance company or an adjustment firm
employed by an insurance company to negotiate an early settlement of a
claim for damages against a person, a business or public body (like a
city). While a fair and responsible adjuster can serve a real purpose
in getting information and evaluating the case for the insurance
company, some adjusters try to make a settlement before the injured
person has retained an attorney ("don't worry, we'll pay your bills.
You don't need an attorney. He'll only confuse things."), get a
statement from the injured without counsel, or delay the payout with
the promise he/she will negotiate any reasonable demand, and then
making an offer of payment that is absurdly low. Some insurance
companies try to make the attorney deal with the adjuster, which is
cheaper than sending the case to defense attorneys. Adjusters also
represent the company in approving settlements.
Administrative Hearing -
n. a hearing before any governmental agency or before an administrative
law judge. Such hearings can range from simple arguments to what
amounts to a trial. There is no jury, but the agency or the
administrative law judge will make a ruling.
Administrative Law - n.
the procedures created by administrative agencies (governmental bodies
of the city, county, state or federal government) involving rules,
regulations, applications, licenses, permits, available information,
hearings, appeals and decision-making. Federal agency procedures are
governed by the Administrative Procedure Act, and many states have
adopted similar procedural formats either by law or regulation. It is
important to consider two vital factors in dealing with administrative
agencies 1) the rules and regulations are often special for each agency
and are not usually found in the statutes but in those regulations; 2)
a member of the public must "exhaust his/her administrative remedies"
(take every step, including appeals) with the agency and its system
before he/she can challenge the administrative ruling with a lawsuit in
court. There are exceptions (such as emergency or obvious futility) to
exhausting one's remedies, but those are rare. Administrative law can
be a technical jungle, and many lawyers make lots of money from knowing
how to hack their way through it on behalf of their clients.
Administrative Law Judge -
n. a professional hearing officer who works for the government to
preside over hearings and appeals involving governmental agencies. They
are generally experienced in the particular subject matter of the
agency involved or of several agencies. Formerly called "hearing
officers," they discovered that there was more prestige and higher pay
in being called "judge."
Admiralty - n. concerning
activities which occur at sea, including on small boats and ships in
navigable bays. Admiralty law (maritime law) includes accidents and
injuries at sea, maritime contracts and commerce, alleged violations of
rules of the sea over shipping lanes and rights-of-way, and mutiny and
other crimes on shipboard. Jurisdiction over all these matters rests in
the federal courts, which do not use juries in admiralty cases. There
are other special rules in processing maritime cases, which are often
handled by admiralty law specialists. Lawyers appearing in admiralty
cases are called "proctors."
Admissible Evidence - n.
evidence which the trial judge finds is useful in helping the trier of
fact (a jury if there is a jury, otherwise the judge), and which cannot
be objected to on the basis that it is irrelevant, immaterial, or
violates the rules against hearsay and other objections. Sometimes the
evidence which a person tries to introduce has little relevant value
(usually called probative value) in determining some fact, or prejudice
from the jury's shock at gory details may outweigh that probative
value. In criminal cases the courts tend to be more restrictive on
letting the jury hear such details for fear they will result in "undue
prejudice." Thus, the jury may only hear a sanitized version of the
facts in prosecutions involving violence.
Admission - n. a statement
made by a party to a lawsuit or a criminal defendant, usually prior to
trial, that certain facts are true. An admission is not to be confused
with a confession of blame or guilt, but admits only some facts. In
civil cases, each party is permitted to submit a written list of
alleged facts and request the other party to admit or deny whether each
is true or correct. Failure to respond in writing is an admission of
the alleged facts and may be used in trial.
Admission Against Interest
- n. an admission of the truth of a fact by any person, but especially
by the parties to a lawsuit, when a statement obviously would do that
person harm, be embarrassing, or be against his/her personal or
business interests. Another party can quote in court an admission
against interest even though it is only hearsay.
Admission of Evidence - n. a judge's acceptance of evidence in a trial.
Admit - v. 1) to state
something is true in answering a complaint filed in a lawsuit. The
defendant will admit or deny each allegation in his or her answer filed
with the court. If he or she agrees and states that he/she did what
he/she is accused of, then the allegation need not be proved in trial.
2) in criminal law, to agree a fact is true or confess guilt. 3) to
allow as evidence in a trial, as the judge says: "Exhibit D, the
letter, is admitted."
Adverse Party - n. the
opposite side in a lawsuit. Sometimes when there are numerous parties
and cross-complaints, parties may be adverse to each other on some
issues and in agreement on other matters. Two beneficiaries of a person
who has died may join together to claim a will was valid, but fight
each other over the assets of the dead person's estate if the court
rules the will was legal.
Affiant - n. a person who
signs an affidavit and swears to its truth before a notary public or
some person authorized to take oaths, like a County Clerk.
Affidavit - n. 1) any
written document in which the signer swears under oath before a notary
public or someone authorized to take oaths (like a County Clerk), that
the statements in the document are true. 2) in many states a
declaration under penalty of perjury, which does not require the
oath-taking before a notary, is the equivalent of an affidavit.
Affirmative Defense - n.
part of an answer to a charge or complaint in which a defendant takes
the offense and responds to the allegations with his/her own charges,
which are called "affirmative defenses." These defenses can contain
allegations, take the initiative against statements of facts contrary
to those stated in the original complaint against them, and include
various defenses based on legal principles. Many of these defenses fall
into the "boilerplate" (stated in routine, non-specific language)
category, but one or more of the defenses may help the defendant.
Age Discrimination - n. an
employer's unfair treatment of a current or potential employee up to
age 70, which is made illegal by the Age Discrimination Unemployment
Act, first adopted in 1967. The claimant's problem is proof of age
discrimination, but employers should beware. Even flight attendants in
their late 30s have proved that there was age discrimination in
replacing them with younger, "more attractive" women.
Agency - n. the
relationship of a person (called the agent) who acts on behalf of
another person, company, or government, known as the principal.
"Agency" may arise when an employer (principal) and employee (agent)
ask someone to make a delivery or name someone as an agent in a
contract. The basic rule is that the principal becomes responsible for
the acts of the agent, and the agent's acts are like those of the
principal (Latin: respondeat superior). Factual questions arise such
as: was the agent in the scope of employment when he/she ran down the
little child, got drunk and punched someone, or sold impure wheat?
There is also the problem of whether the principal acted in such a way
as to make others believe someone was his agent-this is known as
"apparent" or "ostensible" authority. When someone who is or is not an
employee uses company business cards, finance documents, or a truck
with the company logo, such use gives apparent authority as an agent.
Agent - n. a person who is
authorized to act for another (the agent's principal) through
employment, by contract or apparent authority. The importance is that
the agent can bind the principal by contract or create liability if
he/she causes injury while in the scope of the agency. Who is an agent
and what is his/her authority are often difficult and crucial factual
issues.
Agreed Statement - n.
occasionally the two parties on opposite sides of a lawsuit or on an
appeal from a trial judgment will agree upon certain facts and sign a
statement to be used in court for that purpose. Agreed statements are
only used when the only remaining dispute boils down to a question of
law and legal argument and not of the actual facts.
Allege - v. to claim a
fact is true, commonly in a complaint which is filed to commence a
lawsuit, in an "affirmative defense" to a complaint, in a criminal
charge of the commission of a crime or any claim.
Amended Pleading - n. a
changed written pleading in a lawsuit, including complaint or answer to
a complaint. Pleadings are amended for various reasons, including
correcting facts, adding causes of action (legal bases for a suit),
adding affirmative defenses, or responding to a court's finding that a
pleading is inadequate as a matter of law. Amendments cannot be made
willy-nilly, but only prior to being served, upon stipulation by the
parties or order of the court.
Appeal - 1) v. to ask a
higher court to reverse the decision of a trial court after final
judgment or other legal ruling. After the lower court judgment is
entered into the record, the losing party (appellant) must file a
notice of appeal, request transcripts or other records of the trial
court (or agree with the other party on an "agreed-upon statement"),
file briefs with the appeals court citing legal reasons for
over-turning the ruling, and show how those reasons (usually other
appeal decisions called "precedents") relate to the facts in the case.
No new evidence is admitted on appeal, for it is strictly a legal
argument. The other party (Respondent or appellee) usually files a
responsive brief countering these arguments. The appellant then can
counter that response with a final brief. If desired by either party,
they will then argue the case before the appeals court, which may
sustain the original ruling, reverse it, send it back to the trial
court, or reverse in part and confirm in part. For state cases there
are Supreme Courts (called Courts of Appeal in New York and Maryland)
which are the highest appeals courts, and most states have lower
appeals courts as well. For Federal cases there are Federal Courts of
Appeal in ten different "circuits," and above them is the Supreme
Court, which selectively hears only a few appeals at the highest level.
2) n. the name for the process of appealing, as in "he has filed an
appeal."
Arbitrary - adj. not supported by fair or substantial cause or reason. Most often it is used in reference to a judge's ruling.
Arbitration - n. a
mini-trial, which may be for a lawsuit ready to go to trial, held in an
attempt to avoid a court trial and conducted by a person or a panel of
people who are not judges. The arbitration may be agreed to by the
parties, may be required by a provision in a contract for settling
disputes, or may be provided for under statute. To avoid clogged court
calendars the parties often agree to have the matter determined by a
panel such as one provided by the American Arbitration Association
(which has a specific set of rules), a retired judge, some other
respected lawyer, or some organization that provides these services.
Usually contract-required arbitration may be converted into a legal
judgment on petition to the court, unless some party has protested that
there has been a gross injustice, collusion or fraud. Many states
provide for mandatory arbitration of cases on a non-binding basis in
the hope that these "mini-trials" (proceedings) conducted by
experienced attorneys will give the parties a clearer picture of the
probable result and lead to acceptance of the arbitrator's decision.
Assigned Risk - n. a
person whose official driving record (accidents and tickets) is so poor
that he/she cannot purchase commercial auto insurance, and must be
assigned to a state operated or designated insurance program at high
rates.
Assumption of Risk - n. 1)
taking a chance in a potentially dangerous situation. This is a typical
affirmative defense in a negligence case, in which the defendant claims
that the situation (taking a ski-lift, climbing a steep cliff, riding
in an old crowded car, working on the girders of a skyscraper) was so
inherently or obviously hazardous that the injured plaintiff should
have known there was danger and took the chance that he/she could be
injured. 2) the act of contracting to take over the risk, such as
buying the right to a shipment and accepting the danger that it could
be damaged or prove unprofitable.
Attorney - n. 1) an agent
or someone authorized to act for another. 2) a person who has been
qualified by a state or federal court to provide legal services,
including appearing in court. Each state has a bar examination which is
a qualifying test to practice law. The examinations vary in difficulty,
but cannot be taken until the applicant is a graduate of an accredited
law school (with a three-year minimum course of study) or in seven
states has fulfilled extensive other training. Passage of the bar
examination qualifies the attorney for that state only and for the
federal courts located in that state (and other federal courts upon
request). Some states will accept attorneys from other states, but many
will not grant this "reciprocity" and require at least a basic test for
out-of-state attorneys. Attorneys from other states may practice in a
limited way, but cannot appear (except on a single case with court
permission) in state courts (but in federal courts). Graduation from
law school does not make one an attorney. There are also patent
attorneys who can practice in federal patent courts only and have both
legal and engineering training. Most patent attorneys today are regular
attorneys who specialize.
Attorney of Record - n.
the attorney who has appeared in court and/or signed pleadings or other
forms on behalf of a client. The lawyer remains the attorney of record
until some other attorney or the client substitutes for him/her, he/she
is allowed by the court to withdraw, or after the case is closed.
Sometimes lawyers find themselves still on the record in cases (such as
divorces) which they believe have long since been completed.
Attorney-Client Privilege
- n. the requirement that an attorney may not reveal communications,
conversations and letters between himself/ herself and his/her client,
under the theory that a person should be able to speak freely and
honestly with his/her attorney without fear of future revelation. In a
trial, deposition, and written questions (interrogatories), the
attorney is required and the client is entitled to refuse to answer any
question or produce any document which was part of the attorney-client
contact. The problem sometimes arises as to whether the conversation
was in an attorney-client relationship. If a man tells his neighbor who
happens to be an attorney that he embezzled funds, is he doing so while
seeking legal advice or just chatting over the fence (which is the
test)? If a document was prepared as part of the legal preparation for
a client, it usually is a "work product" and is also privileged.
Similar privileges exist between pastor and parishioner and doctor and
patient.
Attorney's Fee - n. the
payment for legal services. It can take several forms 1) hourly charge,
2) flat fee for the performance of a particular service (like $250 to
write a will), 3) contingent fee (such as one-third of the gross
recovery, and nothing if there is no recovery), 4) statutory fees (such
as percentages of an estate for representing the estate), 5)
court-approved fees (such as in bankruptcy or guardianships), 6) some
mixture of hourly and contingent fee or other combination. It is wise
(and often mandatory) for the attorney and the client to have a signed
contract for any extensive legal work, particularly in contingent fee
cases. Most attorneys keep records of time spent on cases to justify
fees (and keep track of when actions were taken), even when the work is
not on an hourly basis. A "retainer" is a down payment on fees, often
required by the attorney in order to make sure he or she is not left
holding the bag for work performed, or at least as a good faith
indication that the client is serious and can afford the services. On
the other hand, contingent fees require limits (often one-third) to
protect the unwary client. Attorney fee disputes can be decided by
arbitration, often operated by the local bar association. Attorney's
fees are not awarded to the winning party in a lawsuit except where
there is a provision in a contract for the fees or there is a statute
which provides for an award of fees in the particular type of case.
Attorney's Work Product - n.
written materials, charts, notes of conversations and investigations,
and other materials directed toward preparation of a case or other
legal representation. Their importance is that they cannot be required
to be introduced in court or otherwise revealed to the other side.
Sometimes there is a question as to whether documents were prepared by
the attorney and/or the client for their use in the case preparation or
are documents which are independent and legitimate evidence.
B
Bad Faith - 1) n.
intentional dishonest act by not fulfilling legal or contractual
obligations, misleading another, entering into an agreement without the
intention or means to fulfill it, or violating basic standards of
honesty in dealing with others. Most states recognize what is called
"implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing" which is breached by
acts of bad faith, for which a lawsuit may be brought (filed) for the
breach (just as one might sue for breach of contract). The question of
bad faith may be raised as a defense to a suit on a contract. 2) adj.
when there is bad faith then a transaction is called a "bad faith"
contract or "bad faith" offer.
Bar Association - n. an
organization of lawyers. There are two types, one of which is official
and usually called an "integrated bar," which is qualified by the
particular state's highest court to establish rules for admission and
conduct. There are also local bar associations by city or county which
are unofficial and voluntary, but do conduct the business of attorneys,
such as settling fee disputes and working with the local courts on
rules. There is also the American Bar Association, a national voluntary
organization of attorneys.
Beneficiary - n. a broad
definition for any person or entity (like a charity) who is to receive
assets or profits from an estate, a trust, an insurance policy or any
instrument in which there is distribution. There is also an "incidental
beneficiary" or a "third party beneficiary" who gets a benefit although
not specifically named, such as someone who will make a profit if a
piece of property is distributed to another.
Bias - n. the
predisposition of a judge, arbitrator, prospective juror, or anyone
making a judicial decision, against or in favor of one of the parties
or a class of persons. This can be shown by remarks, decisions contrary
to fact, reason or law, or other unfair conduct. Bias can be toward an
ethnic group, homosexuals, women or men, defendants or plaintiffs,
large corporations, or local parties. Getting a "hometown" decision is
a form of bias which is the bane of the out-of-town lawyer. There is
also the subtle bias of some male judges in favor of pretty women.
Obvious bias is a ground for reversal on appeal, but it is hard to
prove, since judges are usually careful to display apparent fairness in
their comments. The possibility of juror bias is explored in
questioning at the beginning of trial in a questioning process called
voir dire.
Brief - 1) n. a written
legal argument, usually in a format prescribed by the courts, stating
the legal reasons for the suit based on statutes, regulations, case
precedents, legal texts, and reasoning applied to facts in the
particular situation. A brief is submitted to lay out the argument for
various petitions and motions before the court (sometimes called
"points and authorities"), to counter the arguments of opposing
lawyers, and to provide the judge or judges with reasons to rule in
favor of the party represented by the brief writer. Occasionally on
minor or follow-up legal issues, the judge will specify that a letter
or memorandum brief will be sufficient. On appeals and certain other
major arguments, the brief is bound with color-coded covers stipulated
in state and/or federal court rules. Ironically, although the term was
originally intended to mean a brief or summary argument (shorter than
an oral presentation), legal briefs are quite often notoriously long.
2) v. to summarize a precedent case or lay out in writing a legal
argument. Attentive law students "brief" each case in their casebooks,
which means extracting the rule of law, the reasoning (rationale), the
essential facts, and the outcome. 3) v. to give a summary of important
information to another person.
Burden of Proof - n. the
requirement that the plaintiff (the party bringing a civil lawsuit)
show by a "preponderance of evidence" or "weight of evidence" that all
the facts necessary to win a judgment are presented and are probably
true. In a criminal trial the burden of proof required of the
prosecutor is to prove the guilt of the accused "beyond a reasonable
doubt," a much more difficult task. Unless there is a complete failure
to present substantial evidence of a vital fact (usually called an
"element of the cause of action"), the ultimate decision as to whether
the plaintiff has met his/her burden of proof rests with the jury or
the judge if there is no jury. However, the burden of proof is not
always on the plaintiff. In some issues it may shift to the defendant
if he/she raises a factual issue in defense, such as a claim that
he/she was not the registered owner of the car that hit the plaintiff,
so the defendant has the burden to prove that defense. If at the close
of the plaintiff's presentation he/she has not produced any evidence on
a necessary fact (e.g. any evidence of damage) then the case may be
dismissed without the defendant having to put on any evidence.
Business Invitee - n. a
person entering commercial premises for the purpose of doing business,
rather than just taking a short cut to the next street. It is important
since a business is liable to a business invitee for injury caused by
dangerous conditions such as bad floors or oil on the linoleum. There
is a presumption that anyone entering a retail store or restaurant in
which one may browse is a business invitee unless there is evidence to
the contrary.
C
Capricious - adv., adj.
unpredictable and subject to whim, often used to refer to judges and
judicial decisions which do not follow the law, logic or proper trial
procedure. A semi-polite way of saying a judge is inconsistent or
erratic.
Caption - n. the first
section of any written legal pleading (papers) to be filed, which
contains the name, address, telephone number of the attorney, the
person or persons the attorney represents, the court name, the title of
the case, the number of the case, and the title of the documents
(complaint, accusation, answer, motion, etc.). Each jurisdiction has
its own rules as to the exact format of the caption.
Case - n. short for a
cause of action, lawsuit, or the right to sue (as in "does he have a
case against Jones?"). It is also shorthand for the reported decisions
(appeals, certain decisions of federal courts and special courts such
as the tax court) which can be cited as precedents. Thus, "in the case
of Malarkey v. Hogwash Printing Company, the court stated the rule
as…."
Case Law - n. reported
decisions of appeals courts and other courts which make new
interpretations of the law and, therefore, can be cited as precedents.
These interpretations are distinguished from "statutory law," which is
the statutes and codes (laws) enacted by legislative bodies;
"regulatory law," which is regulations required by agencies based on
statutes; and in some states, the common law, which is the generally
accepted law carried down from England. The rulings in trials and
hearings which are not appealed and not reported are not case law and,
therefore, not precedent or new interpretations. Law students
principally study case law to understand the application of law to
facts and learn the courts' subsequent interpretations of statutes.
Casualty - n. 1) an
accident which could not have been foreseen or guarded against, such as
a shipwreck caused by storm or fire caused by lightning. 2) the loss,
as of life, from such an unavoidable accident. The courts remain
inconsistent on the exact definition.
Cause - from Latin causa
1) v. to make something happen. 2) n. the reason something happens. A
cause implies what is called a "causal connection" as distinguished
from events which may occur but do not have any effect on later events.
Example: While driving his convertible, Johnny Youngblood begins to
stare at pretty Sally Golightly, who is standing on the sidewalk. While
so distracted he veers into a car parked at the curb. Johnny's
inattention (negligence) is the cause of the accident, and neither
Sally nor her beauty is the cause. 3) n. short for cause of action.
Cause of Action - n. the
basis of a lawsuit founded on legal grounds and alleged facts which, if
proved, would constitute all the "elements" required by statute.
Examples: to have a cause of action for breach of contract there must
have been an offer of acceptance; for a tort (civil wrong) there must
have been negligence or intentional wrongdoing and failure to perform;
for libel there must have been an untruth published which is
particularly harmful; and in all cases there must be a connection
between the acts of the defendant and damages. In many lawsuits there
are several causes of action stated separately, such as fraud, breach
of contract, and debt, or negligence and intentional destruction of
property.
Certiorari - n.
(sersh-oh-rare-ee) a writ (order) of a higher court to a lower court to
send all the documents in a case to it so the higher court can review
the lower court's decision. Certiorari is most commonly used by the
U.S. Supreme Court, which is selective about which cases it will hear
on appeal. To appeal to the Supreme Court one applies to the Supreme
Court for a writ of certiorari, which it grants at its discretion and
only when at least three members believe that the case involves a
sufficiently significant federal question in the public interest. By
denying such a writ the Supreme Court says it will let the lower court
decision stand, particularly if it conforms to accepted precedents
(previously decided cases).
Champerty - n. an
agreement between the party suing in a lawsuit (plaintiff) and another
person, usually an attorney, who agrees to finance and carry the
lawsuit in return for a percentage of the recovery (money won and
paid). In common law this was illegal on the theory that it encouraged
lawsuits. Today it is legal and often part of a "contingent fee"
agreement between lawyer and client. It is not the same as barratry,
which is active encouragement of lawsuits.
