Civil Litigation & Evidence Law Dictionary (Duhaime. org)

 0    331 tarjetas    JolaW
descargar mp3 imprimir jugar test de práctica
 
término English definición English
ABC Rule
empezar lección
An equitable exception to the general rule that attorney fees are not awarded, and which allows an award of attorney fees as consequential damages.
Abstract Instruction
empezar lección
An instruction given to a jury which though correct in law, is irrelevant.
Abuse of Process
empezar lección
The use of legal process in an improper or unauthorized manner.
Action
empezar lección
A formal demand to a court of law and of justice to resolve a dispute.
Actuary
empezar lección
Professionals uniquely skilled in the application of mathematics to risk management, contingent events and opportunity.
Ad Damnum
empezar lección
Latin: to the damage.
Addendum
empezar lección
An attachment to a written document.
Adjudicative Fact
empezar lección
Basic, core facts that must be proven by a party.
Adminiculum
empezar lección
Latin: some evidence tendered to support something else
Administration of Justice
empezar lección
The personnel, activity and structure of the justice system - courts and police - in the detection, investigation, apprehension, interviewing and trial of persons suspected of crime.
Advocate
empezar lección
The Scottish law term for a barrister; one who argues cases for clients before the Court.
Affiant
empezar lección
A person that is sworn to an affidavit; who gives evidence by way of an affidavit.
Affidavit
empezar lección
A statement which before being signed, the person signing takes an oath that the contents are, to the best of their knowledge, true.
Affirmative Defense
empezar lección
A reply to a claim which alleges facts from which it results that, notwithstanding the truth of the allegations of the complaint, no cause of action exists.
Aggravated Damages
empezar lección
Damages awarded by a court to reflect the exceptional harm done to a plaintiff of a tort action.
Ambidexter
empezar lección
A lawyer who purports to act for both sides.
Amicus Curiae
empezar lección
Latin: friend of the court.
Appeal
empezar lección
To ask a more senior court or person to review a decision of a subordinate court or person.
Appellant
empezar lección
The person who initiates an appeal of a judicial body's decision.
Attorney
empezar lección
An alternate word for lawyers or barrister and solicitor, used mostly in the USA.
Audi Alteram Partem
empezar lección
Latin; literally 'hear the other side'.
Audita Querela
empezar lección
An application to a court after judgment seeking to avoid execution of that judgment because of some event intervening between judgment and execution which compromises the judgment creditor's entitlement to execution.
Backing Sheet
empezar lección
A back cover page to a legal document designed to show, when folded, what the legal document is and who it is from.
Bad Faith
empezar lección
Intent to deceive. A person who intentionally tries to deceive or mislead another in order to gain some advantage.
Bailiff
empezar lección
A person acting with legal authority in the seizure of personal property; and, also, the official in each courtroom who attends to security within.
Balance of Probabilities
empezar lección
Burden of proof in civil trials.
Barrister
empezar lección
A lawyer that restricts his or her practice to the court room; a litigation specialist.
Bench
empezar lección
A judge in court session.
Best Evidence Rule
empezar lección
When a document is proposed as evidence, the original must be produced.
Bill of Costs
empezar lección
A formal itemized memorandum presented by the successful party to concluded litigation, to the other, as a proposal of costs and disbursements that the issuing party claims.
Blue Ribbon Jury
empezar lección
A jury consisting of highly qualified persons.
Bond
empezar lección
A written guarantee in regards to the fulfillment of a legal obligation.
Builders' Lien
empezar lección
A statutory charge against real property by those who have contributed material or manpower to its improvement.
Burden of Proof
empezar lección
A rule of evidence that makes a person prove a certain thing or the contrary will be assumed by the court.
Calderbank Letter
empezar lección
A species of settlement offer delivered in the form of a letter and which can be used in the event that it is rejected and subsequent to trial or hearing of the litigation which results in terms similar to the rejected offer, costs are spoken to.
