Glossary
of Legal Terms
A
B C D
E F G
H I J
K L M
N O P
Q R S
T U V
W X Y
Z
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A -
Abstract of
title -
A chronological summary of all official records and recorded
documents affecting the title to a parcel of real property.
Acceptance - The taking and receiving of anything in good
faith with the intention of retaining it.
Accomplice - 1. A partner in a crime. 2. A person who
knowingly and voluntarily participates with another in a
criminal activity.
Accretion - The increase or accumulation of land by natural
causes, as out of a lake or river.
Acknowledgment - A formal declaration before an authorized
official by the person who executed an instrument that it is his
free act and deed; the certificate of the official on such
instrument attesting that it was so acknowledged.
Acquittal - A release, absolution, or discharge of an
obligation or liability. In criminal law the finding of not
guilty.
Action Case- Cause, suit, or controversy disputed or
contested before a court of justice.
Additur - An increase by a judge in the amount of damages
awarded by a jury.
Adjective law - Also, procedural law. That body of law which
governs the process of protecting the rights under substantive
law.
Adjudication - Giving or pronouncing a judgment or decree.
Also the judgment given.
Administrative agencies - Agencies created by the
legislative branch of government to administer laws pertaining
to specific areas such as taxes, transportation, and labor.
Administrator - 1. One who administers the estate of a
person who dies without a will. 2. A court official.
Admiralty law - Also, maritime law. That body of law
relating to ships, shipping, marine commerce and navigation,
transportation of persons or property by sea, etc.
Admissible evidence - Evidence that can be legally and
properly introduced in a civil or criminal trial.
Admonish - To advise or caution. For example the court
may caution or admonish counsel for wrong practices.
Advance sheets - Paperback pamphlets published by law
book publishers weekly or monthly which contain reporter cases,
including correct volume number and page number. When there are
sufficient cases, they are replaced by a bound volume.
Adversary proceeding - One having opposing parties such
as a plaintiff and a defendant. Individual lawsuit(s) brought
within a bankruptcy proceeding.
Adverse possession - Method of acquiring real property
under certain conditions by possession for a statutory period.
Affiant - The person who makes and subscribes an
affidavit.
Affidavit - A voluntary, written, or printed declaration
of facts, confirmed by oath of the party making it before a
person with authority to administer the oath.
Affirmation - A solemn and formal declaration that an
affidavit is true. This is substituted for an oath in certain
cases.
Affirmative defense - A defense raised in a responsive
pleading (answer) relating a new matter as a defense to the
complaint; affirmative defenses might include contributory
negligence or estopped in civil actions; in criminal cases
insanity, duress, or self-defense might be used.
Affirmed - In the practice of appellate courts, the word
means that the decision of the trial court is correct.
Agreement - Mutual consent.
Aid and Abet - To actively, knowingly, or intentionally
assist another person in the commission or attempted commission
of a crime.
Alien - A foreign-born person who has not qualified as a
citizen of the country.
Allegation - A statement of the issues in a written
document (a pleading) which a person is prepared to prove in
court.
Alteration - Changing or making different.
Alternative dispute resolution - Settling a dispute
without a full, formal trial. Methods include mediation,
conciliation, arbitration, and settlement, among others.
American Bar Association - A national association of
lawyers whose primary purpose is improvement of lawyers and the
administration of justice.
American Law Reports - A publication which reports cases
from all United States jurisdictions by subject matter.
Ancillary - A proceeding which is auxiliary or
subordinate to another proceeding. In probate, a proceeding in a
state where a decedent owned property but was not domiciled.
Annotations - Remarks, notes, case summaries, or
commentaries following statutes which describe interpretations
of the statute.
Answer - A formal, written statement by the defendant in
a lawsuit which answers each allegation contained in the
complaint.
Answers to Interrogatories - A formal written statement
by a party to a lawsuit which answers each question or
interrogatory propounded by the other party. These answers must
be acknowledged before a notary public or other person
authorized to take acknowledgments.
Antitrust acts - Federal and state statutes to protect
trade and commerce from unlawful restraints, price
discriminations, price fixing, and monopolies.
Appeal - A proceeding brought to a higher court to review
a lower court decision.
Appeal Bond - A guaranty by the appealing party insuring
that court costs will be paid.
Appearance - The act of coming into court as a party to a
suit either in person or through an attorney.
Appendix - Supplementary materials added to the end of a
document.
Appellate court - A court having jurisdiction to hear
appeals and review a trial court's procedure.
Appellee - (See respondent) The party against whom an
appeal is taken.
Arbitration - The hearing of a dispute by an impartial
third person or persons (chosen by the parties), whose award the
parties agree to accept.
Arbitrator - A private, disinterested person chosen by
the parties in arbitration to hear evidence concerning the
dispute and to make an award based on the evidence.
Arraignment - The hearing at which the accused is brought
before the court to plead to the criminal charge in the
indictment. He may plead "guilty," "not
guilty," or where permitted "nolo contendere."
(See preliminary hearing.)
Arrest - To take into custody by legal authority.