Civil Code - n. in many
states, the name for the collection of statutes and laws which deal
with business and negligence lawsuits and practices.
Civil Liability - n.
potential responsibility for payment of damages or other
court-enforcement in a lawsuit, as distinguished from criminal
liability, which means open to punishment for a crime.
Civil Penalties - n. fines
or surcharges imposed by a governmental agency to enforce regulations
such as late payment of taxes, failure to obtain a permit, etc.
Civil Procedure - n. the
complex and often confusing body of rules and regulations set out in
both state (usually Code of Civil Procedure) and federal (Federal Code
of Procedure) laws which establish the format under which civil
lawsuits are filed, pursued and tried. Civil procedure refers only to
form and procedure, and not to the substantive law which gives people
the right to sue or defend a lawsuit.
Civil Rights - n. those
rights guaranteed by the Bill of Rights, the 13th and 14th Amendments
to the Constitution, including the right to due process, equal
treatment under the law of all people regarding enjoyment of life,
liberty, property, and protection. Positive civil rights include the
right to vote, the opportunity to enjoy the benefits of a democratic
society, such as equal access to public schools, recreation,
transportation, public facilities, and housing, and equal and fair
treatment by law enforcement and the courts.
Claim - 1) v. to make a
demand for money, for property, or for enforcement of a right provided
by law. 2) n. the making of a demand (asserting a claim) for money due,
for property, from damages or for enforcement of a right. If such a
demand is not honored, it may result in a lawsuit. In order to enforce
a right against a government agency (ranging for damages from a
negligent bus driver to a shortage in payroll) a claim must be filed
first. If rejected or ignored by the government, it is lawsuit time.
Class Action - n. a
lawsuit filed by one or more people on behalf of themselves and a
larger group of people "who are similarly situated." Examples might
include: all women who have suffered from defective contraceptive
devices or breast implants, all those overcharged by a public utility
during a particular period, or all those who were underpaid by an
employer in violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act. If a class
action is successful, a period of time is given for those who can prove
they fit the class to file claims to participate in the judgment
amount. Class actions are difficult and expensive to file and follow
through, but the results can be helpful to people who could not afford
to carry a suit alone. They can force businesses that have caused broad
damage or have a "public be damned" attitude to change their practices
and/or pay for damages. They often result in high fees for the winning
attorneys, although often attorneys do not collect a fee at the
beginning of a class action suit but might charge a contingent fee
(such as one-third of the final judgment), which, occasionally, can be
millions of dollars. Such fees usually require court approval.
Clerk - n. 1) an official
or employee who handles the business of a court or a system of courts,
maintains files of each case, and issues routine documents. Almost
every county has a clerk of the courts or County Clerk who fulfills
those functions, and most courtrooms have a clerk to keep records and
assist the judge in the management of the court. 2) a young lawyer who
assists a judge or a senior attorney in research and drafting of
documents, usually for a year or two, and benefits in at least two
ways: learning from the judge or attorney and enjoying association with
them. Law clerks for judges, particularly on the Courts of Appeal and
the Supreme Court, are chosen from among the top students graduating
from law school. 3) a person who works in an office or a store who
performs physical work such as filing, stocking shelves, or counter
sales.
Closing Argument - n. the
final argument by an attorney on behalf of his/her client after all
evidence has been produced for both sides. The lawyer for the plaintiff
or prosecution (in a criminal case) makes the first closing argument,
followed by counsel for the defendant, and then the plaintiff's
attorney can respond to the defense argument. Unlike the "opening
statement," which is limited to what is going to be proved, the
"closing argument" may include opinions on the law, comment on the
opposing party's evidence, and usually requests a judgment or verdict
(jury's decision) favorable to the client.
Code of Professional Responsibility - n.
a set of rules governing the ethical conduct of attorneys in the
practice of the law. It covers such topics as conflicts of interest,
honesty with clients, confidentiality and conduct toward other
attorneys and the courts. First developed and pushed by the American
Bar Association, the code has been adopted by most states.
Codefendant - n. when more than one person or entity is sued in one lawsuit, each party sued is called a codefendant.
Coinsurance - n. an
insurance policy in which the insurance company insures only a partial
value of the property owned by the insured owner. Essentially the owner
and the insurance company share the risk
Company - n. any formal
business entity for profit, which may be a corporation, a partnership,
association or individual proprietorship. Often people think the term
"company" means the business is incorporated, but that is not true. In
fact, a corporation usually must use some term in its name such as
"corporation," "incorporated," "corp." or "inc." to show it is a
corporation.
Comparative Negligence - n.
a rule of law applied in accident cases to determine responsibility and
damages based on the negligence of every party directly involved in the
accident. For a simple example, Eddie Leadfoot, the driver of one
automobile, is speeding and Rudy Airhead, the driver of an oncoming
car, has failed to signal and starts to turn left, incorrectly judging
Leadfoot's speed. A crash ensues in which Airhead is hurt. Airhead's
damage recovery will be reduced by the percentage his failure to judge
Leadfoot's speed contributed to or caused the accident. Most cases are
not as simple, and the formulas to figure out, attribute and compare
negligence often make assessment of damages problematic, difficult, and
possibly totally subjective. Not all states use comparative negligence
(California is a fairly recent convert), and some states still use
contributory negligence which denies recovery to any party whose
negligence has added to the cause of the accident in any way.
Contributory negligence is often so unfair that juries tend to ignore
it.
Compensation - n. 1)
payment for work performed, by salary, wages, commission or otherwise.
It can include giving goods rather than money. 2) the amount received
to "make one whole" (or at least better) after an injury or loss,
particularly that paid by an insurance company either of the party
causing the damage or by one's own insurer.
Compensatory Damages n.
damages recovered in payment for actual injury or economic loss, which
does not include punitive damages (as added damages due to malicious or
grossly negligent action).
Complainant - n. a person
or entity who begins a lawsuit by filing a complaint and is usually
called the plaintiff, or in some cases the petitioner.
Compromise - 1) n. an
agreement between opposing parties to settle a dispute or reach a
settlement in which each gives some ground, rather than continue the
dispute or go to trial. Judges encourage compromise and settlement,
which is often economically sensible, since it avoids mounting
attorneys' fees and costs. 2) v. to reach a settlement in which each
party gives up some demands.
Conflict of Interest - n.
a situation in which a person has a duty to more than one person or
organization, but cannot do justice to the actual or potentially
adverse interests of both parties. This includes when an individual's
personal interests or concerns are inconsistent with the best for a
customer, or when a public official's personal interests are contrary
to his/her loyalty to public business. An attorney, an accountant, a
business adviser or realtor cannot represent two parties in a dispute
and must avoid even the appearance of conflict. He/she may not join
with a client in business without making full disclosure of his/her
potential conflicts, he/she must avoid commingling funds with the
client, and never, never take a position adverse to the customer.
Consent Judgment - n. a
judgment issued by a judge based on an agreement between the parties to
a lawsuit to settle the matter, aimed at ending the litigation with a
judgment that is enforceable.
Consequential Damages - n. damages claimed and/or awarded in a lawsuit which were caused as a direct foreseeable result of wrongdoing.
Constructive Notice - n. a
fiction that a person got notice even though actual notice was not
personally delivered to him/her. The law may provide that a public
notice put on the courthouse bulletin board is a substitute for actual
notice. A prime example is allowing service by publication when a
spouse has left the state to avoid service (legal delivery of a legal
notice) in a divorce action. The legal advertisement of the summons in
an approved newspaper is treated as constructive notice, just as if the
summons and petition had been served personally.
Constructive Possession -
n. when a person does not have actual possession, but has the power to
control an asset, he/she has constructive possession. Having the key to
a safe deposit box, for example, gives one constructive possession.
Contempt of Court - n.
there are essentially two types of contempt: a) being rude,
disrespectful to the judge or other attorneys or causing a disturbance
in the courtroom, particularly after being warned by the judge; b)
willful failure to obey an order of the court. This latter can include
failure to pay child support or alimony. The court's power to punish
for contempt (called "citing" one for contempt) includes fines and/or
jail time (called "imposing sanctions"). Incarceration is generally
just a threat and if imposed, usually brief. Since the judge has
discretion to control the courtroom, contempt citations are generally
not appealable unless the amount of fine or jail time is excessive.
"Criminal contempt" involves contempt with the aim of obstruction of
justice, such as threatening a judge or witness or disobeying an order
to produce evidence.
Contingent Fee - n. a fee
to a lawyer which will be due and payable only if there is a successful
conclusion of the legal work, usually winning or settling a lawsuit in
favor of the client (particularly in negligence cases), or collecting
funds due with or without filing a lawsuit. In many states, such
agreements must be in writing and signed by attorney and client. The
fee is generally a percentage of the recovery (money won), but may be
partly a fee for time worked and partly a percentage. Although fees are
negotiable, a standard contingent fee in accident cases is one-third of
the money won, unless particular difficulties exist with the case,
making the attorney believe he/she has the right to ask for more.
States vary but some put a cap on the amount of fee for cases handled
for minors even if the parent as guardian ad litem agrees to more.
Contingent fee agreements in criminal cases which depend on the outcome
are unethical.
Continuance - n. a
postponement of a date of a trial, hearing or other court appearance to
a later fixed date by order of the court, or upon a stipulation (legal
agreement) by the attorneys and approved by the court or (where local
rules permit) by the clerk of the court. In general courts frown on too
many continuances and will not allow them unless there is a legitimate
reason. Some states demand payment of fees for continuances to
discourage delays.
Continuing Objection - n.
an objection to certain questions or testimony during a trial which has
been "overruled" by the judge, but the attorney who made the objection
announces he/she is "continuing" the objection to all other questions
on the same topic or with the same legal impropriety in the opinion of
the attorney. Thus a "continuing" objection does not require an
objection every time the same question or same subject is introduced.
Example: the attorney for the plaintiff (the person suing) begins
asking questions about emotional distress, which the defendant's
attorney objects to as "immaterial," but the judge allows the first
questions. The defense attorney states he has a "continuing" objection
to all questions about the emotional distress.
Contributory Negligence - n.
a doctrine of common law that if a person was injured in part due to
his/her own negligence (his/her negligence "contributed" to the
accident), the injured party would not be entitled to collect any
damages (money) from another party who supposedly caused the accident.
Under this rule, a badly injured person who was only slightly negligent
could not win in court against a very negligent defendant. If Joe
Tosspot was driving drunk and speeding and Angela Comfort was going 25
m.p.h. but six inches over the center-line, most likely Angela would be
precluded from any recovery (receiving any money for injuries or
damages) from a car crash. The possible unfair results have led some
juries to ignore the rule and, in the past few decades, most states
have adopted a comparative negligence test in which the relative
percentages of negligence by each person are used to determine damage
recovery (how much money would be paid to the injured person).
Counsel - 1) n. a
lawyer, attorney, attorney-at-law, counsellor, counsellor-at-law,
solicitor, barrister, advocate or proctor (a lawyer in admiralty
court), licensed to practice law. In the United States they all mean
the same thing. 2) v. to give legal advice. 3) v. in some
jurisdictions, to urge someone to commit a crime, which in itself is a
crime.
Counter Offer - n. an
offer made in response to a previous offer by the other party during
negotiations for a final contract. Making a counter offer automatically
rejects the prior offer, and requires an acceptance under the terms of
the counter offer or there is no contract. Example: Susan Seller offers
to sell her house for $150,000, to be paid in 60 days; Bruce Buyer
receives the offer and gives Seller a counter offer of $140,000,
payable in 45 days. The original offer is dead, despite the shorter
time for payment since the price is lower. Seller then can choose to
accept at $140,000, counter again at some compromise price, reject the
counter offer, or let it expire.
Course of Employment - adj.
actively involved in a person's employment at a particular time, most
likely when an accident occurred, which is required to make a claim for
work-related injury under state Worker's Compensation Acts.
Court - n. 1) the judge,
as in "The court rules in favor of the plaintiff." 2) any official
tribunal (court) presided over by a judge or judges in which legal
issues and claims are heard and determined.
Court Calendar - n. the list of matters to be heard or set for trial or hearing by a court.
Court Costs - n. fees for
expenses that the courts pass on to attorneys, who then pass them on to
their clients or to the losing party. Court costs usually include:
filing fees, charges for serving summons and subpenas, court reporter
charges for depositions (which can be very expensive), court
transcripts and copying papers and exhibits. The prevailing party in a
lawsuit is usually awarded court costs. Attorneys' fees can be included
as court costs only if there is a statute providing for attorneys' fee
awards in a particular type of case, or if the case involved a contract
which had an attorneys' fee clause (commonly found in promissory notes,
mortgages and deeds of trust). If a losing party does not agree with
the claimed court costs (included in a filed cost bill) he/she/it may
move (ask) the judge to "tax costs" (meaning reduce or disallow the
cost), resulting in a hearing at which the court determines which costs
to allow and in what amount (how much).
Court of Appeals - n. any court (state or federal) which hears appeals from judgments and rulings of trial courts or lower appeals courts.
Credibility - n. whether
testimony is worthy of belief, based on competence of the witness and
likelihood that it is true. Unless the testimony is contrary to other
known facts or is extremely unlikely based on human experience, the
test of credibility is purely subjective.
Credible Witness - n. a
witness whose testimony is more than likely to be true based on his/her
experience, knowledge, training and appearance of honesty and
forthrightness, as well as common human experience. This is subjective
in that the trier of fact (judge or jury) may be influenced by the
demeanor of the witness or other factors.
Cross-Complaint - n. after
a complaint has been filed against a defendant for damages or other
orders of the court, the defendant may file a written complaint against
the party suing him/her or against a third party as long as the subject
matter is related to the original complaint. The defendant's filing of
a complaint is called a cross-complaint, and the defendant is then
called a cross-complainant and the party he/she sues is called a
cross-defendant. The defendant must still file an answer or other
response to the original complaint. If the cross-complaint is against
the original plaintiff (original suer) then it can be served on the
plaintiff's attorney by mail, but a third party must be served in
person with the cross-complaint and a new summons issued by the clerk
of the court. The cross-defendants must then file answers or other
responses. These are called pleadings and must be carefully drafted
(usually by an attorney) to properly state the factual as well as legal
basis for the claim and contain a prayer for damages or other relief.
Cross-Examination - n. the
opportunity for the attorney (or an unrepresented party) to ask
questions in court of a witness who has testified in a trial on behalf
of the opposing party. The questions on cross-examination are limited
to the subjects covered in the direct examination of the witness, but
importantly, the attorney may ask leading questions, in which he/she is
allowed to suggest answers or put words in the witness's mouth. (For
example, "Isn't it true that you told Mrs. Jones she had done nothing
wrong?" which is leading, as compared to "Did you say anything to Mrs.
Jones?") A strong cross-examination (often called just "cross" by
lawyers and judges) can force contradictions, expressions of doubts or
even complete obliteration of a witness's prior carefully rehearsed
testimony. On the other hand, repetition of a witness' s story,
vehemently defended, can strengthen his/her credibility.
D
Damages - n. the amount of
money which a plaintiff (the person suing) may be awarded in a lawsuit.
There are many types of damages. Special damages are those which
actually were caused by the injury and include medical and hospital
bills, ambulance charges, loss of wages, property repair or replacement
costs or loss of money due on a contract. The second basic area of
damages are general damages, which are presumed to be a result of the
other party's actions, but are subjective both in nature and
determination of value of damages. These include pain and suffering,
future problems and crippling effect of an injury, loss of ability to
perform various acts, shortening of life span, mental anguish, loss of
companionship, loss of reputation (in a libel suit, for example),
humiliation from scars, loss of anticipated business and other harm.
The third major form of damage is exemplary (or punitive) damages,
which combines punishment and the setting of public example. Exemplary
damages may be awarded when the defendant acted in a malicious,
violent, oppressive, fraudulent, wanton or grossly reckless way in
causing the special and general damages to the plaintiff. On occasion
punitive damages can be greater than the actual damages, as, for
example, in a sexual harassment case or fraudulent schemes. Although
often asked for, they are seldom awarded. Nominal damages are those
given when the actual harm is minor and an award is warranted under the
circumstances. The most famous case was when Winston Churchill was
awarded a shilling (about 25 cents) against author Louis Adamic, who
had written that the British Prime Minister had been drunk at a dinner
at the White House. Liquidated damages are those pre-set by the parties
in a contract to be awarded in case one party defaults as in breach of
contract.
Dangerous - adj. unsafe,
hazardous, fraught with risk. It can be negligence for which a lawsuit
can be brought if damage results from creating or leaving unguarded a
dangerous condition which can cause harm to others, a dangerous
instrumentality (any device which can cause harm, including explosives
and poisonous substances) or dangerous weapon which is inherently
hazardous to anyone handling it or within the weapon's range.
Day in Court - n. popular
term for everyone's opportunity to bring a lawsuit or use the court
system if he/she thinks he/she has a gripe which can be resolved in
court. Example: "John finally got his day in court to protest his
speeding ticket."
De Facto - adj. Latin for
"in fact." Often used in place of "actual" to show that the court will
treat as a fact authority being exercised or an entity acting as if it
had authority, even though the legal requirements have not been met.
De Novo - adj. Latin for
"anew," which means starting over, as in a trial de novo. For example,
a decision in a small claims case may be appealed to a local trial
court, which may try the case again, de novo.
Decision - n. judgment,
decree or determination of findings of fact and/or of law by a judge,
arbitrator, court, governmental agency or other official tribunal
(court).
Declaratory Judgment - n.
a judgment of a court which determines the rights of parties without
ordering anything be done or awarding damages. While this borders on
the prohibited "advisory opinion," it is allowed to nip controversies
in the bud. Examples: a party to a contract may seek the legal
interpretation of a contract to determine the parties' rights, or a
corporation may ask a court to decide whether a new tax is truly
applicable to that business before it pays it
Decree - n. in general,
synonymous with judgment. However, in some areas of the law, the term
decree is either more common or preferred as in probates of estates,
domestic relations (divorce), admiralty law and in equity (court
rulings ordering or prohibiting certain acts). Thus, there may be
references to a final or interlocutory decree of divorce, final decree
of distribution of a dead person's estate, etc.
Default - 1) n. failure to
respond to a summons and complaint served on a party in the time
required by law. If a legal answer or other response is not filed, the
suing party (plaintiff) can request a default be entered in the record,
which terminates the rights of the defaulting party to defend the case.
Under a unique New York statute a default can be taken by failure to
respond to a summons served without a complaint. 2) the failure to make
a payment when due, which can lead to a notice of default and the start
of foreclosure proceedings if the debt is secured by a mortgage or deed
of trust. 3) v. to fail to file an answer or other response to a
summons and complaint, or fail to make a payment when due.
Default Judgment - n. if a
defendant in a lawsuit fails to respond to a complaint in the time set
by law (commonly 20 or 30 days), then the plaintiff (suer) can request
that the default (failure) be entered into the court record by the
clerk, which gives the plaintiff the right to get a default judgment.
If the complaint was for a specific amount of money owed on a note,
other money due, or a specific contract price (or if the amount due is
easy to calculate) then the clerk of the court can enter a default
judgment. If proof of damages or other relief is necessary, a hearing
will be held in which the judge determines terms of the default
judgment. In either case the defendant cannot speak for
himself/herself. A defendant who fails to file an answer or other legal
response when it is due can request that the default be set aside, but
must show a legitimate excuse and a good defense to the lawsuit.
Defect - n. an
imperfection, quite often so great that the machinery or written
document cannot be used. A car that will not run or has faulty brakes
has a defect, and so does a deed in which a party who signed the deed
to give over property did not have title to the property described.
There are also minor defects, like scratches that only lessen value but
do not make an object useless.
Defendant - n. 1) the
party sued in a civil lawsuit or the party charged with a crime in a
criminal prosecution. In some types of cases (such as divorce) a
defendant may be called a respondent.
Defense - n. 1) a general
term for the effort of an attorney representing a defendant during
trial and in pre-trial maneuvers to defeat the party suing or the
prosecution in a criminal case. 2) a response to a complaint, called an
affirmative defense, to counter, defeat or remove all or a part of the
contentions of the plaintiff.
Defense Attorney - n. 1)
the attorney representing the defendant in a lawsuit or criminal
prosecution. 2) a lawyer who regularly represents defendants who have
insurance and who is chosen by the insurance company. 3) a lawyer who
regularly represents criminal defendants. Attorneys who regularly
represent clients in actions for damages are often called "plaintiff's
attorneys."
Deficiency Judgment - n. a
judgment for an amount not covered by the value of security put up for
a loan or installment payments. In most states the party owed money can
only get a deficiency judgment if he/she chooses to file a suit for
judicial foreclosure instead of just foreclosing on real property.
However, some states allow a lawsuit for a deficiency after foreclosure
on the mortgage or deed of trust. The right to a deficiency judgment is
often written into a lease or installment contract on a vehicle. There
is a danger that the sale of a repossessed vehicle will be at a
wholesale price or to a friend at a sheriff's sale or auction, leaving
the debtor holding the bag for the difference between the sale price
and remainder due on the lease or contract.
Demand - 1) v. to claim as
a need, requirement or entitlement, as in to demand payment or
performance under a contract. In a lawsuit for payment of a debt or
performance of an act, the party suing (plaintiff) should allege that
he/she/it demanded payment or performance. 2) n. a claim, such as an
unqualified request for payment or other action. 3) the amount
requested by a plaintiff (usually in writing) during negotiations to
settle a lawsuit. 4) adj. referring to a note payable at any time a
request to pay is made.