Call To The Bar
empezar lección
The official moment that an individual is sworn or entered into a law society or state bar or court and thereafter licensed to practise law in that jurisdiction.
Capacity
empezar lección
The power to acquire and assert legal rights.
Cease and Desist Letter
empezar lección
A letter which advises a person to stop (cease and desist) using specified legal rights which are asserted by another.
Certificate of Pending Litigation
empezar lección
A registration or/of a notice or warning that litigation is ongoing as to ownership of a particular piece of land or other real property.
Certiorari
empezar lección
A formal request to a court challenging a legal decision of an administrative tribunal, judicial office or organization (eg. government) alleging that the decision has been irregular or incomplete or if there has been an error of law.
Challenge for Cause
empezar lección
A challenge of a prospective juror for which the cause is disclosed by the challenging party (or their lawyer), and submitted to the Court for decision.
Chambers
empezar lección
A court which sits to dispose of procedural matters.
Circumstantial Evidence
empezar lección
Evidence which may allow a judge or jury to deduce a certain fact from other facts which have been proven.
Citation
empezar lección
An order of a court to either do a certain thing or to appear before it to answer charges.
Civil Action
empezar lección
Any action that is not a criminal proceeding.
Civil Litigation
empezar lección
The conduct of a non-criminal matter in a court of law from initial advice to client(s) through to the enforcement of judgment.
Client-Solicitor Privilege
empezar lección
A right that belongs to the client of a lawyer that the latter keep any information or words spoken to him during the provision of the legal services to that client, strictly confidential.
Collaborative Law
empezar lección
A family law dispute resolution encouragement process set in writing which includes a promise to negotiate in good faith, to engage in the exchange of private and confidential information on a without prejudice basis, and a motivational commitment that the participating lawyers or law firms would withdraw if the negotiations fail.
Commissioner of Oath
empezar lección
A formal appointment or commission governments give to individuals empowering them to certify the oath of another upon documents, such as affidavits.
Commonality
empezar lección
A feature of a group of people seeking to be certified for a class action, that there are questions of law and fact common to the prospective group (class).
Common Fund
empezar lección
A fund recovered by a litigant or lawyer for the benefit of persons other than himself or his client, and that litigant or lawyer then entitled to a reasonable attorney's fee from the fund as a whole.
Common Pleas
empezar lección
A court to resolve civil disputes between private citizens and not otherwise involving the Crown.
Community of Interest
empezar lección
A term of class action law; a requirement for certification, that members of the proposed group represent a community of interests.
Competency
empezar lección
An individual's ability to understand the nature and object of legal proceedings being presented, and to consult with counsel.
Complete Diversity
empezar lección
A jurisdictional requirement of US district courts; that that all persons on one side of the controversy be citizens of different states than all persons on the other side.
Compromise Agreement
empezar lección
An agreement to settle a previously existing claim with a substituted performance.
Conflict of Laws
empezar lección
A specialized branch of law which resolves cases which have an element of conflicting foreign law.
Confrontation Clause
empezar lección
The constitutional guarantee in the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution which requires that an accused person have the right to be confronted with the witnesses against him.
Consent Order
empezar lección
An order of the court in terms which have been contractually entered into by parties to the litigation.
Contemnor
empezar lección
A person found to have committed contempt of court.
Contempt of Court
empezar lección
Conduct that is disobedient, obstructive or contemptuous to the Court.
Contingency Fee
empezar lección
A method of payment of legal fees represented by a percentage of an award.
Contumacy
empezar lección
Intentional contempt of court.
Costs
empezar lección
A court order that the losing party in litigation must pay the successful party's expenses plus an additional allowance, the latter as a contribution towards the winner's legal fees.
Costs Follow The Event
empezar lección
An award of costs will generally flow with the result of litigation; the successful party being entitled to an order for costs against the unsuccessful party.
Costs if Demanded
empezar lección
An award of costs which is explicitly left to the discretion of the party to whom costs are awarded.
