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A
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Click on the first letter of the
word from the list above to go to the appropriate section of the glossary.
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Damages:
Money payment recovered in the courts for an injury or loss
caused by an unlawful act or omission or negligence of another.
Decedent:
A deceased person.
Decision: The
judgment reached or given by a court of law.
Declaratory
Judgment:
Judicial adjudication of the rights of the parties in a lawsuit
made to clarify the parties' legal positions.
Decree:
An order of the court. A final decree is one that fully and
finally disposes of the litigation. An interlocutory decree is a
preliminary order that often disposes of only part of a lawsuit.
Defamation:
That which tends to injure a persons reputation. Libel is
published defamation, whereas slander is spoken.
Default:
A failure to respond to a lawsuit within the specified time.
Default
Judgment:
A judgment entered against a party who fails to appear in court
or respond to the charges.
Defendant:
In civil law, the party defending a lawsuit ; the party against
whom the plaintiff seeks to recover damages from.
Demurrer:
Defendant's claim that even if the allegations in a complaint
are true, they are not sufficient to impose any liability on the
defendant.
De Novo:
A new. A trial de novo is a new trial of a case.
Deposition:
Testimony of a witness taken under oath, but not in a courtroom.
May be used to discover evidence prior to trial or to preserve
testimony for use in court at a later time.
Deponent:
The person who testifies at a deposition.
Descent and
Distribution Statutes:
State laws that provide for the distribution of estate property
of a person who dies without a will. Same as intestacy laws.
Dicta:
Plural of "obiter dictum." A remark made by a judge in
a legal opinion that is irrelevant to the decision and does not
establish a precedent.
Directed
Verdict:
Now called Judgment as a matter of Law. An instruction by the
judge to the jury to return a specific verdict.
Direct
Evidence:
Generally, eyewitness evidence. Compare with circumstantial
evidence.
Direct
Examination:
The first questioning of witnesses by the party on whose behalf
they are called.
Disability:
In the legal sense, lack of legal capacity to perform some act.
Used in a physical sense in connection with workers'
compensation acts and is a composite of (a) actual incapacity to
perform employment tasks and the wage loss resulting therefrom
and (b) physical bodily impairment which may or may not be
incapacitating.
Disbarment:
Form of discipline of a lawyer resulting in the loss (often
permanently) of that lawyer's right to practice law. It differs
from censure (an official reprimand or condemnation) and from
suspension (a temporary loss of the right to practice law).
Disclaim:
To refuse a gift made in a will.
Discovery:
The pretrial process by which one party discovers the evidence
that will be relied upon in the trial by the opposing party.
Disfigurement:
A technical term in workers' compensation cases for a serious
and permanent scar to the head, neck, or face.
Dismissal
with Prejudice:
Final judgment against the plaintiff which prohibits bringing an
action on the same cause of action in the future. In contrast,
"dismissal without prejudice" allows the plaintiff to
sue again for the same cause of action.
Dismissal:
The termination of a lawsuit. A dismissal without prejudice
allows a lawsuit to be brought before the court again at a later
time. In contrast, a dismissal with prejudice prevents the
lawsuit from being brought before a court in the future.
Dissent:
To disagree. An appellate court opinion setting forth the
minority view and outlining the disagreement of one or more
judges with the decision of the majority.
Diversion:
The process of removing some minor criminal, traffic, or
juvenile cases from the full judicial process, on the condition
that the accused undergo some sort of rehabilitation or make
restitution for damages.
Docket:
A list of cases to be heard by a court or a log containing brief
entries of court proceedings.
Doctrine of
avoidable consequences or mitigation of damages:
Imposes a duty on victims of a tort to take reasonable steps to
minimize their damages after an injury has been inflicted.
Domicile:
The place where a person has his or her permanent legal home. A
person may have several residences, but only one domicile.
Double
Jeopardy:
Putting a person on trial more than once for the same crime. It
is forbidden by the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Dram shop:
A drinking establishment where alcoholic beverages are served to
be drunk on the premises.
Dram Shop
Act: In
Pennsylvania, this statute imposes liability on drinking
establishments, like bars and restaurants, for harm resulting
from the establishment's service of alcohol to visibly
intoxicated persons.
Due Process
of Law:
The right of all persons to receive the guarantees and
safeguards of the law and the judicial process. It includes such
constitutional requirements as adequate notice, assistance of
counsel. and the rights to remain silent, to a speedy and public
trial, to an impartial jury, and to confront and secure
witnesses.
Duty:
In negligence cases, a "duty" is an obligation to
conform to a particular standard of care. A failure to so
conform places the actor at risk of being liable to another to
whom a duty is owed for an injury sustained by the other of
which the actor's conduct is a legal cause. See reasonable man
doctrine.
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