Assault - Threat to inflict injury with an apparent
ability to do so. Also, any intentional display of force that
would give the victim reason to fear or expect immediate bodily
harm.
Assignment - The transfer to another person of any
property, real or personal.
Assumption of risk - A doctrine under which a person may
not recover for an injury received when he has voluntarily
exposed himself to a known danger.
At issue - The time in a lawsuit when the complaining
party has stated their claim and the other side has responded
with a denial and the matter is ready to be tried.
Attachment - Taking a person's property to satisfy a
court-ordered debt.
Attorney-at-law - An advocate, counsel, or official agent
employed in preparing, managing, and trying cases in the courts.
Attorney-in-fact - A private person (who is not
necessarily a lawyer) authorized by another to act in his or her
place, either for some particular purpose, as to do a specific
act, or for the transaction of business in general, not of legal
character. This authority is conferred by an instrument in
writing, called a "letter of attorney," or more
commonly "power of attorney."
Attorney of record - The principal attorney in a lawsuit,
who signs all formal documents relating to the suit.
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B -
Bail -
Money or other security (such as a bail bond) provided to the
court to temporarily allow a person's release from jail and
assure their appearance in court. "Bail" and
"Bond" are often used interchangeably. (Applies mainly
to state courts.)
Bail bond - An obligation signed by the accused to secure
his or her presence at the trial. This obligation means that the
accused may lose money by not properly appearing for the trial.
Often referred to simply as "bond."
Bailiff - An officer of the court responsible for keeping
order and maintaining appropriate courtroom decorum and has
custody of the jury.
Bankruptcy - Refers to statutes and judicial proceedings
involving persons or businesses that cannot pay their debts and
seek the assistance of the court in getting a fresh start. Under
the protection of the bankruptcy court, debtors may be released
from or "discharged" from their debts, perhaps by
paying a portion of each debt. Bankruptcy judges preside over
these proceedings. The person with the debts is called the
debtor and the people or companies to whom the debtor owes money
are called creditors.
Bankruptcy Judge - The judge who determines whether a
debtor is entitled to a discharge in bankruptcy.
Bankruptcy law - The area of federal law dealing with the
handling of bankrupt persons or businesses.
Bar 1. - Historically, the partition separating the
general public from the space occupied by the judges, lawyers,
and other participants in a trial. 2. More commonly, the term
means the who body of lawyers.
Bar examination - A state examination taken by
prospective lawyers in order to be admitted and licensed to
practice law.
Battery - A beating, or wrongful physical violence. The
actual threat to use force is an "assault;" the use of
it is a battery, which usually includes an assault.
Bench - The seat occupied by the judge. More broadly, the
court itself.
Bench trial - (Also known as court trial.) Trial without
a jury in which a judge decides the facts.
Bench warrant - An order issued by a judge for the arrest
of a person.
Beneficiary - Someone named to receive property or
benefits in a will. In a trust, a person who is to receive
benefits from the trust.
Bequeath - To give a gift to someone through a will.
Bequests - Gifts made in a will.
Best evidence - Primary evidence; the best evidence
available. Evidence short of this is "secondary." That
is, an original letter is "best evidence," and a
photocopy is "secondary evidence."
Beyond a reasonable doubt - The standard in a criminal
case requiring that the jury be satisfied to a moral certainty
that every element of a crime has been proven by the
prosecution. This standard of proof does not require that the
state establish absolute certainty by eliminating all doubt, but
it does require that the evidence be so conclusive that all
reasonable doubts are removed from the mind of the ordinary
person.
Bill of particulars - A statement of the details of the
charge made against the defendant.
Bind over - To hold a person for trial on bond (bail) or
in jail. If the judicial official conducting a hearing finds
probable cause to believe the accused committed a crime, the
official will bind over the accused, normally by setting bail
for the accused's appearance at trial. (This is a state court
procedure.)
Bond (See bail bond.) - A written agreement by which a
person insures he will pay a certain sum of money if he does not
perform certain duties property.
Bound supplement - A supplement to a book or books to
update the service bound in permanent form.
Booking - The process of photographing, fingerprinting,
and recording identifying data of a suspect. This process
follows the arrest.
Breach - The breaking or violating of a law, right, or
duty, either by commission or omission. The failure of one part
to carry out any condition of a contract.
Breach of contract - An unjustified failure to perform
when performance is due.
Brief - A written argument by counsel arguing a case,
which contains a summary of the facts of the case, pertinent
laws, and an argument of how the law applies to the fact
situation. Also called a memorandum of law.
Burden of proof - In the law of evidence, the necessity
or duty of affirmatively proving a fact or facts in dispute on
an issue raised between the parties in a lawsuit. The
responsibility of proving a point (the burden of proof). It
deals with which side must establish a point or points. (See
standard of proof.)
Burglary - The act of illegal entry with the intent to
steal.
Business bankruptcy - A proceeding under the Bankruptcy
Code filed by a business entity.
Bylaws - Rules or laws adopted by an association or
corporation to govern its actions.
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