Demonstrative Evidence -
n. actual objects, pictures, models and other devices which are
supposedly intended to clarify the facts for the judge and jury: how an
accident occurred, actual damages, medical problems, or methods used in
committing an alleged crime. Many of these are not supposed to be
actual evidence, but "aids" to understanding. A model of a knee or a
photograph of an accident scene obviously helps, but color photos of an
operation in progress or a bullet-riddled body can excite the passions
of a jury. The borderline balance between legitimate aids and evidence
intended to inflame a juror's emotions is in the hands of the trial
judge.
Demurrer - n.
(dee-muhr-ur) a written response to a complaint filed in a lawsuit
which, in effect, pleads for dismissal on the point that even if the
facts alleged in the complaint were true, there is no legal basis for a
lawsuit. A hearing before a judge (on the law and motion calendar) will
then be held to determine the validity of the demurrer. Some causes of
action may be defeated by a demurrer while others may survive. Some
demurrers contend that the complaint is unclear or omits an essential
element of fact. If the judge finds these errors, he/she will usually
sustain the demurrer (state it is valid), but "with leave to amend" in
order to allow changes to make the original complaint good. An
amendment to the complaint cannot always overcome a demurrer, as in a
case filed after the time allowed by law to bring a suit. If after
amendment the complaint is still not legally good, a demurrer will be
granted sustained. In rare occasions, a demurrer can be used to attack
an answer to a complaint. Some states have substituted a motion to
dismiss for failure to state a cause of action for the demurrer.
Denial - n. a statement in
the defendant's answer to a complaint in a lawsuit that an allegation
(claim of fact) is not true. If a defendant denies all allegations it
is called a general denial. In answering, the defendant is limited to
admitting, denying or denying on the basis he/she/it has no information
to affirm or deny. The defendant may also state affirmative defenses.
Deponent - n. a person testifying (stating answers in response to questions) at a deposition.
Deposition - n. the taking
and recording of testimony of a witness under oath before a court
reporter in a place away from the courtroom before trial. A deposition
is part of permitted pre-trial discovery (investigation), set up by an
attorney for one of the parties to a lawsuit demanding the sworn
testimony of the opposing party (defendant or plaintiff), a witness to
an event, or an expert intended to be called at trial by the
opposition. If the person requested to testify (deponent) is a party to
the lawsuit or someone who works for an involved party, notice of time
and place of the deposition can be given to the other side's attorney,
but if the witness is an independent third party, a subpena must be
served on him/her if he/she is reluctant to testify. The testimony is
taken down by the court reporter, who will prepare a transcript if
requested and paid for, which assists in trial preparation and can be
used in trial either to contradict (impeach) or refresh the memory of
the witness, or be read into the record if the witness is not
available.
Direct Evidence - n. real,
tangible or clear evidence of a fact, happening or thing that requires
no thinking or consideration to prove its existence, as compared to
circumstantial evidence.
Direct Examination - n.
the first questioning of a witness during a trial or deposition
(testimony out of court), as distinguished from cross-examination by
opposing attorneys and redirect examination when the witness is again
questioned by the original attorney.
Directed Verdict - n. a
verdict by a jury based on the specific direction by a trial judge that
they must bring in that verdict because one of the parties has not
proved his/her/its case as a matter of law (failed to present credible
testimony on some key element of the claim or of the defense). A judge
in a criminal case may direct a verdict of acquittal on the basis that
the prosecution has not proved its case, but the judge may not direct a
verdict of guilty, since that would deprive the accused of the
constitutional right to a jury trial.
Disability - n. 1) a
condition which prevents one from performing all usual physical or
mental functions. This usually means a permanent state, like blindness,
but in some cases is temporary. In recent times society and the law
have dictated that people with disabilities should be accommodated and
encouraged to operate to their maximum potential and have the right to
participate in societal and governmental activity without impediments.
Hence, access by ramps, elevators, special parking places and other
special arrangements have become required in many states. 2) a legal
impediment, including being a minor who can- not make a contract, or
being insane or incompetent.
Discovery - n. the entire
efforts of a party to a lawsuit and his/her/its attorneys to obtain
information before trial through demands for production of documents,
depositions of parties and potential witnesses, written interrogatories
(questions and answers written under oath), written requests for
admissions of fact, examination of the scene and the petitions and
motions employed to enforce discovery rights. The theory of broad
rights of discovery is that all parties will go to trial with as much
knowledge as possible and that neither party should be able to keep
secrets from the other (except for constitutional protection against
self-incrimination). Often much of the fight between the two sides in a
suit takes place during the discovery period.
Dismissal - n. 1) the act
of voluntarily terminating a criminal prosecution or a lawsuit or one
of its causes of action by one of the parties. 2) a judge's ruling that
a lawsuit or criminal charge is terminated. 3) an appeals court's act
of dismissing an appeal, letting the lower court decision stand. 4) the
act of a plaintiff dismissing a lawsuit upon settling the case. Such a
dismissal may be dismissal with prejudice, meaning it can never be
filed again, or dismissal without prejudice, leaving open the
possibility of bringing the suit again if the defendant does not follow
through on the terms of the settlement.
Diversity of Citizenship - n.
when opposing parties in a lawsuit are citizens of different states
(including corporations incorporated or doing business in different
states) or a citizen of a foreign country, which places the case under
federal court jurisdiction, pursuant to Article III, section 2 of the
U.S. Constitution, and the federal Judicial Code, if the amount in
controversy exceeds $10,000.
Docket - 1) n. the cases
on a court calendar. 2) n. brief notes, usually written by the court
clerk, stating what action was taken that day in court. 3) v. to write
down the name of a case to be put on calendar or make notes on action
in court.
E
Egress - n. way of departure. A word usually used in conjunction with "access" or "ingress."
Employee - n. a person who
is hired for a wage, salary, fee or payment to perform work for an
employer. In agency law the employee is called an agent and the
employer is called the principal. This is important to determine if one
is acting as employee when injured (for worker's compensation) or when
he/she causes damage to another, thereby making the employer liable for
damages to the injured party.
Employer - n. a person or entity which hires the services of another called a principal in the law of agency.
Employment - n. the hiring
of a person for compensation. It is important to determine if acts
occurred in the "scope of employment" to establish the possible
responsibility of the employer to the employee for injuries on the job
or to the public for acts of the employee.
Enter a Judgment - v. to
officially record a judgment on the "judgment roll," which entry is
normally performed by the court clerk once the exact wording of the
judgment has been prepared or approved and signed by the trial judge.
All times for appeal and other post-judgment actions are based on the
date of the entry of judgment and not the date when the judgment is
announced.
Equitable Estoppel - n.
where a court will not grant a judgment or other legal relief to a
party who has not acted fairly; for example, by having made false
representations or concealing material facts from the other party. This
illustrates the legal maxim: "he who seeks equity, must do equity."
Example: Larry Landlord rents space to Dora Dressmaker in his shopping
center but falsely tells her a Sears store will be a tenant and will
draw customers to the project. He does not tell her a new freeway is
going to divert traffic from the center. When she fails to pay her rent
due to lack of business, Landlord sues her for breach of lease.
Dressmaker may claim he is equitably estopped.
Equity - n. 1) a venerable
group of rights and procedures to provide fairness, unhampered by the
narrow strictures of the old common law or other technical requirements
of the law. In essence courts do the fair thing by court orders such as
correction of property lines, taking possession of assets, imposing a
lien, dividing assets, or injunctive relief (ordering a person to do
something) to prevent irreparable damage. The rules of equity arose in
England where the strict limitations of common law would not solve all
problems, so the King set up courts of chancery (equity) to provide
remedies through the royal power. Most eastern states had courts of
equity or chancery separate from courts of law, and others had parallel
systems of law and equity with different procedural rules. Now most
states combine law and equity and treat both under "one cause of
action." 2) the net value of real property, determined by subtracting
the amount of unpaid debts secured by (against) the property from the
appraised value of the property.
Errors and Omissions - n.
short hand for malpractice insurance which gives physicians, attorneys,
architects, accountants and other professionals coverage for claims by
patients and clients for alleged professional errors and omissions
which amount to negligence.
Esquire - n. a form of
address showing that someone is an attorney, usually written Albert
Pettifog, Esquire, or simply Esq. Originally in England an Esquire was
a rank just above "gentleman" and below "knight." It became a title for
barristers, sheriffs and judges.
Evidence - n. every type
of proof legally presented at trial (allowed by the judge) which is
intended to convince the judge and/or jury of alleged facts material to
the case. It can include oral testimony of witnesses, including experts
on technical matters, documents, public records, objects, photographs
and depositions (testimony under oath taken before trial). It also
includes so-called "circumstantial evidence" which is intended to
create belief by showing surrounding circumstances which logically lead
to a conclusion of fact. Comments and arguments by the attorneys,
statements by the judge and answers to questions which the judge has
ruled objectionable are not evidence. Charts, maps and models which are
used to demonstrate or explain matters are not evidence themselves, but
testimony based upon such items and marks on such material may be
evidence. Evidence must survive objections of opposing attorneys that
it is irrelevant, immaterial or violates rules against "hearsay"
(statements by a party not in court), and/or other technicalities.
Ex Parte (ex par-tay,
but popularly, ex party) adj. Latin meaning "for one party," referring
to motions, hearings or orders granted on the request of and for the
benefit of one party only. This is an exception to the basic rule of
court procedure that both parties must be present at any argument
before a judge, and to the otherwise strict rule that an attorney may
not notify a judge without previously notifying the opposition. Ex
parte matters are usually temporary orders (like a restraining order or
temporary custody) pending a formal hearing or an emergency request for
a continuance. Most jurisdictions require at least a diligent attempt
to contact the other party's lawyer of the time and place of any ex
parte hearing.
Examination - n. 1) the
questioning of a witness by an attorney. Direct examination is
interrogation by the attorney who called the witness, and
cross-examination is questioning by the opposing attorney. A principal
difference is that an attorney putting questions to his own witness
cannot ask "leading" questions, which put words in the mouth of the
witness or suggest the answer, while on cross-examination he/she can
pose a question that seems to contain an answer or suggest language for
the witness to use or agree to. 2) in bankruptcy, the questions asked
of a debtor by the judge, trustee in bankruptcy, attorneys or even
creditors, to determine the state of the debtor's affairs. 3) in
criminal law, a preliminary examination is a hearing before a judge or
other magistrate to determine whether a defendant charged with a felony
should be held for trial. Usually this is held by a lower court and if
there is any substantial evidence to show a felony has been committed
by the defendant he/she is bound over to the appropriate court for
trial, but otherwise the charge will be dismissed by the judge.
Exception - n. 1) a formal
objection during trial ("We take exception, or simply, "exception")" to
the ruling of a judge on any matter, including rulings on objections to
evidence, to show to a higher court that the lawyer did not agree with
the ruling. In modern practice, it is not necessary "to take exception"
to a judge's adverse ruling, since it is now assumed that the attorney
against whom the ruling is made objects. This also keeps the
transcribed record from being cluttered with shouts of "exception." 2)
in contracts, statutes or deeds, a statement that some matter is not
included.
Execute - v. 1) to finish,
complete or perform as required, as in fulfilling one's obligations
under a contract or a court order. 2) to sign and otherwise complete a
document, such as acknowledging the signature if required to make the
document valid. 3) to seize property under court order. 4) to put to
death pursuant to a sentence rendered by a court.
Exemplary Damages n.
often called punitive damages, these are damages requested and/or
awarded in a lawsuit when the defendant's willful acts were malicious,
violent, oppressive, fraudulent, wanton or grossly reckless. Examples
of acts warranting exemplary damages: publishing that someone had
committed murders when the publisher knew it was not true but hated the
person; an ex-husband trashes his former wife's auto and threatens
further property damage; a stockbroker buys and sells a widow's stocks
to generate commissions resulting in her losing all her capital
(money). These damages are awarded both as a punishment and to set a
public example. They reward the plaintiff for the horrible nature of
what she/he went through or suffered. Although often requested,
exemplary damages are seldom awarded. There have been major awards in
egregious (remarkable or outstanding) cases, such as fraud schemes,
sexual harassment or other intentional and vicious actions even when
the provable actual damages were not extensive.
Exhibit n. 1) a
document or object (including a photograph) introduced as evidence
during a trial. These are subject to objections by opposing attorneys
just like any evidence. 2) a copy of a paper attached to a pleading
(any legal paper filed in a lawsuit), declaration, affidavit or other
document, which is referred to and incorporated into the main document
Expert Testimony - n.
opinions stated during trial or deposition (testimony under oath before
trial) by a specialist qualified as an expert on a subject relevant to
a lawsuit or a criminal case.
Expert Witness - n. a
person who is a specialist in a subject, often technical, who may
present his/her expert opinion without having been a witness to any
occurrence relating to the lawsuit or criminal case. It is an exception
to the rule against giving an opinion in trial, provided that the
expert is qualified by evidence of his/her expertise, training and
special knowledge. If the expertise is challenged, the attorney for the
party calling the "expert" must make a showing of the necessary
background through questions in court, and the trial judge has
discretion to qualify the witness or rule he/she is not an expert, or
is an expert on limited subjects. Experts are usually paid handsomely
for their services and may be asked by the opposition the amount they
are receiving for their work on the case. In most jurisdictions, both
sides must exchange the names and addresses of proposed experts to
allow pre-trial depositions.
Extension - n. granting of
a specific amount of extra time to make a payment, file a legal
document after the date due or continue a lease after the original
expiration of the term.
Eyewitness - n. a person who has actually seen an event and can so testify in court.
F
Fact - n. an actual thing
or happening, which must be proved at trial by presentation of evidence
and which is evaluated by the finder of fact (a jury in a jury trial,
or by the judge if he/she sits without a jury).
Fact Finder (Finder of Fact) - n.
in a trial of a lawsuit or criminal prosecution, the jury or judge (if
there is no jury) who decides if facts have been proven. Occasionally a
judge may appoint a "special master" to investigate and report on the
existence of certain facts.
Federal Courts - n. the
court system which handles civil and criminal cases based on
jurisdictions enumerated in the Constitution and federal statutes. They
include federal district courts which are trial courts, district courts
of appeals and the U.S. Supreme Court, as well as specialized courts
such as bankruptcy, tax, claims (against the government) and veterans'
appeals.
Federal Tort Claims Act - n.
a statute (1948) which removed the power of the federal government to
claim immunity from a lawsuit for damages due to negligent or
intentional injury by a federal employee in the scope of his/her work
for the government. It also established a set of regulations and format
for making claims, giving jurisdiction to federal district courts.
File - 1) v. to deposit
with the clerk of the court a written complaint or petition which is
the opening step in a lawsuit and subsequent documents, including an
answer, demurrer, motions, petitions and orders. All of these are
placed in a case file which has a specific number assigned to it which
must be stated on every document. The term is used: "When are you going
to file the complaint," or "The answer will be filed tomorrow." 2) n.
the master folder of a lawsuit kept by the clerk of the court,
including all legal pleadings (documents) filed by both sides. Each
document in the file must have a stamp showing the date it was received
and the name of the clerk who received it. Any document which is filed
must be served on the opposing attorney, usually by mail, except that
the first paper filed (summons complaint, petition, motion) must be
served on all defendants personally (hand delivered by a process
server). 3) n. the record an attorney keeps on a case, containing all
papers deposited with the clerk, as well as all correspondence and
notes on the case
Final Judgment - n. the
written determination of a lawsuit by the judge who presided at trial
(or heard a successful motion to dismiss or a stipulation for
judgment), which renders (makes) rulings on all issues and completes
the case unless it is appealed to a higher court. It is also called a
final decree or final decision.
Final Settlement n. an
agreement reached by the parties to a lawsuit, usually in writing
and/or read into the record in court, settling all issues. Usually
there are elements of compromise, waiver of any right to reopen or
appeal the matter even if there is information found later which would
change matters (such as recurrence of a problem with an injury), mutual
release of any further claim by each party, a statement that neither
side is admitting fault, and some action or payment by one or both
sides. In short, the case is over, provided the parties do what they
are supposed to do according to the final settlement's terms. With the
glut of cases crowding court calendars and overwhelming the system and
delays in getting to trial (due to three factors: increased criminal
case load, increased litigious nature of society and an insufficient
number of judges), judges encourage attempts to settle, including
mandatory settlement conferences with judges or experienced settlement
attorneys present.
Finding - n. the
determination of a factual question vital (contributing) to a decision
in a case by the trier of fact (jury or judge sitting without a jury)
after a trial of a lawsuit, often referred to as findings of fact. A
finding of fact is distinguished from a conclusion of law which is
determined by the judge as the sole legal expert. Findings of fact and
conclusions of law, need not be made if waived or not requested by the
trial attorneys, leaving just the bare judgment in the case.
Foreign Corporation - n. a
corporation which is incorporated under the laws of a different state
or nation. A "foreign" corporation must file a notice of doing business
in any state in which it does substantial regular business. It must
name an "agent for acceptance of service" in that state, or the
Secretary of State in some jurisdictions will automatically be that
agent so people doing business with a foreign corporation will be able
to bring legal actions locally if necessary. Example: the Whoopee
Widget Corporation is incorporated in Delaware. It has a sales office
in Arizona, which does not make a guaranteed refund to Jack Jones of
Arizona. Jones can sue Whoopee in Arizona and serve the Arizona
Secretary of State or Whoopee's designated agent.
Foreseeable Risk - n. a
danger which a reasonable person should anticipate as the result from
his/her actions. Foreseeable risk is a common affirmative defense put
up as a response by defendants in lawsuits for negligence. A skier hits
a bump on a ski run, falls and breaks his leg. This is a foreseeable
risk of skiing. A mother is severely injured while accompanying her
child on a roller coaster when the car jumps the track and comes loose.
While there is potential risk, she had the right to anticipate that the
roller coaster was properly maintained and did not assume the risk that
it would come apart. Signs that warn "use at your own risk" do not bar
lawsuits for risks that are not foreseeable.
Forum - n. a court which has jurisdiction to hold a trial of a particular lawsuit or petition.
Four Corners of an Instrument - n.
the term for studying an entire document to understand its meaning,
without reference to anything outside of the document ("extrinsic
evidence"), such as the circumstances surrounding its writing or the
history of the party signing it. If possible a document should be
construed based on what lies within its four corners, unless such
examination cannot solve an ambiguity in its language.
Frivolous - adj. referring
to a legal move in a lawsuit clearly intended merely to harass, delay
or embarrass the opposition. Frivolous acts can include filing the
lawsuit itself, a baseless motion for a legal ruling, an answer of a
defendant to a complaint which does not deny, contest, prove or
controvert anything, or an appeal which contains not a single arguable
basis (by any stretch of the imagination) for the appeal. A frivolous
lawsuit, motion or appeal can result in a successful claim by the other
party for payment by the frivolous suer of their attorneys' fees for
defending the case. Judges are reluctant to find an action frivolous,
based on the desire not to discourage people from using the courts to
resolve disputes.
Full Disclosure - n. the
need in business transactions to tell the "whole truth" about any
matter which the other party should know in deciding to buy or
contract. In real estate sales in many states there is a full
disclosure form which must be filled out and signed under penalty of
perjury for knowingly falsifying or concealing any significant fact.
G
General Damages - n.
monetary recovery (money won) in a lawsuit for injuries suffered (such
as pain, suffering, inability to perform certain functions) or breach
of contract for which there is no exact dollar value which can be
calculated. They are distinguished from special damages, which are for
specific costs, and from punitive (exemplary) damages for punishment
and to set an example when malice, intent or gross negligence was a
factor.
Good Faith - n. honest
intent to act without taking an unfair advantage over another person or
to fulfill a promise to act, even when some legal technicality is not
fulfilled. The term is applied to all kinds of transactions.
Guest - n. 1) in general,
a person paying to stay in a hotel, motel or inn for a short time. 2) a
person staying at another's residence without charge, called a "social
guest." An important distinction is that a non-paying guest is not owed
the duty of being provided a safe boarding space, as is a paying
customer. Thus if a social guest trips on a slippery rug, he/she has no
right to sue for negligence, but a paying guest might. 3) an
"automobile" guest is one who is a passenger without paying, as
distinguished from a taxi fare, bus rider or one who has paid a friend
to drive. However, the so-called "guest statute" may give a non-paying
passenger the right to sue. An automobile guest is somewhat (but not
entirely) analogous to the "social guest" in a residence.
H
Hearsay - n. 1)
second-hand evidence in which the witness is not telling what he/she
knows personally, but what others have said to him/her. 2) a common
objection made by the opposing lawyer to testimony when it appears the
witness has violated the hearsay rule. 3) scuttlebutt or gossip.
Hearsay Rule - n. the
basic rule that testimony or documents which quote persons not in court
are not admissible. Because the person who supposedly knew the facts is
not in court to state his/her exact words, the trier of fact cannot
judge the demeanor and credibility of the alleged first-hand witness,
and the other party's lawyer cannot cross-examine (ask questions of)
him or her. However, as significant as the hearsay rule itself are the
exceptions to the rule which allow hearsay testimony such as: a) a
statement by the opposing party in the lawsuit which is inconsistent
with what he/she has said in court (called an "admission against
interest"); b) business entries made in the regular course of business,
when a qualified witness can identify the records and tell how they
were kept; c) official government records which can be shown to be
properly kept; d) a writing about an event made close to the time it
occurred, which may be used during trial to refresh a witness's memory
about the event; e) a "learned treatise" which means historical works,
scientific books, published art works, maps and charts; f) judgments in
other cases; g) a spontaneous excited or startled utterance ("oh, God,
the bus hit the little girl"); h) contemporaneous statement which
explains the meaning of conduct if the conduct was ambiguous; i) a
statement which explains a person's state of mind at the time of an
event; j) a statement which explains a person's future intentions ("I
plan to?.") if that person's state of mind is in question; k) prior
testimony, such as in deposition (taken under oath outside of court),
or at a hearing, if the witness is not available (including being
dead); l) a declaration by the opposing party in the lawsuit which was
contrary to his/her best interest if the party is not available at
trial (this differs from an admission against interest, which is
admissible in trial if it differs from testimony at trial); m) a dying
declaration by a person believing he/she is dying; n) a statement made
about one's mental set, feeling, pain or health, if the person is not
available-most often applied if the declarant is dead ("my back hurts
horribly," and then dies); o) a statement about one's own will when the
person is not available; p) other exceptions based on a judge's
discretion that the hearsay testimony in the circumstances must be
reliable.