Costs in any Event of the Cause
empezar lección
An entitlement to costs of an interlocutory application regardless of the ultimate result of the main action.
Costs in the Cause
empezar lección
The general rule in the law of costs that the ultimate victor at trial may get his or her costs against the loser and including all interlocutory applications.
Counterclaim
empezar lección
A defendant's claim against a plaintiff.
Court of Record
empezar lección
A court of law which retains written records of its proceedings and which has the ability to fine or imprison.
Criminal Contempt
empezar lección
Contumacious behaviour or behaviour which tends to publicly depreciate the authority of the court or the administration of justice.
Cross Examination
empezar lección
The examination of a witness called by the other side at trial and for which leading questions are permitted.
Damages
empezar lección
A cash compensation ordered by a court to offset losses or suffering caused by another’s fault or negligence.
De Bene Esse
empezar lección
To take something for what it is worth, such as evidence collected for the time being, in the absence of, but in anticipation of, litigation, admissibility to be determined when such thing is sought to be used against another at trial.
Deem
empezar lección
To accept a document or an event as conclusive of a certain status in the absence of evidence or facts which would normally be required to prove that status.
Default Judgment
empezar lección
An order of the Court striking a claim because no appearance, answer, reply or defence has been filed within the applicable deadlines.
Defendant
empezar lección
The individual, company or organization who defends a legal action taken by a plaintiff and against whom the court has been asked to order damages or specific corrective action redress some type of unlawful or improper action alleged by the plaintiff.
Dehors
empezar lección
French for outside. In the context of legal proceedings, it refers to that which is irrelevant or outside the scope of the debate.
Deliberative Secrecy
empezar lección
The intentional concealment of the process of cogitating, consulting or other private methods of arriving at a judicial decision.
Demand Letter
empezar lección
A letter from a lawyer, on behalf of a client, that demands payment or some other action, which is allegedly due or in default.
Demurrer
empezar lección
A mostly obsolete motion put to a trial judge after the plaintiff has completed his or her case, in which the defendant, while not objecting to the facts presented, and rather than responding by a full defence, asks the court to reject the petition right then and there because of a lack of basis in law or insufficiency of the evidence.
De Novo
empezar lección
Latin: new.
Deponent
empezar lección
A person who gives evidence verified by oath, as within an affidavit.
Deposition
empezar lección
The official statement by a witness taken in writing (as opposed to testimony which where a witnesses give their perception of the facts verbally).
Dilatory Plea
empezar lección
A formal challenge which questions not the cause of action, but the propriety of the suit, or the mode in which the remedy is sought.
Direct Contempt
empezar lección
Contempt of Court which is aimed expressly against the dignity or authority of the Court itself in the person of its Judges or officers.
Discontinuance
empezar lección
A formal notice filed with the Court and served on the defendant, ending active litigation.
Discovery
empezar lección
The making known to the other side of a law suit, of all relevant evidence.
Dismissal Without Prejudice
empezar lección
A dismissal of an action before it is judges on the merits and leaves the parties as though the action had never been filed, subject to limitations in local Court rules.
Docket
empezar lección
An official court record book which lists all the cases before the court and which may also note the status or action required for each case.
Document
empezar lección
Any written thing capable of being made evidence.
Double Costs
empezar lección
A punitive measure against a litigant for that party’s failure, in all of the circumstances, to have accepted an offer to settle that should have been accepted.
Double Hearsay
empezar lección
Recitals of statements of others within a statement that is itself hearsay; an out-of-court declaration containing another out-of-court declaration.
Duces Tecum
empezar lección
Latin: bring with you.
Dying Declaration
empezar lección
Exception to the hearsay rule: a statement of fact made by a dying victim relating to the cause and circumstances of a homicide.
Embracery
empezar lección
Improper influence on a juror.