Highway - n. any public
street, road, turnpike or canal which any member of the public has the
right to use, provided he/she/it follows the laws governing its use,
such as having a driver's license if operating a vehicle. Thus, the use
is really a privilege and not an absolute right.
Hit and Run - n. the crime
of a driver of a vehicle who is involved in a collision with another
vehicle, property or human being, who knowingly fails to stop to give
his/her name, license number and other information as required by
statute to the injured party, a witness or law enforcement officers. If
there is only property damage and no other person is present, leaving
the information attached to the damaged property may be sufficient,
provided the person causing the accident makes a report to the police.
Hit and run statutes vary from state to state. It is not a violation of
the constitutional protection against self-incrimination to be required
to stop and give this information since it is a report and not an
admission of guilt. Some hit and run cases are difficult to determine,
such as the driver leaves the accident scene to go a block to his/her
house or the neighborhood repair garage, and then walks back to the
scene.
Hold Harmless - n. a
promise to pay any costs or claims which may result from an agreement.
Quite often this is part of a settlement agreement, in which one party
is concerned that there might be unknown lawsuits or claims stemming
from the situation, so the other party agrees to cover them.
I
Impeach - v. 1) to
discredit the testimony of a witness by proving that he/she has not
told the truth or has been inconsistent, by introducing contrary
evidence, including statements made outside of the courtroom in
depositions or in statements of the witness heard by another. in camera
adj. or adv. phrase. Latin for "in chambers." This refers to a hearing
or discussions with the judge in the privacy of his chambers (office
rooms) or when spectators and jurors have been excluded from the
courtroom.
In Forma Pauperis - (in
form-ah paw-purr-iss) adj. or adv. Latin for "in the form of a pauper,"
referring to a party to a lawsuit who gets filing fees waived by filing
a declaration of lack of funds (has no money to pay). These
declarations are most often found in divorces by young marrieds or poor
defendants who have been sued.
Income - n. money, goods
or other economic benefit received. Under income tax laws, income can
be "active" through one's efforts or work (including management) or
"passive" from rentals, stock dividends, investments and interest on
deposits in which there is neither physical effort nor management. For
tax purposes, income does not include gifts and inheritances received.
Taxes are collected based on income by the federal government and most
state governments.
Information and Belief - n.
a phrase often used in legal pleadings (complaints and answers in a
lawsuit), declarations under penalty of perjury, and affidavits under
oath, in which the person making the statement or allegation qualifies
it. In effect, he/she says: "I am only stating what I have been told,
and I believe it." This makes clear about which statements he/she does
not have sure-fire, personal knowledge (perhaps it is just hearsay or
surmise) and protects the maker of the statement from claims of
outright falsehood or perjury. The typical phraseology is: "Plaintiff
is informed and believes, and upon such information and belief, alleges
that defendant diverted the funds to his own use."
Ingress - 1) n. entrance.
2) n. the right to enter. 3) v. the act of entering. Often used in the
combination "ingress and egress," which means entering and leaving, to
describe one's rights to come and go under an easement over another's
property.
Injury - n. any harm done
to a person by the acts or omissions of another. Injury may include
physical hurt as well as damage to reputation or dignity, loss of a
legal right or breach of contract. If the party causing the injury was
either willful (intentionally causing harm) or negligent then he/she is
responsible (liable) for payment of damages for the harm caused.
Theoretically, potential or continuing injury may be prevented by an
order of the court upon a petition for an injunction.
Inspection of Documents -
n. the right to examine and copy the opposing party's papers in a
lawsuit which are relevant to the case. A demand (legal request) may be
made, but the categories of documents must be stated so that the other
party can know what he/she must produce. If the opposition either
refuses to produce some documents or appears to hold back, the party
wanting to see the documents can bring a "motion to produce" requesting
a court order to produce and a penalty (sanctions) to be paid for
failure to honor the demand. A party may also use a subpena duces tecum
to obtain specific documents if they are known to exist. All of these
procedures are part of the discovery process, intended to give both
sides extensive pre-trial information. Such exchanges of documents can
lead to settlement, minimize surprises at trial and keep one side from
hiding material, thus preventing the other from being able to introduce
relevant material at trial. However, it is well known that many law
firms obfuscate, delay, pretend to misunderstand requests and fail to
be forthcoming.
Insurance - n. a contract
(insurance policy) in which the insurer (insurance company) agrees for
a fee (insurance premiums) to pay the insured party all or a portion of
any loss suffered by accident or death. The losses covered by the
policy may include property damage or loss from accident, fire, theft
or intentional harm; medical costs and/or lost earnings due to physical
injury; long-term or permanent loss of physical capacity; claims by
others due to the insured's alleged negligence (e.g. public liability
auto insurance); loss of a ship and/or cargo; finding a defect in title
to real property; dishonest employees; or the loss of someone's life.
Life insurance may be on the life of a spouse, a child, one of several
business partners or an especially important manager ("key man"
insurance), all of which is intended to provide for survivors or to
ease the burden created by the loss of a financial contributor.
So-called "mortgage" insurance is life insurance which will pay off the
remaining amount due on a home loan on the death of the husband or
wife. Life insurance proceeds are usually not included in the probate
of a dead person's estate, but the funds may be counted by the Internal
Revenue Service in calculating estate tax. Insurance companies may
refuse to pay a claim by a third party against an insured, but at the
same time may be required to assume the legal defense (pay attorney's
fees or provide an attorney) under the doctrine of "reservation of
rights."
Insured - n. 1) the person
or entity who will be compensated for loss by an insurer under the
terms of a contract called an insurance policy. 2) the person whose
life is insured by life insurance, after whose death the benefits go to
others.
Insurer - n. an insurance
company which agrees to pay someone who pays them for insurance for
losses suffered pursuant to the terms of an insurance policy. For this
benefit the customer pays the company a fee, called a premium.
Interrogatories - n. a set
of written questions to a party to a lawsuit asked by the opposing
party as part of the pre-trial discovery process. These questions must
be answered in writing under oath or under penalty of perjury within a
specified time (such as 30 days). Several states ask basic "form"
interrogatories on a printed form, with an allowance for "supplemental"
interrogatories specifically relevant to the lawsuit. Normal practice
is for the lawyers to prepare the questions and for the answering party
to have help from his/her/its attorney in understanding the meaning
(sometimes hidden) of the questions and to avoid wording in his/her
answers which could be interpreted against the party answering.
Objections as to relevancy or clarity may be raised either at the time
the interrogatories are answered or when they are used in trial. Most
states limit the number of interrogatories that may be asked without
the court's permission to keep the questions from being a means of
oppression rather than a source of information. While useful in getting
basic information, they are much easier to ask than answer and are
often intentionally burdensome. In addition the parties may request
depositions (pre-trial questioning in front of a court reporter) or
send "requests for admissions" which must be answered in writing.
Intervening Cause - n. an
event which occurs between the original improper or dangerous action
and the damage itself. Thus, the "causal connection" between the wrong
and damages is broken by the intervening cause. This is a "but for"
situation, in which the intervention becomes the real reason harm
resulted. The result is that the person who started the chain of events
is no longer responsible and will not be found liable for damages to
the injured person. Example: Fred Flameout negligently starts a
wildfire by welding on his hay bailer next to a row of haystacks, some
hay catches fire, and the fire spreads, heading toward the next-door
ranch. However, just as the county fire department has the fire nearly
contained, Peter Petrol drives his oil truck through the fireline
against a fire fighter's orders and stops on the road between
Flameout's property and Richard Rancher's. Sparks from the fire cause
Petrol's truck to explode, sending the fire on the way to Rancher's
barns and home, which burn down. Petrol's negligence is an intervening
cause which gets Flameout off the liability hook. Sometimes this is
called supervening cause or superseding.
Intoxication - n. 1) the
condition of being drunk as the result of drinking alcoholic beverages
and/or use of narcotics. In the eyes of the law this definition may
differ depending on the situation to which it is applied. 2) as it
applies to drunk driving (DUI, DWI) the standard of intoxication varies
by state between .08 and .10 alcohol in the bloodstream, or a
combination of alcohol and narcotics which would produce the same
effect even though the amount of alcohol is below the minimum. 3) as it
applies to public drunkenness the standard is subjective, meaning the
person must be unable to care for himself, be dangerous to himself or
others, be causing a disturbance or refuse to leave or move along when
requested. 4) a defense in a criminal case in which the claim is made
by the defendant that he/she was too intoxicated to form an intent to
commit the crime or to know what he/she was doing, where the amount of
intoxication is subjective but higher than for drunk driving. There is
also the question if the intoxication was an intentional aforethought
to the crime ("I wanted to get drunk so I had the nerve to kill her").
Unintentional intoxication can show lack of capacity to form an intent
and thus reduce the possible level of conviction and punishment, as
from voluntary (intentional) manslaughter down to involuntary
(unintentional but through a wrongful act) manslaughter. However, in
vehicular manslaughter, the intoxication is an element in the crime,
whether getting drunk was intentional or not, since criminal intent was
not a factor.
Irrelevant - adj. not
important, pertinent, or germane to the matter at hand or to any issue
before the court. This is the most common objection raised by attorneys
to questions asked or to answers given during testimony in a trial. The
objection is made as soon as an alert attorney believes the opposition
is going into matters which are not concerned with the facts or outside
the issues of the lawsuit. It is often stated in the trio: "Irrelevant,
immaterial and incompetent" to cover the bases. The judge must then
rule on the relevancy of the question. If the question has been
answered before the lawyer could say "objection," the judge may order
that answer stricken from the record. Blotting it from a jury's memory
or conscience, though, is impossible.
Irreparable Damage or Injury -
n. the type of harm which no monetary compensation can cure or put
conditions back the way they were, such as cutting down shade trees,
polluting a stream, not giving a child needed medication, not
supporting an excavation which may cause collapse of a building,
tearing down a structure, or a host of other actions or omissions. The
phrase must be used to claim that a judge should order an injunction,
writ, temporary restraining order or other judicial assistance,
generally known as equitable relief. Such relief is a court order of
positive action, such as prohibiting pollution or requiring the shoring
up of a defective wall.
Issue - 1) n. a person's
children or other lineal descendants such as grandchildren and
great-grandchildren. It does not mean all heirs, but only the direct
bloodline. Occasionally, there is a problem in determining whether a
writer of a will or deed meant issue to include descendants beyond his
or her immediate children. While a child or children are alive, issue
refers only to them, but if they are deceased then it will apply to the
next living generation unless there is language in the document which
shows it specifically does not apply to them. 2) n. any matter of
dispute in a legal controversy or lawsuit, very commonly used in such
phrases as "the legal issues are," "the factual issues are," "this is
an issue which the judge must decide," or "please, counsel, let us know
what issues you have agreed upon." 3) v. to send out, promulgate,
publish or make the original distribution, such as a corporation
selling and distributing shares of stock to its initial investors. 4)
n. the shares of stock or bonds of a corporation which have been sold
and distributed.
J
Joinder - n. the joining
together of several lawsuits or several parties all in one lawsuit,
provided that the legal issues and the factual situation are the same
for all plaintiffs and defendants. Joinder requires a) that one of the
parties to one of the lawsuits make a motion to join the suits and the
parties in a single case; b) notice must be made to all parties; c)
there must be a hearing before a judge to show why joinder will not
cause prejudice (hurt) to any of the parties to the existing lawsuits;
and d) an order of the judge permitting joinder. Joinder may be
mandatory if a person necessary to a fair result was not included in
the original lawsuit, or it may be permissive if joining the cases
together is only a matter of convenience or economy.
Joinder of Issue - n. that
point in a lawsuit when the defendant has challenged (denied) some or
all of plaintiff's allegations of facts, and/or when it is known which
legal questions are in dispute. This is stated in the expression: "the
issue is joined," in the same manner as a military man would say: "the
battle has been joined," meaning the fight is underway. Thus, the
pre-trial legal underbrush has been cleared away, the motions made, and
the pre-trial discovery (depositions, requests for documents, written
questions and answers, and other demands for information) sufficiently
completed, all of which makes clear what matters are to be decided by
trial.
Joint - adj., adv.
referring to property, rights or obligations which are united,
undivided and shared by two or more persons or entities. Thus, a joint
property held by both cannot be effectively transferred unless all
owners join in the transaction. If a creditor sues to collect a joint
debt, he/she must include all the debtors in the lawsuit, unless the
debt is specifically "joint and several," meaning any one of the
debtors may be individually liable. Therefore, care must be taken in
drafting deeds, sales agreements, promissory notes, joint venture
agreements and other documents. A joint tenancy is treated specially,
since it includes the right of the survivor to get the entire property
when the other dies (right of survivorship).
Joint and Several - adj.
referring to a debt or a judgment for negligence, in which each debtor
(one who owes) or each judgment defendant (one who has a judgment
against him/her) is responsible (liable) for the entire amount of the
debt or judgment. Thus, in drafting a promissory note for a debt, it is
important to state that if there is more than one person owing the
funds to be paid, the debt is joint and several, since then the person
owed money (creditor, promisee) can collect the entire amount from any
of the joint signers of the note, and not be limited to a share from
each debtor. If a party injured in an accident sues several parties for
causing his/her damages, the court may find that several people were
"jointly" negligent and contributed to the damages. The entire judgment
may be collected from any of the defendants found responsible, unless
the court finds different amounts of negligence of each defendant
contributed to the injury. Defense attorneys should require the trier
of fact (jury or judge sitting without a jury) to break down the amount
of negligence of each defendant and the plaintiff if there is
contributory negligence. Often the court will refuse to do so, allowing
the plaintiff to collect from whichever defendant has the "deep pocket"
(lots of money), and letting the defendant who pays demand
contributions from the other defendants.
Joint Liability - n. when
two or more persons are both responsible for a debt, claim or judgment.
It can be important to the person making the claim, as well as to a
person who is sued, who can demand that anyone with joint liability for
the alleged debt or claim for damages be joined in (brought into) the
lawsuit.
Joint Tortfeasors - n. two
or more persons whose negligence in a single accident or event causes
damages to another person. In many cases the joint tortfeasors are
jointly and severally liable for the damages, meaning that any of them
can be responsible to pay the entire amount, no matter how unequal the
negligence of each party was. Example: Harry Hotrod is doing 90 miles
an hour along a two-lane road in the early evening, Adele Aimster has
stopped her car to study a map with her car sticking out into the lane
by six inches. Hotrod swings out a couple of feet to miss Aimster's
vehicle, never touches the brake, and hits Victor Victim, driving from
the other direction, killing him. While Hotrod is grossly negligent for
the high speed and failure to slow down, Aimster is also negligent for
her car's slight intrusion into the lane. As a joint tortfeasor she may
have to pay all the damages, particularly if Hotrod has no money or
insurance. However, comparative negligence rules by statute or case law
in most jurisdictions will apportion the liability by percentages of
negligence among the tortfeasors (wrongdoers) and the injured parties.
Jones Act - n., adj. a
federal law which covers injuries to crewmen at sea, gives jurisdiction
to the federal courts and sets up various rules for conduct of these
cases under maritime law. A claim for recompense (payment) for damages
at sea is called a "Jones Act case."
Judge - 1) n. an official
with the authority and responsibility to preside in a court, try
lawsuits and make legal rulings. Judges are almost always attorneys. In
some states, "justices of the peace" may need only to pass a test, and
federal and state "administrative law judges" are often lawyer or
non-lawyer hearing officers specializing in the subject matter upon
which they are asked to rule. The word "court" often refers to the
judge, as in the phrase "the court found the defendant at fault," or
"may it please the court," when addressing the judge. The word "bench"
also refers to the judge or judges in general. Judges on appeals courts
are usually called "justices." Judges of courts established by a state
at the county, district, city or township level, gain office by
election, by appointment by the Governor or by some judicial selection
process in case of a vacancy. Federal judges are appointed for life by
the President of the United States with confirmation by the U.S.
Senate. A senator of the same party as the President has considerable
clout in recommending Federal judges from his/her home state. 2) v. to
rule on a legal matter, including determining the result in a trial if
there is no jury.
Judgment - n. the final
decision by a court in a lawsuit, criminal prosecution or appeal from a
lower court's judgment, except for an "interlocutory judgment," which
is tentative until a final judgment is made. The word "decree" is
sometimes used as synonymous with judgment.
Judgment Creditor - n. the
winning plaintiff in a lawsuit to whom the court decides the defendant
owes money. A judgment creditor can use various means to collect the
judgment. The judgment is good for a specified number of years and then
may be renewed by a filed request. If the defendant debtor files for
bankruptcy, the judgment creditor will have priority (the right to
share in assets) ahead of general creditors who are not secured by
mortgages or deeds of trust and do not have judgments. However, if the
bankrupt person has no assets, this becomes an empty advantage.
Judgment Debt - n. the amount of money in a judgment award to the winning party, which is owed to the winner by the losing party.
Judgment Debtor - n. the losing defendant in a lawsuit who owes the amount of the judgment to the winner.
Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict -
(N.O.V.) n. reversal of a jury's verdict by the trial judge when the
judge believes there was no factual basis for the verdict or it was
contrary to law. The judge will then enter a different verdict as "a
matter of law." Essentially the judge should have required a "directed
verdict" (instruction to the jury to return with a particular verdict
since the facts allowed no other conclusion), and when the jury "went
wrong," the judge uses the power to reverse the verdict instead of
approving it, to prevent injustice. This process is commonly called
"judgment N.O.V." or simply "N.O.V.," for Latin non obstante veredicto.
Juris Doctor - (J.D.) n.
the law degree granted upon graduation by many university law schools
with accepted high standards of admission and grading. This often
supersedes the Bachelor of Laws in recognition that the law curriculum
entitles a person to a graduate degree.
Jurisdiction - n. the
authority given by law to a court to try cases and rule on legal
matters within a particular geographic area and/or over certain types
of legal cases. It is vital to determine before a lawsuit is filed
which court has jurisdiction. State courts have jurisdiction over
matters within that state, and different levels of courts have
jurisdiction over lawsuits involving different amounts of money. For
example, Superior Courts (called District or County Courts in several
states) generally have sole control of lawsuits for larger sums of
money, domestic relations (divorces), probate of estates of deceased
persons, guardianships, conservatorships and trials of felonies. In
some states (like New York) probate and certain other matters are
within the jurisdiction of so-called Surrogate Courts. Municipal courts
(or other local courts) have jurisdiction over cases involving lesser
amounts of money, misdemeanors (crimes not punishable by state prison),
traffic matters and preliminary hearings on felony charges to determine
if there is sufficient evidence to warrant a trial by the Superior
Court. Some states have police courts to handle misdemeanors.
Jurisdiction in the courts of a particular state may be determined by
the location of real property in a state (in rem jurisdiction), or
whether the parties are located within the state (in personam
jurisdiction). Thus, a probate of Marsha Blackwood's estate would be in
Idaho where she lived and died, but jurisdiction over her title to real
estate in Utah will be under the jurisdiction of the Utah courts.
Federal courts have jurisdiction over lawsuits between citizens of
different states, cases based on federal statutes such as fair labor
standards and antitrust violations, charges of federal crimes, appeals
from bankruptcy proceedings, maritime cases or legal actions involving
federal constitutional questions. Sometimes regulatory agencies have
the initial jurisdiction before any legal action may be filed in court.
More than one court may have concurrent jurisdiction, such as both
state and federal courts, and the lawyer filing the lawsuit may have to
make a tactical decision as to which jurisdiction is more favorable or
useful to his/her cause, including time to get to trial, the potential
pool of jurors or other considerations. Appellate jurisdiction is given
by statute to appeals courts to hear appeals about the judgment of the
lower court that tried a case, and to order reversal or other
correction if error is found. State appeals are under the jurisdiction
of the state appellate courts, while appeals from federal district
courts are within the jurisdiction of the courts of appeal and
eventually the Supreme Court. Jurisdiction is not to be confused with
"venue," which means the best place to try a case. Thus, any state
court may have jurisdiction over a matter, but the "venue" is in a
particular county.
Jurisdictional Amount - n.
the range between the minimum and maximum amount of money or value in
dispute in a lawsuit (generally based on the amount demanded in the
lawsuit), which determines which court has jurisdiction to try the
case. Example: in California, municipal courts have jurisdiction up to
$25,000, superior courts have jurisdiction over that sum, and small
claims courts (an alternative to formal municipal court filing) have a
maximum jurisdictional amount of $5,000. Federal jurisdiction commences
at the $10,000 level, if the lawsuit fits other federal requirements.
Jurisprudence - n. the entire subject of law, the study of law and legal questions.