Empanel
empezar lección
Also, "impanel"; the official call to duty of a jury, usually as called by the clerk of the Court in which the jury is to act, and just before the jurors are sworn in.
En banc
empezar lección
(French) As a full bench.
Equitable Estoppel
empezar lección
A bar to a party from asserting a legal claim or defense that is contrary or inconsistent with his or her prior action of conduct.
Equity Delights to do Justice, and not by Halves
empezar lección
A maxim of equity that once invoked successfully, equity will, fully and with finality, resolve the dispute between the parties.
Esquire
empezar lección
A mostly informal title associated with those who practice law.
Essoin
empezar lección
A valid excuse for not appearing in Court when summoned.
Evidence
empezar lección
Proof of fact(s) presented at a judicial hearing such as a trial.
Examination for Discovery
empezar lección
A recorded oral examination of the other side to litigation before trial and under oath, but not before a judge, with a view to obtaining admissions or discovering facts.
Examination In Chief
empezar lección
The questioning of your own witness under oath.
Examination on Affidavit
empezar lección
An examination under oath of the deponent of an affidavit.
Exchequer
empezar lección
A court of law designed to determine claims by the Crown.
Ex Facie Contempt
empezar lección
Contempt committed outside the court.
Exhibit
empezar lección
A document or object shown to the court as evidence.
Ex Juris
empezar lección
Latin: outside of the jurisdiction.
Ex Parte
empezar lección
Latin: outside the awareness of a party; for one party only.
Expert Witness
empezar lección
A witness with a defined area of expertise and on that basis and strictly within that area, is allowed to give opinion evidence to the Court (or jury, as the case may be).
Facial Mapping
empezar lección
An identification technique which distinguishes unique facial characteristics of an individual.
Factum
empezar lección
The written summary of a litigant's position to be taken and expounded upon in a judicial proceeding, including a concise summary of relevant facts and law and brief arguments with reference to authorities where applicable.
Fieri Facias
empezar lección
Latin: that you cause to be made. Mostly used to refer to a writ of judgment enforcement obtained under the old common law of England.
Final Order
empezar lección
An order or judgment of the Court that finally disposes of the rights of the parties.
Fishing Expedition
empezar lección
A speculative demand for information without any real expectation about the outcome of the demand or its relevance to the litigation.
Forum Conveniens
empezar lección
The court or forum most suitable for the ends of justice.
Fresh Evidence
empezar lección
Evidence that existed at the time of the trial, but for various reasons could not be put before the court.
Ghostwriting
empezar lección
When a lawyer is hired to draft an official court document on behalf of a self-represented litigant.
Guardian Ad Litem
empezar lección
A guardian appointed to direct litigation on behalf and in the interests of a person otherwise incapable of managing their affairs.
Habit
empezar lección
A regular response to a specific situation.
Harmless Error
empezar lección
An error which beyond a reasonable doubt, did not contribute to a decision.
Hearing
empezar lección
The presentation of evidence before an adjudicating body as may be required for a full disclosure and challenge of alleged facts.
Hearsay
empezar lección
Evidence that is offered by a witness of which they do not have direct knowledge but, rather, their testimony is based on what others have said to them.
Hired Gun
empezar lección
An expert with a bias or who adapts his or her expert evidence to the requirements of the party that calls him/her as a witness.
Hostile Witness
empezar lección
A party's witness who demonstrates such adversity to answering questions that the trial judge allows leading questions to be put to that witness.
Husband-Wife Privilege
empezar lección
A special right that married persons have to keep communications between them secret and even inaccessible to a court of law.
Impanel
empezar lección
Also, "empanel"; the official call to duty of a jury, usually as called by the clerk of the Court in which the jury is to act, and just before the jurors are sworn in.
Implied Undertaking Rule
empezar lección
A party to whom documents are produced within litigation will not use them for collateral or ulterior purposes.
In Camera
empezar lección
A closed and private session of Court or some other deliberating body.