Jury - n. one of the
remarkable innovations of the English common law (from the Angles and
Saxons, but also employed in Normandy prior to the Norman Conquest in
1066), it is a group of citizens called to hear a trial of a criminal
prosecution or a lawsuit, decide the factual questions of guilt or
innocence or determine the prevailing party (winner) in a lawsuit and
the amount to be paid, if any, by the loser. Once selected, the jury is
sworn to give an honest and fair decision. The legal questions are
determined by the judge presiding at the trial, who explains those
issues to the members of the jury (jurors) in "jury instructions." The
common number of jurors is 12 (dating back a thousand years), but some
states allow a smaller number (six or eight) if the parties agree. For
a plaintiff (the party suing) to win a lawsuit with a jury,
three-quarters of the jurors must favor the claim. Guilt or innocence
in a criminal trial requires a unanimous decision of the jury, except
two states (Oregon and Louisiana) allow a conviction with 10 of 12
jurors. Juries have greatly changed in recent decades, as the term
"impartial jury" in the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution requires
that the pool of jurors must include all races, ethnic groups and women
as well as men in percentages relative to the general population. Any
failure to achieve that balance or systematic challenges to those of
the same ethnicity of the accused, may result in a claim on appeal that
the jury was not fair-in popular jargon, not "a jury of one's peers."
This does not mean that a Samoan male must be tried by other Samoan
males, but it does mean that the potential jurors must come from a
balanced group. Members of the jury are supposed to be free of bias,
have no specific knowledge of the case and have no connection with any
of the parties or witnesses. Questions are asked by the judge and
attorneys (called "voir dire") during jury selection to weed out those
whom they may challenge on those grounds (challenge for cause). Some
potential jurors are challenged (peremptory challenge) because the
attorney for one side or the other feels there is some hidden bias. In
well-financed cases this has led to the hiring of jury "specialists"
and psychologists by attorneys to aid in jury selection. In a
high-profile criminal case in which the jury might be influenced by
public comment or media coverage during trial, the court may order the
jury be sequestered (kept in a hotel away from family, friends, radio,
television and newspapers.)
Just Compensation - n. 1)
in general a fair and reasonable amount of money to be paid for work
performed or to make one "whole" after loss due to damages. 2) the full
value to be paid for property taken by the government for public
purposes guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,
which states: "?nor shall private property be taken for public use
without just compensation." If the amount offered by the governmental
agency taking the property is not considered sufficient, the property
owner may demand a trial to determine just compensation.
K
K - n. the shorthand symbol for "contract" used almost universally by lawyers and law students.
L
Last Clear Chance - n. a
rule of law in determining responsibility for damages caused by
negligence, which provides that if the plaintiff (the party suing for
damages) is negligent, that will not matter if the defendant (the party
being sued for damages caused by his/her negligence) could have still
avoided the accident by reasonable care in the final moments (no matter
how slight) before the accident. The theory is that although the
plaintiff may have been negligent, his/her negligence no longer was the
cause of the accident because the defendant could have prevented the
accident. Most commonly applied to auto accidents, a typical case of
last clear chance would be when one driver drifts over the center line,
and this action was noted by an oncoming driver who proceeds without
taking simple evasive action, crashes into the first driver and is thus
liable for the injuries to the first driver who was over the line. In
the few states which apply the strict "contributory negligence" rule
which keeps a negligent plaintiff from recovering damages from a
negligent defendant, "last clear chance" can save the careless
plaintiff's lawsuit.
Latent Defect - n. a
hidden flaw, weakness or imperfection in an article which a seller
knows about, but the buyer cannot discover by reasonable inspection. It
includes a hidden defect in the title to land, such as an incorrect
property description. Generally, this entitles the purchaser to get
his/her money back (rescind the deal) or get a replacement without a
defect on the basis of "implied" warranty of quality that a buyer could
expect ("merchantability"). Even an "as is" purchase could be rescinded
if it could be shown the seller knew of the flaw.
Law of Admiralty - n. statutes, customs and treaties dealing with actions on navigable waters. It is synonymous with maritime law.
Lawsuit - n. a common term
for a legal action by one person or entity against another person or
entity, to be decided in a court of law, sometimes just called a
"suit." The legal claims within a lawsuit are called "causes of
action."
Lay a Foundation - v. in
evidence, to provide to the judge the qualification of a witness
(particularly an expert witness) or a document or other piece of
evidence which assures the court of the talent and experience of a
witness or the authenticity of the document or article. Example: a
medical report cannot be introduced unless the physician who wrote it
testifies that he wrote it, or a photograph must be authenticated by
the photographer or by testimony that it truly reflects a particular
place or event. An expert witness is qualified by testimony as to
experience and training.
Leading - 1) v. short for
"leading the witness," in which the attorney during a trial or
deposition asks questions in a form in which he/she puts words in the
mouth of the witness or suggests the answer. Leading is improper if the
attorney is questioning a witness called by that attorney and
presumably friendly to the attorney's side of the case. Thus, the
opposing attorney will object that a question is "leading," and if so
the judge will sustain (uphold) the objection and prohibit the question
in that form. However, leading questions are permissible in
cross-examination of a witness called by the other party or if the
witness is found to be hostile or adverse to the position of the
attorney conducting the questioning. 2) adj. referring to a question
asked of a witness which suggests the answer.
Leading Question - n. a
question asked of a witness by an attorney during a trial or a
deposition (questioning under oath outside of court), suggesting an
answer or putting words in the mouth of the witness. Such a question is
often objected to, usually with the simple objection: "leading." A
leading question is allowable only when directed to the opposing party
to the lawsuit or to an "adverse witness" during cross-examination (the
chance to question after direct testimony) on the basis that such a
witness can readily deny the proposed wording. Typical improper leading
question: "Didn't the defendant appear to you to be going too fast in
the limited visibility?" The proper question would be: "How fast do you
estimate the defendant was going?" followed by "What was the
visibility?" and "How far could you see?"
Leading the Witness - n.
asking a question during a trial or deposition which puts words in the
mouth of the witness or suggests the answer, which is improper
questioning of a witness called by that attorney, but is proper in
cross-examination or allowed if a witness is declared by the judge to
be a hostile or adverse witness.
Legal Duty - n. the
responsibility to others to act according to the law. Proving the duty
(such as not to be negligent, to keep premises safe, or to drive within
the speed limit) and then showing that the duty was breached are
required elements of any lawsuit for damages due to negligence or
intentional injuries.
Legal Services - n. the work performed by a lawyer for a client.
Lemon Law - n. statutes
adopted in some states to make it easier for a buyer of a new vehicle
to sue for damages or replacement if the dealer or manufacturer cannot
make it run properly after a reasonable number of attempts to fix the
car. Without a "lemon law" auto makers have often demanded the buyer
come back a dozen times and give up use of the car for lengthy periods
while they test it, claiming they are "still trying" to make it run
right.
Liability - n. one of the
most significant words in the field of law, liability means legal
responsibility for one's acts or omissions. Failure of a person or
entity to meet that responsibility leaves him/her/it open to a lawsuit
for any resulting damages or a court order to perform (as in a breach
of contract or violation of statute). In order to win a lawsuit the
suing party (plaintiff) must prove the legal liability of the defendant
if the plaintiff's allegations are shown to be true. This requires
evidence of the duty to act, the failure to fulfill that duty and the
connection (proximate cause) of that failure to some injury or harm to
the plaintiff. Liability also applies to alleged criminal acts in which
the defendant may be responsible for his/her acts which constitute a
crime, thus making him/her subject to conviction and punishment.
Example: Jack Jumpstart runs a stop sign in his car and hits Sarah
Stepforth as she is crossing in the cross-walk. Jack has a duty of care
to Sarah (and the public) which he breaches by his negligence, and
therefore has liability for Sarah's injuries, giving her the right to
bring a lawsuit against him. However, Jack's father owns the automobile
and he, too, may have liability to Sarah based on a statute which makes
a car owner liable for any damages caused by the vehicle he owns. The
father's responsibility is based on "statutory liability" even though
he personally breached no duty. A signer of a promissory note has
liability for money due if it is not paid and so would a co-signer who
guarantees it. A contractor who has agreed to complete a building has
liability to the owner if he fails to complete on time.
Liable - adj. responsible
or obligated. Thus, a person or entity may be liable for damages due to
negligence, liable to pay a debt, liable to perform an act which
he/she/it contracted to do, or liable to punishment for commission of a
crime. Failure to meet the responsibility or obligation opens one up to
a lawsuit, and committing a crime can lead to a criminal prosecution.
Lien - n. any official
claim or charge against property or funds for payment of a debt or an
amount owed for services rendered. A lien is usually a formal document
signed by the party to whom money is owed and sometimes by the debtor
who agrees to the amount due. A lien carries with it the right to sell
property, if necessary, to obtain the money. A mortgage or a deed of
trust is a form of lien, and any lien against real property must be
recorded with the County Recorder to be enforceable, including an
abstract of judgment which turns a judgment into a lien against the
judgment debtor's property. There are numerous types of liens
including: a mechanic's lien against the real property upon which a
workman, contractor or supplier has provided work or materials, an
attorney's lien for fees to be paid from funds recovered by his/her
efforts, a medical lien for medical bills to be paid from funds
recovered for an injury, a landlord's lien against a tenant's property
for unpaid rent or damages, a tax lien to enforce the government's
claim of unpaid taxes, or the security agreement (UCC-1) authorized by
the Uniform Commercial Code. Most liens are enforceable in the order in
which they were recorded or filed (in the case of security agreements),
except tax liens, which have priority over the private citizen's claim.
Limitation of Actions - n.
the period of time in which a person has to file with the clerk of the
court or appropriate agency what he/she believes is a valid lawsuit or
claim. The period varies greatly depending on what type of case is
involved, whether the suit is against the government, whether it is by
a minor, and most importantly, in what state or federal jurisdiction
the right to sue arose. This is more commonly called the statute of
limitations, which are specific periods for various claims in each
state.
Litigant - n. any party to
a lawsuit. This means plaintiff, defendant, petitioner, respondent,
cross-complainant and cross-defendant, but not a witness or attorney.
Litigation - n. any lawsuit or other resort to the courts to determine a legal question or matter.
Long-Arm Statute - n. law
which gives a local state court jurisdiction over an out-of-state
company or individual whose actions caused damage locally or to a local
resident. The legal test is whether the out-of-state defendant has
contacts within the state which are "sufficiently substantial." An
accident or injury within the state usually shows such a substantial
contact. This is particularly important when a driver from one state is
sued in another state for damages caused by his/her negligence there.
It also can be employed if a product shipped from out-of-state fails,
explodes or causes damage to a local person who sues in the state where
he/she resides. The long-arm statute allows him/her to get local court
jurisdiction over the defendant.
Loss of Use - n. the
inability to use an automobile, premises or some equipment due to
damage to the vehicle, premises or articles caused by the negligence or
other wrongdoing of another. Examples: compensation for each day a car
is out of commission during repairs or for the period of non-occupancy
while a burned building is restored. A common standard of compensation
(payment) is rental value of the automobile or premises, but the period
of loss must be "reasonable," meaning the damages will be limited to a
period in which a person would normally and promptly proceed to have
the vehicle repaired or arrange reconstruction of the building or
premises.
M
Make One Whole - v. to pay
or award damages sufficient to put the party who was damaged back into
the position he/she would have been in without the fault of another.
Malpractice - n. An act or
continuing conduct of a professional which does not meet the standard
of professional competence and results in provable damages to his/her
client or patient. Such an error or omission may be through negligence,
ignorance (when the professional should have known), or intentional
wrongdoing. However, malpractice does not include the exercise of
professional judgment even when the results are detrimental to the
client or patient. Except in cases of extremely obvious or intentional
wrongs, in order to prove malpractice there must be testimony of an
expert as to the acceptable standard of care applied to the specific
act or conduct which is claimed to be malpractice and testimony of the
expert that the professional did not meet that standard. The defendant
then can produce his/her own expert to counter that testimony.
Professions which are subject to lawsuits based on claims of
malpractice include lawyers, physicians, dentists, hospitals,
accountants, architects, engineers and real estate brokers. In some
states in order to file an action for malpractice against a medical
caregiver, there must be a written demand or notice which gives the
physician or hospital a chance to settle the matter before a suit is
filed. In actions against attorneys it is mandatory that the plaintiff
prove that the error, if any, caused damages. This means that a
lawsuit, claim or negotiation the attorney was handling would have
resulted in a win or better recovery except for the malpractice. Thus,
there is a requirement of proving the original "case within the case"
during the trial of the malpractice claim. Contrary to public
perception, substantial judgments in malpractice actions are rare, with
studies showing that only a small percentage of the claims result in
recovery for the allegedly aggrieved client or patient. The principal
reason is that most cries of malpractice are unfounded and are based on
unhappiness with the result of the original services no matter how well
handled, a breakdown in communication between attorney or doctor and
client or patient, anger with the professional, retaliation for
attempts to collect unpaid fees or greed.
Maritime Law - n. Also
called "admiralty law" or "the law of admiralty," the laws and
regulations, includ-ing international agreements and treaties, which
exclusively govern activities at sea or in any navigable waters. In the
United States, federal courts have jurisdiction over maritime law.
Master and Servant - n.
the body of law, including statutes and legal decisions which are
precedents, which relates to the relationship of an employer and
employee.
Mediation - n. the attempt
to settle a legal dispute through active participation of a third party
(mediator) who works to find points of agreement and make those in
conflict agree on a fair result. Mediation differs from arbitration, in
which the third party (arbitrator) acts much like a judge in an
out-of-court, less formal setting but does not actively participate in
the discussion. Mediation has become very common in trying to resolve
domestic relations disputes (divorce, child custody, visitation) and is
often ordered by the judge in such cases. Mediation also has become
more frequent in contract and civil damage cases. There are
professional mediators or lawyers who do some mediation for substantial
fees, but the financial cost is less than fighting the matter out in
court and may achieve early settlement and an end to anxiety. However,
mediation does not always result in a settlement.
Memorandum - n. 1) a brief
writing, note, summary or outline. 2) A "memorandum of decision," or
"memorandum opinion," is a brief statement by a judge announcing
his/her ruling without detail or giving extensive reasons, which may or
may not be followed by a more comprehensive written decision. Such
memoranda (plural) are issued by appeals courts in language such as:
"The petition of appellant is denied for the reasons stated in Albini
v. Younger," or "The decision below is affirmed."
Mental Suffering - n. emotional pain synonymous with "mental anguish."
Mitigation of Damages - n.
the requirement that someone injured by another's negligence or breach
of contract must take reasonable steps to reduce the damages, injury or
cost, and to prevent them from getting worse. Thus, a person claiming
to have been injured by another motorist should seek medical help and
not let the problem worsen. If a tenant moves out before a lease has
expired, a landlord must make reasonable attempts to re-let the
property and take in some rents (which are credited against the amount
remainder of the lease) to mitigate his/her loss.
Moiety - (moy-et-tee) n. half. Generally a reference to interest in real property, moiety is seldom used today
Moot - adj. 1) unsettled,
open to argument or debatable, specifically about a legal question
which has not been determined by any decision of any court. 2) an issue
only of academic interest.
Motion - n. a formal
request made to a judge for an order or judgment. Motions are made in
court all the time for many purposes: to continue (postpone) a trial to
a later date, to get a modification of an order, for temporary child
support, for a judgment, for dismissal of the opposing party's case,
for a rehearing, for sanctions (payment of the moving party's costs or
attorney's fees), or for dozens of other purposes. Most motions require
a written petition, a written brief of legal reasons for granting the
motion (often called "points and authorities"), written notice to the
attorney for the opposing party and a hearing before a judge. However,
during a trial or a hearing, an oral motion may be permitted.
Motion for a New Trial - n.
a request made by the loser for the case to be tried again on the basis
that there were significant legal errors in the way the trial was
conducted and/or the jury or the judge sitting without a jury obviously
came to an incorrect result. This motion must be made within a few days
after the judgment is formally entered and is usually heard by the same
judge who presided at the trial. Such a motion is seldom granted
(particularly if the judge heard the case without a jury) unless there
is some very clear error which any judge would recognize. Some lawyers
feel the motion helps add to the record of argument leading to an
appeal of the case to an appeals court.
Motion for a Summary Judgment - n.
a written request for a judgment in the moving party's favor before a
lawsuit goes to trial and based on testimony recorded outside court,
affidavits (declarations under penalty of perjury), depositions,
admissions of fact and/or answers to written interrogatories, claiming
that all factual and legal issues can be decided in the moving party's
favor. These alleged facts are accompanied by a written legal brief
(points and authorities) in support of the motion. The opposing party
needs to show by affidavits, written declarations or points and
authorities (written legal argument in support of the motion) that
there are "triable issues of fact" and/or of law by points and
authorities. If there are any triable issues the motion must be denied
and the case can go to trial. Sometimes, if there are several claims
(causes of action) such a motion may cause the judge to find (decide)
that some causes of action can be decided under the motion, leaving
fewer matters actually to be tried. The paper- work on both sides is
complex, burdensome and in many states, based on strict procedures.
Motion for Dismissal - (non-suit)
n. application by a defendant in a lawsuit or criminal prosecution
asking the judge to rule that the plaintiff (the party who filed the
lawsuit) or the prosecution has not and cannot prove its case.
Attorneys most often make this motion after the plaintiff or prosecutor
has presented all the evidence they have, but they can make it at the
end of the evidence presentation but before judgment or upon evidence
being presented that proves to the judge that the defendant cannot
lose. Quite often this is an oral motion, and arguments are made in the
judge's chambers where the jury cannot hear. It is also sometimes
called a motion for nonsuit.
Motion in Limine - (lim-in-nay)
n. Latin for "threshold," a motion made at the start of a trial
requesting that the judge rule that certain evidence may not be
introduced in trial. This is most common in criminal trials where
evidence is subject to constitutional limitations, such as statements
made without the Miranda warnings (reading the suspect his/her rights).
Motion to Strike - n. a
request for a judge's order to eliminate all or a portion of the legal
pleading (complaint, answer) of the opposition on any one of several
grounds. It is often used in an attempt to have an entire cause of
action removed ("stricken") from the court record. A motion to strike
is also made orally during trial to ask the judge to order "stricken"
answers by a witness in violation of rules of evidence (laws covering
what is admissible in trial). Even though the jury is admonished to
ignore such an answer or some comment, the jury has heard it, and "a
bell once rung, cannot be unrung."
Movant - n. the party in a lawsuit or other legal proceeding who makes a motion (application for a court order or judgment).
Move - v. to make a motion in court applying for a court order or judgment.
N
N.O.V. - adj. shorthand
acronym of Latin for non obstante veredicto (nahn ahb-stan-tuh
very-dick-toe) meaning "notwithstanding the verdict," referring to a
decision of a judge to set aside (reverse) a jury's decision in favor
of one party in a lawsuit or a guilty verdict when the judge is
convinced the judgment is not reasonably supported by the facts and/or
the law. The result is called a "judgment N.O.V." Granting a motion for
such a ruling means the court realizes it should have directed the jury
to reach an opposite verdict in the first place.
Negligence - n. failure to
exercise the care toward others which a reasonable or prudent person
would do in the circumstances, or taking action which such a reasonable
person would not. Negligence is accidental as distinguished from
"intentional torts" (assault or trespass, for example) or from crimes,
but a crime can also constitute negligence, such as reckless driving.
Negligence can result in all types of accidents causing physical and/or
property damage, but can also include business errors and
miscalculations, such as a sloppy land survey. In making a claim for
damages based on an allegation of another's negligence, the injured
party (plaintiff) must prove: a) that the party alleged to be negligent
had a duty to the injured party-specifically to the one injured or to
the general public, b) that the defendant's action (or failure to act)
was negligent-not what a reasonably prudent person would have done, c)
that the damages were caused ("proximately caused") by the negligence.
An added factor in the formula for determining negligence is whether
the damages were "reasonably foreseeable" at the time of the alleged
carelessness. If the injury is caused by something owned or controlled
by the supposedly negligent party, but how the accident actually
occurred is not known (like a ton of bricks falls from a construction
job), negligence can be found based on the doctrine of res ipsa
loquitor (Latin for "the thing speaks for itself"). Furthermore, in six
states (Alabama, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia,
Maryland) and the District of Columbia, an injured party will be denied
any judgment (payment) if found to have been guilty of even slight
"contributory negligence" in the accident. This archaic and unfair rule
has been replaced by "comparative negligence" in the other 44 states,
in which the negligence of the claimant is balanced with the percentage
of blame placed on the other party or parties ("joint tortfeasors")
causing the accident. In automobile accident cases in 16 states the
head of the household is held liable for damages caused by any member
of the family using the car under what is called the "family purpose"
doctrine. Nine states (California, New York, Michigan, Florida, Idaho,
Iowa, Minnesota, Nevada, Rhode Island) make the owner of the vehicle
responsible for all damages caused by a driver given permission to use
the car, whether or not the negligent driver has assets or insurance to
pay a judgment. Eight states (Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey,
Oregon, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia) allow the
owner to rebut a presumption that the driver was authorized to use the
car. Negligence is one of the greatest sources of litigation (along
with contract and business disputes) in the United States.
Negotiation - n. 1) the
transfer of a check, promissory note, bill of exchange or other
negotiable instrument to another for money, goods, services or other
benefit. 2) give-and-take discussion or conference in an attempt to
reach an agreement or settle a dispute.
Net - n., adj. the amount
of money or value remaining after all costs, losses, taxes,
depreciation of value and other expenses and deductions have been paid
and/or subtracted. Thus the term is used in net profit, net income, net
loss, net worth or net estate.
No Fault Insurance - n: a
type of automobile insurance required of car owners by law in 19 states
(New York, Michigan, Massachusetts, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut,
Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland,
Minnesota, New Jersey, North Dakota, Oregon, South Carolina, South
Dakota) and the District of Columbia, in which the persons injured in
an accident are paid basic damages by the company that insured the
vehicle in which they were riding or by which they were hit as a
pedestrian. The amount of damages to be paid by the insurance is
limited to actual medical and rehabilitation expenses, lost wages and
necessary expenses (such as loss of use of the vehicle) with a low
maximum and for a limited period. In addition, an injured person can
sue the negligent driver for medical costs above the amount of the
insurance, pain and suffering if the injuries required medical
treatment or resulted in permanent injury, broken bones or
disfigurement, or wrongful death. All registered automobiles must be
insured. The benefits of no fault include rapid payment of all medical
expenses in most cases; elimination of lawsuits except in cases
involving lesser injuries, very serious injury or death; and
elimination of extensive and costly investigation, proof of negligence,
medical reports and depositions. The statutes vary in states requiring
"no fault" insurance. There have been legal challenges to the statutes,
primarily suggesting that limitations on the right to sue or
establishment of narrow categories of injury for which a claim of "pain
and suffering" may be included in a lawsuit are unconstitutional. State
courts have struck down those restrictions which were arbitrary or
prevented legitimate claims. The fight over no fault insurance laws
continues state by state, with the insurance companies and some court
reform advocates (who believe "no fault" alleviates a clogging of the
courts) favoring it, and trial attorneys either opposing the proposal
outright or wanting much more leeway for filing lawsuits.
Nominal Damages - n. a
small amount of money awarded to a plaintiff in a lawsuit to show
he/she was right but suffered no substantial harm. The most famous case
of nominal damages was when Prime Minister Winston Churchill was
awarded a shilling (about 25 cents) in a libel lawsuit he had brought
against author Louis Adamic for writing that Churchill had been drunk
during a dinner at the White House. The Prime Minister was vindicated,
but the jury could not find that his towering reputation had been
damaged
Non-Contestability Clause
- n. an insurance policy provision which requires the insurance company
to challenge any statement in the application for the insurance within
a specific time. This prevents the company from denying coverage on the
basis of fraud or error in the application when a claim is made by the
policyholder.
Notice - n. 1)
information, usually in writing in all legal proceedings, of all
documents filed, decisions, requests, motions, petitions, and upcoming
dates. Notice is a vital principle of fairness and due process in legal
procedure and must be given to both parties, to all those affected by a
lawsuit or legal proceeding, to the opposing attorney and to the court.
In short, neither a party nor the court can operate in secret, make
private overtures or conceal actions. Notice of a lawsuit or petition
for a court order begins with personal service on the defendants
(delivery of notice to the person) of the complaint or petition,
together with a summons or order to appear (or file an answer) in
court. Thereafter, if a party is represented by an attorney, notice can
usually be given to the attorney by mail. If there is a so-called ex
parte hearing (an emergency session with a judge with only the
requesting party or his/her attorney present) the party wanting the
hearing must make a diligent attempt to give notice to the other party.
A court may allow "constructive" notice by publication in an approved
legal newspaper of a summons in a lawsuit. Examples: in a divorce
action, publication gives constructive notice to a spouse known to have
left the state or hiding to avoid service; in a quiet title action,
notice by publication is given to alert unknown descendants of a dead
person who may have had an interest in the real property which is the
subject of a lawsuit. Recordation of deeds, mortgages, deeds of trust,
easements, leases and other documents affecting real property title
give "constructive" notice to the general public, and thus
"constructive" notice to anyone interested in the property, without
delivering notice to individuals. 2) a writing informing a party to a
contract, promissory note, lease, rental agreement or other legal
relationship of a delinquency in payment, default, intent to foreclose,
notice to pay rent or quit (leave) or other notice required by the
agreement, mortgage, deed of trust or statute. 3) information. 4) being
informed of a fact, or should have known based on the circumstances, as
"he had notice that the roof was not water-tight."
O
Occupation - n. 1) fairly
permanent trade, profession, employment, business or means of
livelihood. 2) possession of real property or use of a thing.
Occupational Disease - n.
an illness resulting from long-term employment in a particular type of
work, such as black lung disease among miners, or cancer among asbestos
installers. If the chances of being afflicted by such an illness are
significantly higher than the average in the population, then a former
employee may receive benefits from Social Security or worker's
compensation for a work-related disability.
Of Counsel - adj.
reference to an attorney who is not actively involved in the day-to-day
work of a law firm, but may be available in particular matters or for
consultation. This designation often identifies a semi-retired partner,
an attorney who occasionally uses the office for a few clients or one
who only consults on a particular case or on his/her specialty. Putting
the name of the attorney "of counsel" on a law firm's stationery gives
the office the prestige of the lawyer's name and reputation, without
requiring his/her full-time presence.
Offer - n. a specific
proposal to enter into an agreement with another. An offer is essential
to the formation of an enforceable contract. An offer and acceptance of
the offer creates the contract.
Officer of the Court - n.
any person who has an obligation to promote justice and effective
operation of the judicial system, including judges, the attorneys who
appear in court, bailiffs, clerks and other personnel. As officers of
the court lawyers have an absolute ethical duty to tell judges the
truth, including avoiding dishonesty or evasion about reasons the
attorney or his/her client is not appearing, the location of documents
and other matters related to conduct of the courts.
Offset - 1) n. also called
a "setoff," the deduction by a debtor from a claim or demand of a debt
or obligation. Such an offset is based upon a counterclaim against the
party making the original claim. Example: Harry Hardhead makes a claim
or files a lawsuit asking for $20,000 from Danny Debtor as the final
payment in purchase of a restaurant; as part of his defense Debtor
claims an offset of $10,000 for alleged funds owed by Hardhead for
repairs Debtor made on property owned by Hardhead, thus reducing the
claim of Hardhead to $10,000. 2) v. to counterclaim an alleged debt
owed by a claimant to reduce the demand of that claimant.
Omnibus Clause - n. 1) an
automobile insurance policy clause which provides coverage no matter
who is driving the car. 2) a provision in a judgment for distribution
of an estate of a deceased person, giving "all other property" to the
beneficiaries named in the will.
On All Fours - adj. a
reference to a lawsuit in which all the legal issues are identical (or
so close as to make no difference) to another case, particularly an
appeals decision which is a precedent in deciding the suit before the
court. Thus, an attorney will argue that the prior case of, for
example, Steele v. Merritt is "on all fours" with the case before the
court, and so the court must reach the same conclusion.
On the Merits - adj.
referring to a judgment, decision or ruling of a court based upon the
facts presented in evidence and the law applied to that evidence. A
judge decides a case "on the merits" when he/she bases the decision on
the fundamental issues and considers technical and procedural defenses
as either inconsequential or overcome. Example: An attorney is two days
late in filing a set of legal points and authorities in opposition to a
motion to dismiss. Rather than dismiss the case based on this technical
procedural deficiency, the judge considers the case "on the merits" as
if this mistake had not occurred.
Open Court - n. the
conduct of judicial proceedings (trials, hearings and routine matters
such as trial settings) in which the public may be present. Some
hearings and discussions are held in the judge's chambers ("in camera")
or with the courtroom cleared of non-participants and/or the jury such
as adoptions, sanity hearings, juvenile criminal charges and arguments
over evidence and motions which might prejudice the jury. The Sixth
Amendment to the Constitution, later applied to the states under the
14th Amendment, guarantees criminal defendants a "public trial," so all
criminal proceedings are held in "open court." This does not apply to
pre-trial negotiations and procedural and motion discussions with the
judge, which are usually held in chambers.
Opening Statement - n. the
explanation by the attorneys for both sides at the beginning of the
trial of what will be proved during the trial. The defendant's attorney
may delay the opening statement for the defense until the plaintiff's
evidence has been introduced. Unlike a "closing argument," the opening
statement is supposed to be a factual presentation and not an argument.
Opinion - n. the
explanation of a court's judgment. When a trial court judgment is
appealed to a court of appeals, the appeals judge's opinion will be
detailed, citing case precedents, analyzing the facts, the applicable
law and the arguments of the attorneys for the parties. Those opinions
considered by the court to be worthy of serving as a precedent or
involving important legal issues will be published in the official
reports available in most law libraries. Since appeals courts have
anywhere from three to nine judges, there are often "dissenting
opinions" which disagree with the majority opinion, and "concurring
opinions" which agree with the result, but apply different emphasis,
precedents or logic to reach the determination. Normally the majority
opinion identifies the author, but some brief opinions are labeled "in
banc" (by the bench) or "per curiam" (by the court) in which the author
is not specified.
Order - 1) n. every
direction or mandate of a judge or a court which is not a judgment or
legal opinion (although both may include an order) directing that
something be done or that there is prohibition against some act. This
can range from an order that a case will be tried on a certain date, to
an order that a convicted defendant be executed at the state prison. 2)
v. for a judge to direct that a party before the court perform a
particular act or refrain from certain acts, or to direct a public
official or court employee (like a sheriff) to take certain actions
such as seizing property or arresting an AWOL defendant.
Ordinance - n. a statute enacted by a city or town.
ordinary course of business n. conduct of business within
normal commercial customs and usages. original jurisdiction n. the
authority of a court to hold a trial, as distinguished from appellate
jurisdiction to hear appeals from trial judgments.
Out of Court - adj.
referring to actions, including negotiations between parties and/or
their attorneys, without any direct involvement of a judge or the
judicial system. Most commonly it refers to an "out-of-court
settlement" in which the parties work out a settlement agreement, which
they may present to the court for inclusion in a judgment approving the
agreement so that the parties can request a court to enforce the
settlement in case one of the parties reneges and fails to honor the
terms of the settlement. Quite often a judgment approving an
out-of-court settlement is held in abeyance and replaced by a dismissal
if the terms are fulfilled. Some out-of-court settlements are kept
confidential and the lawsuit is dismissed.
Out-of-Pocket Expenses - n.
moneys paid directly for necessary items by a contractor, trustee,
executor, administrator or any person responsible to cover expenses not
detailed by agreement. They may be recoverable from a defendant in a
lawsuit for breach of contract; allowable for reimbursement by
trustees, executors or administrators; or deductible by a landlord from
a tenant's security deposit for damages beyond normal wear and tear.
Overrule - v. 1) to reject
an attorney's objection to a question to a witness or admission of
evidence. By overruling the objection, the trial judge allows the
question or evidence in court. If the judge agrees with the objection,
he/she "sustains" the objection and does not allow the question or
evidence. 2) to decide (by a court of appeals) that a prior appeals
decision on a legal issue was not correct and is therefore no longer a
valid precedent on that legal question.
P
Pain and Suffering - n.
the physical and mental distress suffered from an injury, including
actual broken bones and internal ruptures, but also the aches, pain,
temporary and permanent limitations on activity, potential shortening
of life, depression and embarrassment from scarring, all of which are
part of the "general damages" recoverable by someone injured by
another's negligence or intentional attack. The dollar value of damages
for pain and suffering is subjective, as distinguished from medical
bills, future medical costs and lost wages which can be calculated,
called "special damages."
Panel - n. the list of people selected to appear for jury duty.
Paralegal - n. a
non-lawyer who performs routine tasks requiring some knowledge of the
law and procedures and who is employed by a law office or works
free-lance as an independent for various lawyers. Usually paralegals
have taken a prescribed series of courses in law and legal processes,
which is much less demanding than those required for a licensed
attorney. Paralegals are increasingly popular, often handling much of
the paperwork in probates of estates, divorce actions, bankruptcies,
investigations, analyzing depositions, preparing and answering
interrogatories and procedural motions and other specialized jobs.
Clients should be sure that the hourly rate charged for paralegals is
much less than that for the attorneys.
Partial Disability - n.
the result of an injury which permanently reduces a person's ability to
function, but still permits some working or other activity. In worker's
compensation cases an injured worker is often awarded a percentage
rating of permanent partial disability, which will entitle him/her to a
money settlement. The percentage payoff is often based on a physician's
evaluation of what part of the person's normal functioning is gone.
Party - n. 1) one of the
participants in a lawsuit or other legal proceeding who has an interest
in the outcome. Parties include plaintiff (person filing suit),
defendant (person sued or charged with a crime), petitioner (files a
petition asking for a court ruling), respondent (usually in opposition
to a petition or an appeal), cross-complainant (a defendant who sues
someone else in the same lawsuit), or cross-defendant (a person sued by
a cross-complainant). 2) a person or entity involved in an agreement.
3) a common reference by lawyers to people or entities involved in
lawsuits, transactions, contracts or accidents, as in "both parties
knew what was expected," "he is a party to the contract," "he was not a
party to the criminal conspiracy…."
Passenger - n. a rider who
has paid a fare on a train, bus, airline, taxi, ship, ferry, automobile
or other carrier in the business of transporting people for a fee (a
common carrier). A passenger is owed a duty of care by such a carrier
and has a right to sue for damages for injuries suffered while being
transported without proof of negligence. One tricky issue is whether a
person who has entered the depot, station or airport, but not yet
purchased a ticket or has not boarded, is entitled to the rights of a
passenger to recover for damages. A passenger without payment of fare
who is injured must prove the driver's negligence in a suit for
damages.
Patent Defect - n. an obvious flaw in a product or a document (such as leaving out the property description in a deed).
Peremptory - adj.
absolute, final and not entitled to delay or reconsideration. The term
is applied to writs, juror challenges or a date set for hearing.
Peremptory Challenge - n.
the right of the plaintiff and the defendant in a jury trial to have a
juror dismissed before trial without stating a reason. This challenge
is distinguished from a "challenge for cause" (reason) based on the
potential juror admitting bias, acquaintanceship with one of the
parties or their attorney, personal knowledge about the facts, or some
other basis for believing he/she might not be impartial. The number of
peremptory challenges for each side will differ based on state law, the
number of parties to a case, and whether it is a civil or criminal
trial. The usual phrasing used by lawyers exercising the challenge is
"Juror number seven may be excused."
Peremptory Writ of Mandate
- (or mandamus) n. a final order of a court to any governmental body,
government official or a lower court to perform an act the court finds
is an official duty required by law. This is distinguished from an
alternative writ of mandate (mandamus), which orders the governmental
agency, court or officials to obey the order or show cause at a hearing
why it should not. The usual practice is for anyone desiring such an
order to file a petition for the alternative writ. If the officials do
not comply with the order and fail to convince the court that the writ
of mandate should be denied, then the court will issue the peremptory
writ. In some emergency situations or when there is no conceivable
reason for the government not to follow the law, then the peremptory
writ will be issued after a notice of hearing without the alternative
writ.
Perjury - n. the crime of
intentionally lying after being duly sworn (to tell the truth) by a
notary public, court clerk or other official. This false statement may
be made in testimony in court, administrative hearings, depositions,
answers to interrogatories, as well as by signing or acknowledging a
written legal document (such as affidavit, declaration under penalty of
perjury, deed, license application, tax return) known to contain false
information. Although it is a crime, prosecutions for perjury are rare,
because a defendant will argue he/she merely made a mistake or
misunderstood.
Permanent Disability - n.
an injury which impairs the physical and/or mental ability of a person
to perform his/her normal work or non-occupational activities
supposedly for the remainder of his/her life. Under worker's
compensation laws (covering on-the-job injuries) once the condition is
stable, a degree of permanent disability is established even if the
employee is able to work despite the physical problem. Permanent
disability is also one basis for awarding general damages in a lawsuit
for injury suffered due to the negligence or intentional attack of
another.
Permanent Injury - n.
physical or mental damage which will restrict the employment and/or
other activities of a person for the rest of his/her life. In a lawsuit
to recover damages caused by the negligence or intentional wrongful act
of another, a permanent injury can be a major element in an award of
general damages.
Permissive - adj. 1)
referring to any act which is allowed by court order, legal procedure,
or agreement. 2) tolerant or allowing of others' behavior, suggesting
contrary to others' standards.
Personal Service - n.
delivering a summons, complaint, notice to quit tenancy or other legal
document which must be served by handing it directly to the person
named in the document. Personal service is distinguished from
"constructive service," which includes posting the notice and then
mailing a copy or publishing a summons on a person the court has found
is hiding to avoid service, and from "substituted service," which is
giving the document to someone else (another resident, a secretary or
receptionist, or other responsible adult) at the address.
Petition - 1) n. a formal
written request to a court for an order of the court. It is
distinguished from a complaint in a lawsuit which asks for damages
and/or performance by the opposing party. Petitions include demands for
writs, orders to show cause, modifications of prior orders,
continuances, dismissal of a case, reduction of bail in criminal cases,
a decree of distribution of an estate, appointment of a guardian, and a
host of other matters arising in legal actions. 2) n. a general term
for a writing signed by a number of people asking for a particular
result from a private governing body (such as a homeowners association,
a political party, or a club). 3) in public law, a writing signed by a
number of people which is required to place a proposition or ordinance
on the ballot, nominate a person for public office, or demand a recall
election. Such petitions for official action must be signed by a
specified number of registered voters (such as five percent). 4) v. to
make a formal request of a court; to present a written request to an
organization's governing body signed by one or more members. 5) n. a
suit for divorce in some states, in which the parties are called
petitioner and respondent.
Physician-Patient Privilege - n.
the right and obligation of a physician to refuse to testify in a trial
or other legal proceeding about any statement made to him/her by a
patient on the basis that any communication between doctor and patient
is confidential. A patient could sue the physician for damages if the
doctor breaches the confidence by testifying. Of course, in most trials
involving injuries the physician will testify with the plaintiff's
permission. Note: when the defendant's physician examines the injured
plaintiff, the plaintiff has given permission for that examination and
potential testimony, so a plaintiff must be cautious in making
statements.
Pierce the Corporate Veil - v.
to prove that a corporation exists merely as a completely controlled
front (alter ego) for an individual or management group, so that in a
lawsuit the individual defendants can be held responsible (liable) for
damages for actions of the corporation. If a corporation has issued
stock and held regular meetings of shareholders and directors, it is
unlikely a judge will "pierce" the veil and limit the liability to the
corporation, unless there is proof that the corporation was created to
accomplish a fraud on those dealing with it.
Plaintiff - n. the party
who initiates a lawsuit by filing a complaint with the clerk of the
court against the defendant(s) demanding damages, performance and/or
court determination of rights.
Plaintiff's Attorney - n.
the attorney who represents a plaintiff (the suing party) in a lawsuit.
In lawyer parlance a "plaintiff's attorney" refers to a lawyer who
regularly represents persons who are suing for damages, while a lawyer
who is regularly chosen by an insurance company to represent its
insureds is called a "defense attorney."
Plead - v. 1) in civil
lawsuits and petitions, to file any document (pleading) including
complaints, petitions, declarations, motions and memoranda of points
and authorities. 2) in criminal law, to enter a plea of a defendant in
response to each charge of criminal conduct.
Pleading - n. 1) every
legal document filed in a lawsuit, petition, motion and/or hearing,
including complaint, petition, answer, demurrer, motion, declaration
and memorandum of points and authorities (written argument citing
precedents and statutes). Laypersons should be aware that, except
possibly for petitions from prisoners, pleadings are required by state
or federal statutes and/or court rules to be of a particular form and
format: typed, signed, dated, with the name of the court, title and
number of the case, name, address and telephone number of the attorney
or person acting for himself/herself (in pro per) included. 2) the act
of preparing and presenting legal documents and arguments. Good
pleading is an art: clear, logical, well-organized and comprehensive.
Power of Attorney - n. a
written document signed by a person giving another person the power to
act in conducting the signer's business, including signing papers,
checks, title documents, contracts, handling bank accounts and other
activities in the name of the person granting the power. The person
receiving the power of attorney (the agent) is "attorney in fact" for
the person giving the power, and usually signs documents as "Melinda
Hubbard, attorney in fact for Guilda Giver." There are two types of
power of attorney: a) general power of attorney, which covers all
activities, and b) special power of attorney, which grants powers
limited to specific matters, such as selling a particular piece of real
estate, handling some bank accounts or executing a limited partnership
agreement. A power of attorney may expire on a date stated in the
document or upon written cancellation. Usually the signer acknowledges
before a notary public that he/she executed the power, so that it is
recordable if necessary, as in a real estate transaction.
Pray - v. to formally request judicial judgment, relief and/or damages at the end of a complaint or petition.
Prayer - n. the specific
request for judgment, relief and/or damages at the conclusion of a
complaint or petition. A typical prayer would read: "The plaintiff
prays for 1) special damages in the sum of $17,500; 2) general damages
according to proof [proved in trial]; 3) reasonable attorney's fees; 4)
costs of suit; and 5) such other and further relief as the court shall
deem proper." A prayer gives the judge an idea of what is sought, and
may become the basis of a judgment if the defendant defaults (fails to
file an answer). Sometimes a plaintiff will inflate damages in the
prayer for publicity or intimidation purposes, or because the plaintiff
believes that a gigantic demand will be a better starting point in
negotiations. However, the ridiculous multi-million prayers in smaller
cases make plaintiffs look foolish and unrealistic.
Preemption - n. the rule
of law that if the federal government through Congress has enacted
legislation on a subject matter it shall be controlling over state laws
and/or preclude the state from enacting laws on the same subject if
Congress has specifically stated it has "occupied the field." If
Congress has not clearly claimed preemption, a federal or state court
may decide the issue on the basis of history of the legislation (debate
in Congress) and practice. Example: federal standards of meat or other
products have preempted state laws. However, federal and state
legislation on narcotics control may parallel each other.
Premises - n. 1) in real
estate, land and the improvements on it, a building, store, shop,
apartment, or other designated structure. The exact premises may be
important in determining if an outbuilding (shed, cabana, detached
garage) is insured or whether a person accused of burglary has actually
entered a structure. 2) in legal pleading, premises means "all that has
hereinabove been stated," as in a prayer (request) at the end of a
complaint asking for "any further order deemed proper in the premises"
(an order based on what has been stated in the complaint).