Increased Costs
empezar lección
A term of statute of costs which are in excess of party and party costs and which may equal or come close to completely indemnify the successful litigant.
Indigent
empezar lección
A poor person; not penniless but in need and who has no financial support from any other.
Indirect Contempt
empezar lección
Contempt of court which occurs not in the presence of a judge acting judicially, but which tend to degrade the court or to obstruct or embarrass the administration of justice by the court.
In Facie Contempt
empezar lección
Contempt of court that occurs in the face of the Court.
Inherent Jurisdiction
empezar lección
The residual, automatic and ex officio authority of a court of law to regulate proceedings before it including punishing contempt.
Inhibition
empezar lección
A legal procedure to prevent a debtor from compromising property upon which a creditor holds a charge.
Injunction
empezar lección
A court order that prohibits a party from doing something (restrictive injunction) or compels them to do something (mandatory injunction).
In Limine
empezar lección
Latin: at the beginning or on the threshold.
Inns of Court
empezar lección
The several professional associations of barristers, to which all barristers in England or Wales must belong to one, to wit, Lincoln's Inn, Middle Temple, Gray's Inn or Inner Temple.
In Personam
empezar lección
Latin: regarding a person; a right, action, judgment or entitlement that is attached to a specific person(s).
In Rem
empezar lección
Latin: regarding a thing; proprietary in nature; a right or judgment related to the use or ownership of an item of property.
Interest Reipublicae Ut Sit Finis Litium
empezar lección
Latin: in the interest of society as a whole, litigation must come to an end.
Interloper
empezar lección
A person who, without legal right, runs a business (eg. without mandatory licenses), or who wrongfully interferes or intercepts another's business.
Interrogatories
empezar lección
Pre-trial numbered and written questions on relevant matters to the litigation, sent to the other side of litigation, and for which reply is mandatory.
Inter Se
empezar lección
Latin: as between or amongst themselves.
Intervener
empezar lección
One who is given standing in litigation even though they were not originally a party.
Judicial Discretion
empezar lección
The power the law gives the Court or a judge to choose among two or more alternatives, each being lawful.
Judicial Immunity
empezar lección
Absolute immunity from civil liability for official decisions or acts.
Judicial Lien
empezar lección
A lien obtained by judgment or other judicial proceeding.
Judicial Misconduct
empezar lección
Conduct on the part of a judge that is prohibited and which could lead to a form of discipline.
Judicial Notice
empezar lección
A doctrine which enables a judge to accept a fact without the need of a party to prove it through evidence.
Judicial Review
empezar lección
A process where a court of law is asked to rule on the appropriateness of the decision of an administrative agency or tribunal.
Jurat
empezar lección
The written certification by a judicial officer that a deponent or affiant recognizes and endorses all parts of an affidavit he or she proposes to sign, and confirms that an oath has been administered in this regard to the affiant.
Jure Gestionis
empezar lección
The private or commercial acts of a state.
Jure Imperii
empezar lección
Latin: imperial authority.
Jurisdiction
empezar lección
Legal authority to judge or to act in a given situation or case.
Juror
empezar lección
A member of a jury; a person who has taken an oath to serve on a jury.
Jury
empezar lección
A group of citizens randomly selected from the general population and brought together to assist justice by deciding which version, in their opinion, constitutes 'the truth' given different evidence by opposing parties.
Jury Nullification
empezar lección
The extraordinary power of a jury to issue a verdict contrary to the law as applied to the proven facts.
Jury Secrecy Rule
empezar lección
A rule of law which prohibits the disclosure, by a member of a jury, of statements or opinions voiced during jury deliberations.
Jury Tampering
empezar lección
To unlawfully disrupt the independence of a jury member with a view to influencing that juror otherwise than by the production of evidence in open court.
Justiciability
empezar lección
A necessary prerequisite of a matter put to a court of law for resolution; that an actual and substantial controversy be at hand.