Premium - n. 1) payment
for insurance coverage either in a lump sum or by installments. 2) an
extra payment for an act, option or priority.
Presumption - n. a rule of
law which permits a court to assume a fact is true until such time as
there is a preponderance (greater weight) of evidence which disproves
or outweighs (rebuts) the presumption. Each presumption is based upon a
particular set of apparent facts paired with established laws, logic,
reasoning or individual rights. A presumption is rebuttable in that it
can be refuted by factual evidence. One can present facts to persuade
the judge that the presumption is not true. Examples: a child born of a
husband and wife living together is presumed to be the natural child of
the husband unless there is conclusive proof it is not; a person who
has disappeared and not been heard from for seven years is presumed to
be dead, but the presumption could be rebutted if he/she is found
alive; an accused person is presumed innocent until proven guilty.
These are sometimes called rebuttable presumptions to distinguish them
from absolute, conclusive or irrebuttable presumptions in which rules
of law and logic dictate that there is no possible way the presumption
can be disproved. However, if a fact is absolute it is not truly a
presumption at all, but a certainty.
Prevailing Party - n. the
winner in a lawsuit. Many contracts, leases, mortgages, deeds of trust
or promissory notes provide that the "prevailing party" shall be
entitled to recovery of attorney's fees and costs if legal action must
be taken to enforce the agreement. Even if the plaintiff gets much less
than the claim, he/she/it is the prevailing party entitled to include
attorney's fees in the collectable costs. Usually there is no
prevailing party when a complaint is voluntarily dismissed prior to
trial or settled before or after trial has begun.
Prima Facie - (pry-mah
fay-shah) adj. Latin for "at first look," or "on its face," referring
to a lawsuit or criminal prosecution in which the evidence before trial
is sufficient to prove the case unless there is substantial
contradictory evidence presented at trial. A prima facie case presented
to a Grand Jury by the prosecution will result in an indictment.
Example: in a charge of bad check writing, evidence of a half dozen
checks written on a non-existent bank account makes it a prima facie
case. However, proof that the bank had misprinted the account number on
the checks might disprove the prosecution's apparent "open and shut"
case.
Principal - n. 1) main
person in a business. 2) employer, the person hiring and directing
employees (agents) to perform his/her/its business. It is particularly
important to determine who is the principal since he/she/it is
responsible for the acts of agents in the "scope of employment" under
the doctrine of respondeat superior. 3) in criminal law, the main
perpetrator (organizer and active committer) of a crime, as
distinguished from an "accessory" who helps the principal in some
fashion. The criminal principal is usually the person who originates
the idea of committing the crime and/or directly carries it out, and is
more likely to be charged with a higher degree of the crime, and
receive a stiffer prison sentence. 4) adj. chief, leading, highest.
Principal Place of Business
- n. location of head office of a business where the books and records
are kept and/or management works. In most states corporations must
report their principal place of business to the Secretary of State.
Private Carrier - n. one
who provides transportation or delivery of goods for money, just for
the particular instance, and not as a regular business. It is
distinguished from a "common carrier" which is in the business, such as
buses, railroads, trucking companies, airlines and taxis. However, a
private carrier may be liable for injuries to anyone who pays or shares
the cost of transport.
Pro Bono - adj. short for
pro bono publico, Latin for "for the public good," legal work performed
by lawyers without pay to help people with legal problems and limited
or no funds, or provide legal assistance to organizations involved in
social causes such as environmental, consumer, minority, youth,
battered women and education organizations and charities.
Pro Se - (proh say) prep.
Latin for "for himself." A party to a lawsuit who represents himself
(acting in propria persona) is appearing in the case "pro se."
Procedure - n. the methods
and mechanics of the legal process. These include filing complaints,
answers and demurrers; serving documents on the opposition; setting
hearings, depositions, motions, petitions, interrogatories; preparing
orders; giving notice to the other parties; conduct of trials; and all
the rules and laws governing that process. Every state has a set of
procedural statutes (often called the Codes of Civil Procedure and
Criminal Procedure), and courts have so-called "local rules," which
govern times for filing documents, conduct of the courts and other
technicalities. Law practice before the federal courts operates under
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Federal Rules of Criminal
Procedure. Procedural law is distinguished from "substantive" law,
which involves the statutes and legal precedents upon which cases are
tried and judgments made.
Process - n. in law, the
legal means by which a person is required to appear in court or a
defendant is given notice of a legal action against him/her/it. When a
complaint in a lawsuit is filed, it must be served on each defendant,
together with a summons issued by the clerk of the court stating the
amount of time (say, 30 days) in which the defendant has to file an
answer or other legal pleading with the clerk of the court, and sent to
the plaintiff. New York has an unusual system in which a summons may be
served without a complaint. A subpena is similar to a summons but is a
notice to a witness to appear at a deposition (testimony taken outside
court), or at a trial. A subpena duces tecum is an order to deliver
documents or other evidence either into court or to the attorney for a
party to a lawsuit or criminal prosecution. An order to show cause is a
court order to appear in court and give a reason why the court should
not issue an order (such as paying temporary child support). The
summons, complaint, subpena, subpena duces tecum and order to show
cause must all be "served" on the defendant or person required to
appear or produce, and this is called "service of process." Service of
process is usually made by an officer of the court such as a deputy
sheriff or marshal, or a professional process server, but can be
performed by others in most jurisdictions.
Process Server - n. a
person who serves (delivers) legal papers in lawsuits, either as a
profession or as a government official, such as a deputy sheriff,
marshal or constable.
Product Liability - n. the
responsibility of manufacturers, distributors and sellers of products
to the public, to deliver products free of defects which harm an
individual or numerous persons and to make good on that responsibility
if their products are defective. These can include faulty auto brakes,
contaminated baby food, exploding bottles of beer, flammable children's
pajamas or lack of label warnings. Examples: Beauty Queen Hair Products
makes a hair-permanent kit in which the formula will cause loss of hair
to women with sensitive scalps, and Molly Makeup has her hair done at
the Bon Ton Beauty Shop and suffers scalp burns and loss of hair. Molly
has a claim for damages against Beauty Queen, the manufacturer. Big Boy
Trucks makes a truck with a faulty steering gear, bought by Tom
Holdtight. The gear fails and Holdtight runs off the road and breaks
his back. Holdtight can sue Big Boy for the damages. The key element in
product liability law is that a person who suffers harm need prove only
the failure of the product to make the seller, distributor and/or
manufacturer reliable for damages. An injured person usually need only
sue the seller and let him/her/it bring the manufacturer or distributor
into the lawsuit or require contribution toward a judgment. However,
all those possibly responsible should be named in the suit as
defendants if they are known.
Property Damage - n.
injury to real or personal property through another's negligence,
willful destruction or by some act of nature. In lawsuits for damages
caused by negligence or a willful act, property damage is distinguished
from personal injury. Property damage may include harm to an
automobile, a fence, a tree, a home or any other possession. The amount
of recovery for property damage may be established by evidence of
replacement value, cost of repairs, loss of use until repaired or
replaced or, in the case of heirlooms or very personal items (e.g.
wedding pictures), by subjective testimony as to sentimental value.
Proximate Cause - n. a
happening which results in an event, particularly injury due to
negligence or an intentional wrongful act. In order to prevail (win) in
a lawsuit for damages due to negligence or some other wrong, it is
essential to claim (plead) proximate cause in the complaint and to
prove in trial that the negligent act of the defendant was the
proximate cause (and not some other reason) of the damages to the
plaintiff (person filing the lawsuit). Sometimes there is an
intervening cause which comes between the original negligence of the
defendant and the injured plaintiff, which will either reduce the
amount of responsibility or, if this intervening cause is the
substantial reason for the injury, then the defendant will not be
liable at all. In criminal law, the defendant's act must have been the
proximate cause of the death of a victim to prove murder or
manslaughter
Punitive Damages - n.
(synony- mous with exemplary damages), damages awarded in a lawsuit as
a punishment and example to others for malicious, evil or particularly
fraudulent acts.
Q
Quantum Meruit - (kwahn-tuhm
mare-ooh-it) n. Latin for "as much as he deserved," the actual value of
services performed. Quantum meruit determines the amount to be paid for
services when no contract exists or when there is doubt as to the
amount due for the work performed but done under circumstances when
payment could be expected. This may include a physician's emergency
aid, legal work when there was no contract, or evaluating the amount
due when outside forces cause a job to be terminated unexpectedly. If a
person sues for payment for services in such circumstances the judge or
jury will calculate the amount due based on time and usual rate of pay
or the customary charge, based on quantum meruit by implying a contract
existed.
Quash - v. to annul or set
aside. In law, a motion to quash asks the judge for an order setting
aside or nullifying an action, such as "quashing" service of a summons
when the wrong person was served.
Question of Fact - n. in a
lawsuit or criminal prosecution, an issue of fact in which the truth or
falsity (or a mix of the two) must be determined by the "trier of fact"
(the jury or the judge in a non-jury trial) in order to reach a
decision in the case. A "question of fact" may also be raised in a
motion for summary judgment which asks the court to determine whether
there are any questions of fact to be tried, allowing the judge to rule
on the case (usually to dismiss the complaint) at that point without a
trial. "Questions of fact" are distinguished from "questions of law,"
which can only be decided by the judge.
Question of Law - n. an
issue arising in a lawsuit or criminal prosecution which only relates
to determination of what the law is, how it is applied to the facts in
the case, and other purely legal points in contention. All "questions
of law" arising before, during and sometimes after a trial are to be
determined solely by the judge and not by the jury. "Questions of law"
are differentiated from "questions of fact," which are decided by the
jury and only by the judge if there is no jury.
Quid Pro Quo - (kwid proh
kwoh) n. Latin for "something for something," to identify what each
party to an agreement expects from the other, sometimes called mutual
consideration. Example of its use: "What is the quid pro quo for my
entering into this deal?"
R
Reasonable - adj., adv. in
law, just, rational, appropriate, ordinary or usual in the
circumstances. It may refer to care, cause, compensation, doubt (in a
criminal trial), and a host of other actions or activities.
Reasonable Care - n. the
degree of caution and concern for the safety of himself/herself and
others an ordinarily prudent and rational person would use in the
circumstances. This is a subjective test of determining if a person is
negligent, meaning he/she did not exercise reasonable care.
Rebuttable Presumption - n.
since a presumption is an assumption of fact accepted by the court
until disproved, all presumptions are rebuttable. Thus rebuttable
presumption is a redundancy.
Rebuttal - n. evidence
introduced to counter, disprove or contradict the opposition's evidence
or a presumption, or responsive legal argument.
Reckless - adj. in both
negligence and criminal cases, careless to the point of being heedless
of the consequences ("grossly" negligent). Most commonly this refers to
the traffic misdemeanor "reckless driving." It can also refer to use of
firearms (shooting a gun in a public place), explosives or heavy
equipment.
Reckless Disregard - n.
gross negligence without concern for danger to others. Actually
"reckless disregard" is redundant since reckless means there is a
disregard for safety.
Reckless Driving - n.
operation of an automobile in a dangerous manner under the
circumstances, including speeding (or going too fast for the
conditions, even though within the posted speed limit), driving after
drinking (but not drunk), having too many passengers in the car,
cutting in and out of traffic, failing to yield to other vehicles and
other negligent acts. It is a misdemeanor crime. A "wet reckless" is a
plea in a drunk driving prosecution allowed to lessen the penalty when
the blood alcohol level is close to the legal limit.
Recover - v. to receive a money judgment in a lawsuit.
Recoverable - adj.
referring to the amount of money to which a plaintiff (the party suing)
is entitled in a lawsuit. Thus, a judge might rule "$12,500 is
recoverable for lost wages, and $5,500 is recoverable for property
damage to plaintiff's vehicle."
Recovery - n. the amount of money and any other right or property received by a plaintiff in a lawsuit.
Recusal - n. the act of a
judge or prosecutor being removed or voluntarily stepping aside from a
legal case due to conflict of interest or other good reason.
Release - 1) v. to give up
a right as releasing one from his/her obligation to perform under a
contract, or to relinquish a right to an interest in real property. 2)
v. to give freedom, as letting out of prison. 3) n. the writing that
grants a release.
Relevant - adj. having
some reasonable connection with, and in regard to evidence in trial,
having some value or tendency to prove a matter of fact significant to
the case. Commonly, an objection to testimony or physical evidence is
that it is "irrelevant."
Remand - v. to send back.
An appeals court may remand a case to the trial court for further
action if it reverses the judgment of the lower court, or after a
preliminary hearing a judge may remand into custody a person accused of
a crime if the judge finds that a there is reason to hold the accused
for trial.
Remittitur - n. 1) a
judge's order reducing a judgment awarded by a jury when the award
exceeds the amount asked for by the plaintiff (person who brought the
suit). 2) an appeal's transmittal of a case back to the trial court so
that the case can be retried, or an order entered consistent with the
appeals court's decision (such as dismissing the plaintiff's case or
awarding costs to the winning party on appeal).
Repair - v. to restore to
former condition or in some contracts to operational soundness.
Contracts should spell out the repairs to be made and what the final
condition will be. Example: roof repairs should be more than a
half-baked patching to temporarily halt leaking.
Reply Brief - n. the
written legal argument of the respondent (trial court winner) in answer
to the "opening brief" of an appellant (a trial court loser who has
appealed).
Res Adjudicata - n. a
thing (legal matter) already determined by a court, from Latin for "the
thing has been judged." More properly res judicata.
Res Ipsa Loquitur - (rayz
ip-sah loh-quit-her) n. Latin for "the thing speaks for itself," a
doctrine of law that one is presumed to be negligent if he/she/it had
exclusive control of whatever caused the injury even though there is no
specific evidence of an act of negligence, and without negligence the
accident would not have happened. Examples: a) a load of bricks on the
roof of a building being constructed by Highrise Construction Co. falls
and injures Paul Pedestrian below, and Highrise is liable for
Pedestrian's injury even though no one saw the load fall. b) While
under anesthetic, Isabel Patient's nerve in her arm is damaged although
it was not part of the surgical procedure, and she is unaware of which
of a dozen medical people in the room caused the damage. Under res ipsa
loquitur all those connected with the operation are liable for
negligence. Lawyers often shorten the doctrine to "res ips," and find
it a handy shorthand for a complex doctrine.
Res Judicata - (rayz
judy-cot-ah) n. Latin for "the thing has been judged," meaning the
issue before the court has already been decided by another court,
between the same parties. Therefore, the court will dismiss the case
before it as being useless. Example: an Ohio court determines that John
is the father of Betty's child. John cannot raise the issue again in
another state. Sometimes called res adjudicata.
Rescind - v. to cancel a
contract, putting the parties back to the position as if the contract
had not existed. Both parties rescind a contract by mutual agreement,
since a unilateral cancellation of a contract is a "breach" of the
contract and could result in a lawsuit by the non-cancelling party.
Respondent - n. 1) the
party who is required to answer a petition for a court order or writ
requiring the respondent to take some action, halt an activity or obey
a court's direction. In such matters the moving party (the one filing
the petition) is usually called the "petitioner." Thus, the respondent
is equivalent to a defendant in a lawsuit, but the potential result is
a court order and not money damages. 2) on an appeal, the party who
must respond to an appeal by the losing party in the trial court
(called "appellant") in the appeals court.
Respondeat Superior - (rehs-pond-dee-at
superior) n. Latin for "let the master answer," a key doctrine in the
law of agency, which provides that a principal (employer) is
responsible for the actions of his/her/its agent (employee) in the
"course of employment." Thus, an agent who signs an agreement to
purchase goods for his employer in the name of the employer can create
a binding contract between the seller and the employer. Another
example: if a delivery truck driver negligently hits a child in the
street, the company for which the driver works will be liable for the
injuries.
Restatement of the Law - n.
a series of detailed statements of the basic law in the United States
on a variety of subjects written and updated by well-known legal
scholars under the auspices of the American Law Institute since the
1930s. While not having the force of statutes or of decided precedents,
the Restatement (as lawyers generally call it) has the prestige of the
scholars who have studied the legal questions. Topics covered include
agency, contracts, property, torts and trusts.
Result - n. common lawyer lingo for outcome of a lawsuit.
Retainer - n. the advance
payment to an attorney for services to be performed, intended to insure
that the lawyer will represent the client and that the lawyer will be
paid at least that amount. Commonly in matters which will involve
extensive work there will be a retainer agreement signed by the
attorney and client. Further payments for services can be expected as
the time spent on the legal matter increases. Most lawyers do not want
to be owed money and wish to be paid either in advance or promptly as
the work is performed. One reason for the retainer, and the problem a
lawyer faces, is that he/she does not want to abandon a client, but at
the same time does not want to be stuck with extensive unpaid fees.
Retrial - n. a new trial
granted upon the motion of the losing party, based on obvious error,
bias or newly discovered evidence, or after mistrial or reversed by an
appeals court.
Return of Service - n.
written confirmation under oath by a process server declaring that
there was service of legal documents (such as a summons and complaint).
Reversal - n. the decision
of a court of appeal ruling that the judgment of a lower court was
incorrect and is therefore reversed. The result is that the lower court
which tried the case is instructed to dismiss the original action,
retry the case or change its judgment. Examples: a court which denied a
petition for writ of mandate is ordered to issue the writ. A lower
court which gave judgment with no evidence of damages is ordered to
dismiss.
Reversible Error - n. a
legal mistake at the trial court level which is so significant
(resulted in an improper judgment) that the judgment must be reversed
by the appellate court. A reversible error is distinguished from an
error which is minor or did not contribute to the judgment at the
trial.
Review - n. the judicial
consideration of a lower court judgment by an appellate court,
determining if there were legal errors sufficient to require reversal.
The process requires notice of appeal, obtaining a transcript of the
trial or hearing at the trial level, obtaining all the pleadings and
other documents filed in the original trial, preparation of briefs
citing precedents and arguing that there was reversible error. Then the
respondent (winner at the trial court) may file a responsive brief, and
the appellant (the one appealing the decision) has the chance to file a
brief in response to the respondent. The next step is oral argument (if
allowed) before the appellate court. Appeals on procedural issues
normally do not include oral argument. If the appellate court denies
the appeal a rehearing may be requested but is seldom granted.
Rider - n. 1) an
attachment to a document which adds to or amends it. Typical is an
added provision to an insurance policy, such as additional coverage or
temporary insurance to cover a public event. 2) in legislatures, an
amendment tacked on to a bill which has little or no relevance to the
main purpose of the legislation, but is a way to get the amendment
passed if the basic bill has support. 3) passenger.
Right - 1) n. an
entitlement to something, whether to concepts like justice and due
process or to ownership of property or some interest in property, real
or personal. These rights include: various freedoms; protection against
interference with enjoyment of life and property; civil rights enjoyed
by citizens such as voting and access to the courts; natural rights
accepted by civilized societies; human rights to protect people
throughout the world from terror, torture, barbaric practices and
deprivation of civil rights and profit from their labor; and such U.S.
constitutional guarantees as the right to freedoms of speech, press,
religion, assembly and petition. 2) adj. just, fair, correct.
Risk - n. chances of
danger or loss, particularly of property covered by an insurance policy
or property being used or transported by another. Insurance companies
assume the risk of loss and calculate their premiums by the value and
the risk based on statistically determined chances. A trucking company
assumes the risk of loss while carrying goods.
Rogatory Letters - n. a
written request by a judge to a judge in another state asking that a
witness in the other state have his/her testimony taken in the other
state's court for use in the local court case.
Rule - 1) v. to decide a
legal question, by a court, as in: "I rule that the plaintiff is
entitled to the goods and damages for delay in the sum of $10,000." 2)
v. to make a judicial command, such as: "I find that George Gonzo is
the parent of Larry Gonzo and rule that he must pay support of $150 per
month to the mother" for the support of Larry. 3) n. any regulation
governing conduct. 4) n. one of the regulations of covering legal
practice before a particular group of courts, collectively called
"rules of court" adopted by local judges. 5) n. a legal principle set
by the decision in an appellate case, as "the rule in the case of
Murray v. Crampton is…."
Rules of Court - n. a set
of procedural regulations adopted by courts which are mandatory upon
parties and their lawyers on matters within the jurisdiction of those
courts. Most states have statewide rules of court. Federal court rules
are adopted by the district courts based on the Federal Rules of
Procedure, and county, district and municipal court judges adopt what
are called "local rules" of court. Local rules encompass the time
allowed to file papers, the format of documents (including the paper
colors of appeal court briefs), the number of copies to be filed, the
procedure to file motions, the basis for calculating alimony and child
support, fees for filing various documents and numerous other mundane
but vital matters. These rules are violated or ignored at the peril of
the client and his/her/its counsel.
Ruling - n. court decision on a case or any legal question.
S
Satisfaction - n. receiving payment or performance of what is due.
Satisfaction of Judgment - n.
a document signed by a judgment creditor (the party owed the money
judgment) stating that the full amount due on the judgment has been
paid. The judgment creditor (the party who paid the judgment) is
entitled to demand that the judgment creditor (the party to whom the
money judgment is owed) sign the satisfaction of judgment, file it with
the court clerk, acknowledge it before a notary public, and record the
document with the County Recorder (or Recorder of Deeds) if there is an
abstract of judgment (a document showing the amount of the judgment
which is a lien on any real property belonging to the defendant) on
record.
Save Harmless - v. 1) also
called hold harmless, to indemnify (protect) another from harm or cost.
2) to agree to guarantee that any debt, lawsuit or claim which may
arise as a result of a contract or contract performance will be paid or
taken care of by the party making the guarantee. Example: the seller of
a business agrees to "save harmless" the buyer from any unknown debts
of the business.
Scope of Employment - n.
actions of an employee which further the business of the employer and
are not personal business, which becomes the test as to whether an
employer is liable for damages due to such actions under the doctrine
of respondeat superior (make the master answer). Example: Dick Deliver
drives a truck delivering groceries for Super-Duper Market. If Dick
negligently runs the truck into Victor Victim's VW while making
deliveries or on the way back from a delivery, then Super-Duper is
liable since the accident was in the scope of employment. If Dick goes
outside the delivery route to have lunch with his girlfriend and on the
way hits Victim then there is a strong inference he was outside the
scope of employment.
Service of Process - n.
the delivery of copies of legal documents such as summons, complaint,
subpena, order to show cause (order to appear and argue against a
proposed order), writs, notice to quit the premises and certain other
documents, usually by personal delivery to the defendant or other
person to whom the documents are directed. So-called "substituted
service" can be accomplished by leaving the documents with an adult
resident of a home, with an employee with management duties at a
business office or with a designated "agent for acceptance of service"
(often with name and address filed with the state's Secretary of
State), or, in some cases, by posting in a prominent place followed by
mailing copies by certified mail to the opposing party. In certain
cases of absent or unknown defendants, the court will allow service by
publication in a newspaper. Once all parties have filed a complaint,
answer or any pleading in a lawsuit, further documents usually can be
served by mail or even FAX.
Settle - v. to resolve a
lawsuit without a final court judgment by negotiation between the
parties, usually with the assistance of attorneys and/or insurance
adjusters, and sometimes prodding by a judge. Most legal disputes are
settled prior to trial.
Settlement - n. the
resolution of a lawsuit (or of a legal dispute prior to filing a
complaint or petition) without going forward to a final court judgment.
Most settlements are achieved by negotiation in which the attorneys
(and sometimes an insurance adjuster with authority to pay a settlement
amount on behalf of the company's insured defendant) and the parties
agree to terms of settlement. Many states require a settlement
conference a few weeks before trial in an effort to achieve settlement
with a judge or assigned attorneys to facilitate the process. A
settlement is sometimes reached based upon a final offer just prior to
trial (proverbially "on the courthouse steps") or even after trial has
begun. A settlement reached just before trial or after a trial or
hearing has begun is often "read into the record" and approved by the
court so that it can be enforced as a judgment if the terms of the
settlement are not complied with. Most lawsuits result in settlement.
Several Liability - n.
referring to responsibility of one party for the entire debt (as in
"joint and several") or judgment when those who jointly agreed to pay
the debt or are jointly ordered to pay a judgment do not do so. A
person who is stuck with "several liability" because the others do not
pay their part may sue the other joint debtors for contribution toward
the payment he/she has made.
Shifting the Burden of Proof - n.
the result of the plaintiff in a lawsuit meeting its burden of proof in
the case, in effect placing the burden with the defendant, at which
time it presents a defense. There may be shifts of burden of proof on
specific factual issues during a trial, which may impact the opposing
parties and their need to produce evidence.
Small Claims Court - n. a
division of most municipal, city or other lowest local courts which
hear cases involving relatively small amounts of money and without a
request for court orders like eviction. The highest (jurisdictional)
amount that can be considered in small claims court varies by state,
but goes as high as $5,000 in California. In small claims court,
attorneys may not represent clients, the filing fee is low, there is no
jury, the procedure is fairly informal, each side has a short time to
present his/her case and the right to appeal only permits a trial de
novo (a new trial) at the next court level. Often the judge is an
experienced lawyer sitting as a pro tem judge. Small claims court is a
quick, inexpensive way to settle lesser legal disputes, although the
controversies are often important to the participants. The well-known
television program People's Court is intended to be a good example of a
small claims court.
Special Damages - n.
damages claimed and/or awarded in a lawsuit which were out-of-pocket
costs directly as the result of the breach of contract, negligence or
other wrongful act by the defendant. Special damages can include
medical bills, repairs and replacement of property, loss of wages and
other damages which are not speculative or subjective. They are
distinguished from general damages, in which there is no evidence of a
specific dollar figure.
Speculative Damages - n.
possible financial loss or expenses claimed by a plaintiff (person
filing a lawsuit) which are contingent upon a future occurrence, purely
conjectural or highly improbable. Speculative damages should not be
awarded, and jury instructions should so state. Examples: a) plaintiff
believes that ten years hence, as he ages, he may begin to feel pain
from a healed fracture although no physician has testified that this is
likely to happen; b) plaintiff claims that defendant's failure to
deliver products for sale may hurt plaintiff's reputation with future
customers.
Standard of Care - n. the
watchfulness, attention, caution and prudence that a reasonable person
in the circumstances would exercise. If a person's actions do not meet
this standard of care, then his/her acts fail to meet the duty of care
which all people (supposedly) have toward others. Failure to meet the
standard is negligence, and any damages resulting therefrom may be
claimed in a lawsuit by the injured party. The problem is that the
"standard" is often a subjective issue upon which reasonable people can
differ.
Statute - n. a federal or
state written law enacted by the Congress or state legislature,
respectively. Local statutes or laws are usually called "ordinances."
Regulations, rulings, opinions, executive orders and proclamations are
not statutes.
Statute of Limitations - n.
a law which sets the maximum period which one can wait before filing a
lawsuit, depending on the type of case or claim. The periods vary by
state. Federal statutes set the limitations for suits filed in federal
courts. If the lawsuit or claim is not filed before the statutory
deadline, the right to sue or make a claim is forever dead (barred).
The types of cases and statute of limitations periods are broken down
among: personal injury from negligence or intentional wrongdoing,
property damage from negligence or intentional wrongdoing, breach of an
oral contract, breach of a written contract, professional malpractice,
libel, slander, fraud, trespass, a claim against a governmental entity
(usually a short time), and some other variations. In some instances a
statute of limitations can be extended ("tolled") based on delay in
discovery of the injury or on reasonable reliance on a trusted person
(a fiduciary or confidential adviser who has hidden his/her own misuse
of someone else's funds or failure to pay). A minor's right to bring an
action for injuries due to negligence is tolled until the minor turns
18 (except for a claim against a governmental agency). There are also
statutes of limitations on bringing criminal charges, but homicide
generally has no time limitation on prosecution. The limitations
(depending on the state) generally range from 1 to 6 years except for
in Rhode Island, which uses 10 years for several causes of action.
Louisiana has the strictest limitations, cutting off lawsuit rights at
one year for almost all types of cases except contracts. California
also has short periods, usually one year, with two years for most
property damage and oral contracts and four years for written
contracts. There are also statutes of limitations on the right to
enforce a judgment, ranging from five to 25 years, depending on the
state. Some states have special requirements before a lawsuit can be
filed, such as a written warning to a physician in a claim of
malpractice, making a demand upon a state agency and then waiting for
the claim to be denied or ignored for a particular period, first
demanding a retraction before filing a libel suit, and other
variations. Vermont protects its ski resorts by allowing only one year
for filing a lawsuit for injuries suffered in a skiing accident as an
exception to that state's three-year statute of limitations for other
personal injuries.
Stipulation - n. an
agreement, usually on a procedural matter, between the attorneys for
the two sides in a legal action. Some stipulations are oral, but the
courts often require that the stipulation be put in writing, signed and
filed with the court.
Strict Liability - n.
automatic responsibility (without having to prove negligence) for
damages due to possession and/or use of equipment, materials or
possessions which are inherently dangerous, such as explosives, wild
animals, poisonous snakes or assault weapons. This is analogous to the
doctrine of res ipsa loquitur in which control, ownership and damages
are sufficient to hold the owner liable.
Subpena - (subpoena):
(suh-pea-nah) n. an order of the court for a witness to appear at a
particular time and place to testify and/or produce documents in the
control of the witness (if a "subpena duces tecum"). A subpena is used
to obtain testimony from a witness at both depositions (testimony under
oath taken outside of court) and at trial. Subpenas are usually issued
automatically by the court clerk but must be served personally on the
party being summoned. Failure to appear as required by the subpena can
be punished as contempt of court if it appears the absence was
intentional or without cause.
Subpena Duces Tecum - (suh-pea-nah
dooh-chess-take-uhm or dooh-kess-take-uhm): a court order requiring a
witness to bring documents in the possession or under the control of
the witness to a certain place at a certain time. This subpena must be
served personally on the person subpenaed. It is the common way to
obtain potentially useful evidence, such as documents and business
records, in the possession of a third party. A subpena duces tecum must
specify the documents or types of documents (e.g. "profit and loss
statements of ABC Corporation for years 1987 through 1995, all
correspondence in regard to the contract between ABC Corporation and
Merritt") or it will be subject to an objection that the request is
"too broad and burdensome." To obtain documents from the opposing
party, a "Request for Production of Documents" is more commonly used.
Failure to respond to a subpena duces tecum may subject the party
served with the subpena to punishment for contempt of court for
disobeying a court order.
Subrogation - n. assuming
the legal rights of a person for whom expenses or a debt has been paid.
Typically, subrogation occurs when an insurance company which pays its
insured client for injuries and losses then sues the party which the
injured person contends caused the damages to him/her. Example: Fred
Farmer negligently builds a bonfire which gets out of control and
starts a grass fire which spreads to Ned Neighbor's barn. Good Hands
Insurance Co. has insured the barn, pays Neighbor his estimated cost of
reconstruction of the barn, and then sues Farmer for that amount.
Farmer will have all the "defenses" to the insurance company's suit
that he would have had against Neighbor, including the contention that
the cost of repairing the barn was less than Neighbor was paid or that
Neighbor negligently got in the way of firefighters trying to put out
the grass fire.
Suit - n. generic term for
any filing of a complaint (or petition) asking for legal redress by
judicial action, often called a "lawsuit." In common parlance a suit
asking for a court order for action rather than a money judgment is
often called a "petition," but technically it is a "suit in equity."
Summary Judgment - n. a
court order ruling that no factual issues remain to be tried and
therefore a cause of action or all causes of action in a complaint can
be decided upon certain facts without trial. A summary judgment is
based upon a motion by one of the parties that contends that all
necessary factual issues are settled or so one-sided they need not be
tried. The motion is supported by declarations under oath, excerpts
from depositions which are under oath, admissions of fact and other
discovery, as well as a legal argument (points and authorities), that
argue that there are no triable issues of fact and that the settled
facts require a summary judgment for the moving party. The opposing
party will respond by counter-declarations and legal arguments
attempting to show that there are "triable issues of fact." If it is
unclear whether there is a triable issue of fact in any cause of
action, then summary judgment must be denied as to that cause of
action. The theory behind the summary judgment process is to eliminate
the need to try settled factual issues and to decide without trial one
or more causes of action in the complaint. The pleading procedures are
extremely technical and complicated and are particularly dangerous to
the party against whom the motion is made.
T
Tender - 1) v. to present
to another person an unconditional offer to enter into a contract. 2)
v. to present payment to another. 3) n. delivery, except that the
recipient has the choice not to accept the tender. However, the act of
tender completes the responsibility of the person making the tender.
Testify - v. to give oral
evidence under oath in answer to questions posed by attorneys either at
trial or at a deposition (testimony under oath outside of court), with
the opportunity for opposing attorneys to cross-examine the witness in
regard to answers given.
Testimony - n. oral
evidence given under oath by a witness in answer to questions posed by
attorneys at trial or at a deposition (questioning under oath outside
of court).
Third Party - n. a person
who is not a party to a contract or a transaction, but has an
involvement (such as one who is a buyer from one of the parties, was
present when the agreement was signed or made an offer that was
rejected). The third party normally has no legal rights in the matter,
unless the contract was made for the third party's benefit.
Tort - n. from French for
"wrong," a civil wrong or wrongful act, whether intentional or
accidental, from which injury occurs to another. Torts include all
negligence cases as well as intentional wrongs which result in harm.
Therefore tort law is one of the major areas of law (along with
contract, real property and criminal law) and results in more civil
litigation than any other category. Some intentional torts may also be
crimes, such as assault, battery, wrongful death, fraud, conversion (a
euphemism for theft) and trespass on property and form the basis for a
lawsuit for damages by the injured party. Defamation, including
intentionally telling harmful untruths about another-either by print or
broadcast (libel) or orally (slander)-is a tort and used to be a crime
as well.
Tort Claims Act - n. a
federal or state act which, under certain conditions, waives
governmental immunity and allows lawsuits by people who claim they have
been harmed by torts (wrongful acts), including negligence, by
government agencies or their employees. These acts also establish the
procedure by which such claims are made. Before the enactment of tort
claims acts, government bodies could not be sued without the specific
permission of the government. The federal version is the Federal Tort
Claims Act.
Tortfeasor - n. a person who commits a tort (civil wrong), either intentionally or through negligence.
Transcript - n. the
written record of all proceedings, including testimony, in a trial,
hearing or deposition (out-of-court testimony under oath).
Jurisdictions vary as to whether the attorneys' final arguments are
recorded, with the Federal Court Reporter Act, but not all states,
requiring inclusion. A copy of the transcript may be ordered from the
court reporter and a fee paid for the transcription and first copy; if
the opposing party also wants a copy, the cost will not include the
transcription fee. In most appeals a copy of the transcript is required
so that the court of appeals can review the entire proceedings in the
trial court. Copies of depositions may be ordered for a fee from the
court reporter who took down the testimony. Transcripts are not printed
from the record unless transcription is requested.
Treble Damages - n.
tripling damages allowed by state statute in certain types of cases,
such as not making good on a bad check or intentionally refusing to pay
rent. Federal antitrust violations also carry treble damage penalties.
Trial - n. the examination
of facts and law presided over by a judge (or other magistrate, such as
a commissioner or judge pro tem) with authority to hear the matter
(jurisdiction). A trial begins with the calling of the parties to come
and be heard and selection of a jury if one has been requested. Each
party is entitled to an opening statement by his/her attorney (or the
party if he/she is representing himself/herself), limited to an outline
of what each side intends to prove (the defense may withhold the
opening statement until the defense is ready to present evidence),
followed by the presentation of evidence first by the plaintiff (in a
civil case) or prosecution (in a criminal case), followed by the
defense evidence, and then by rebuttal evidence by the plaintiff or
prosecution to respond to the defense. At the conclusion of all
evidence each attorney (plaintiff or prosecution first) can make a
final argument which can include opinion and comment on evidence and
legal questions. If it is a jury trial, the judge will give the jury a
series of instructions as to the law of the case, based on "jury
instructions" submitted by the attorneys and approved, rejected,
modified and/or added to by the judge. Then the jury retires to the
jury room, chooses a foreperson and decides the factual questions. If
there is no jury, the judge will determine legal issues and decide
factual questions and render (give) a judgment. A jury will judge the
factual issues and decide the verdict based on the law as given in the
instructions by the judge. Final verdict or judgment usually concludes
the trial, although in some criminal cases a further trial will be held
to determine "special circumstances" (acts which will increase the
punishment) or whether the death penalty should be imposed. Throughout
a trial there may be various motions on legal issues, some of which may
be argued in the judge's chambers. In most criminal cases the exact
punishment will be determined by the judge at a hearing held at a later
time.
Trial Court - n. the court which holds the original trial, as distinguished from a court of appeals.
Trial De Novo - n. a form
of appeal in which the appeals court holds a trial as if no prior trial
had been held. A trial de novo is common on appeals from small claims
court judgments.
Trier of Fact - n. the
judge or jury responsible for deciding factual issues in a trial. If
there is no jury the judge is the trier of fact as well as the trier of
the law. In administrative hearings, an administrative law judge, a
board, commission or referee may be the trier of fact.
U
Uxor - n. Latin for
"wife." In deeds and documents the term "et ux." is sometimes used to
mean "and wife," stemming from a time when a wife was a mere legal
appendage of a man and not worthy of being named.
V
Vacate - v. 1) for a judge
to set aside or annul an order or judgment which he/she finds was
improper. 2) to move out of real estate and cease occupancy.
Venire - (ven-eer-ay) n. the list from which jurors may be selected.
Venue - n. 1) the proper
or most convenient location for trial of a case. Normally, the venue in
a criminal case is the judicial district or county where the crime was
committed. For civil cases, venue is usually the district or county
which is the residence of a principal defendant, where a contract was
executed or is to be performed, or where an accident took place.
However, the parties may agree to a different venue for convenience
(such as where most witnesses are located). Sometimes a lawsuit is
filed in a district or county which is not the proper venue, and if the
defendant promptly objects (asks for a change of venue), the court will
order transfer of the case to the proper venue. Example: a promissory
note states that any suit for collection must be filed in Washington
County, Indiana, and the case is filed in Lake County, Indiana. In high
profile criminal cases the original venue may be considered not the
best venue due to possible prejudice stemming from pre-trial publicity
in the area or public sentiment about the case which might impact upon
potential jurors. For these various reasons either party to a lawsuit
or prosecution may move (ask) for a change of venue, which is up to the
discretion of a judge in the court where the case or prosecution was
originally filed. Venue is not to be confused with "jurisdiction,"
which establishes the right to bring a lawsuit (often anywhere within a
state) whether or not it is the place which is the most convenient or
appropriate location.
Verdict - n. the decision
of a jury after a trial, which must be accepted by the trial judge to
be final. A judgment by a judge sitting without a jury is not a
verdict. A "special verdict" is a decision by the jury on the factual
questions in the case, leaving the application of the law to those
facts to the judge, who makes the final judgment. A "directed verdict"
is a decision following an instruction by the judge that the jury can
only bring in a specific verdict ("based on the evidence you must bring
in a verdict of 'not guilty'"). A "chance verdict" (decided by lot or
the flip of a coin), a "compromise verdict" (based on some jurors
voting against their beliefs to break a deadlock) and a "quotient
verdict" (averaging the amount each juror wants to award) are all
improper and will result in a mistrial (having the verdict thrown out
by the judge) or be cause for reversal of the judgment on appeal.
W
Waive - v. to voluntarily
give up something, including not enforcing a term of a contract (such
as insisting on payment on an exact date), or knowingly giving up a
legal right such as a speedy trial, a jury trial or a hearing on
extradition (the transfer to another state's jurisdiction of one
accused of a crime in the other state).
Whiplash - n. a common
neck and/or back injury suffered in automobile accidents (particularly
from being hit from the rear) in which the head and/or upper back is
snapped back and forth suddenly and violently by the impact. The injury
is to the "soft tissues" and sometimes to the vertebrae, does not
always evidence itself for a day or two, and can cause pain and
disability for periods up to a year. The degree of injury and the pain
and suffering from whiplash are often in dispute in claims and lawsuits
for damages due to negligent driving.
Work Product - n. the
writings, notes, memoranda, reports on conversations with the client or
witness, research and confidential materials which an attorney has
developed while representing a client, particularly in preparation for
trial. A "work product" may not be demanded or subpenaed by the
opposing party, as are documents, letters by and from third parties and
other evidence, since the work product reflects the confidential
strategy, tactics and theories to be employed by the attorney.
Workers' Compensation Acts - n.
state statutes which establish liability of employers for injuries to
workers while on the job or illnesses due to the employment, and
requiring insurance to protect the workers. Worker's compensation is
not based on negligence of the employer, but is absolute liability for
medical coverage, a percentage of lost wages or salary, costs of
rehabilitation and retraining, and payment for any permanent injury
(usually based on an evaluation of limitation). Worker's' Compensation
Acts provide for a system of hearings and quasi-judicial determinations
by administrative law judges and appeal boards. However, if worker's'
compensation is granted, it becomes the only remedy against an employer
and does not include general damages for pain and suffering. Thus, an
injured worker may waive workers' compensation and sue the employer for
damages caused by the employer's negligence. If a third party
contributed to the damages, the injured worker may sue that party for
damages even though he/she receives worker's' compensation, but
recovery may be subject to a lien for moneys paid out by the workers'
compensation insurance company
Workmen's Compensation - n. a former name for worker's compensation before the unisex title of the acts was adopted
Wrongful Death - n. the
death of a human being as the result of a wrongful act of another
person. Such wrongful acts include: negligence (like careless driving),
an inten- tional attack such as assault and/or battery, a death in the
course of another crime, vehicular manslaughter, manslaughter or
murder. Wrongful death is the basis for a lawsuit (wrongful death
action) against the party or parties who caused the death filed on
behalf of the members of the family who have lost the company and
support of the deceased. Thus, a child might be entitled to
compensation for the personal loss of a father as well as the amount of
financial support the child would have received from the now-dead
parent while a minor, a wife would recover damages for loss of her
husband's love and companionship and a lifetime of expected support,
while a parent would be limited to damages for loss of companionship
but not support. A lawsuit for wrongful death may be filed by the
executor or administrator of the estate of the deceased or by the
individual beneficiaries (family members).
Wrongful Termination - n.
a right of an employee to sue his/her employer for damages (loss of
wage and "fringe" benefits, and, if against "public policy," for
punitive damages). To bring such a suit the discharge of the employee
must have been without "cause," and the employee a) had an express
contract of continued employment or there was an "implied" contract
based on the circumstances of his/her hiring or legitimate reasons to
believe the employment would be permanent, b) there is a violation of
statutory prohibitions against discrimination due to race, gender,
sexual preference or age, or c) the discharge was contrary to "public
policy" such as in retribution for exposing dishonest acts of the
employer. An employee who believes he/she has been wrongfully
terminated may bring an action (file a suit) for damages for discharge,
as well as for breach of contract, but the court decisions have become
increasingly strict in limiting an employee's grounds for suit.
X
Y
Your Honor - n. the proper way to address a judge in court.
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