Kangaroo Court
empezar lección
A judicial proceeding or trial which has a predetermined outcome or where the basic legal rights of a party are jumped over.
King's Bench
empezar lección
Originally, the common criminal court of the common law; later, the general superior court.
Law of the case Doctrine
empezar lección
When a court decides upon a rule of law, that decision should continue to govern the same issues in subsequent stages in the same case.
Lawyer
empezar lección
An individual trained in the law and that has been certified to give legal advice or to represent others in litigation.
Leading Question
empezar lección
A question which suggests an answer; usually answerable by yes or no.
Legal Professional Privilege
empezar lección
A shield against disclosure of communications between a solicitor and his/her client.
Legislative Fact
empezar lección
Broad, general facts that are not unique and relate indirectly to the parties to litigation.
Levy
empezar lección
A seizure of specified property for the purposes of conversion into money.
Lex Fori
empezar lección
Latin for the law of the forum.
Lex Situs
empezar lección
A conflict of law rule that selects the applicable law based on the venue or location of something.
Liability
empezar lección
A legal obligation, either due now or at some time in the future.
Lien
empezar lección
A property right which remains attached to an object that has been sold, but not totally paid for, until complete payment has been made.
Limitations or Statute of Limitations
empezar lección
Loss of a legal right or cause of action because of the passage of time.
Lis Pendens
empezar lección
Latin: a dispute or matter which is the subject of ongoing or pending litigation.
Litigant
empezar lección
A person who is a party to a legal action.
Litigation
empezar lección
A dispute is in 'litigation' (or being 'litigated') when it has become the subject of a formal court action or law suit.
Litigation Loan
empezar lección
A loan made by a third-party to litigation, typically a finance company, to a litigant to finance the litigation, and often on harsh terms.
Litigation Privilege
empezar lección
Non-disclosure protection imposed on documents which come into existence after litigation commenced or in contemplation, and where they have been made with a view to such litigation, either for the purpose of obtaining advice as to such litigation, or of obtaining evidence to be used in such litigation, or of obtaining information which might lead to the obtaining of such evidence.
Locus
empezar lección
Latin: the place; venue.
Locus Regit Actum
empezar lección
Latin: The law of the place where the facts occurred.
Locus Standi
empezar lección
Latin: legal standing before a court.
Mandamus
empezar lección
A writ which commands an individual, organization (eg. government), administrative tribunal or court to perform a certain action, usually to correct a prior illegal action or a failure to act in the first place.
Mandate Rule
empezar lección
An inferior court has no power or authority to deviate from the mandate issued by an appellate court.
Manifest Abuse of Discretion
empezar lección
An American standard of judicial review: discretion exercised improvidently or thoughtlessly and without due consideration.
Mareva Injunction
empezar lección
A temporary injunction that freezes the assets of a party pending further order or final resolution by the Court.
Mary Carter Agreement
empezar lección
A partial settlement to litigation where some defendants settle by accepting a term of which is a loan by the settling defendant to the plaintiff, to be repaid by any monies recovered from the remaining defendant(s).
Master
empezar lección
A partly-empowered superior-level court judge, used mostly for interlocutory and procedural civil hearings.
Medical Expert
empezar lección
A witness tendered to offer opinion evidence within the confines of his or her area of medical expertise.
Minutes of Settlement
empezar lección
A formal record of a contract which settles one or more live issues before a Court.
Miscarriage of Justice
empezar lección
A substantial wrong which occurs during a trial which so infects the proceedings as to merit quashing the result on appeal.
Mis-joinder
empezar lección
When a person has been named as a party to a law suit when that person should not have been added.
Moot
empezar lección
A matter where the issue raised concerns a hypothetical or abstract question
Moot Court
empezar lección
A trial on a fictional or hypothetical issue, usually hosted by law schools, as training for future barristers or litigators.
Motion to Strike
empezar lección
A motion put to the Court to strike a pleading or evidence of a witness.
Natural Justice
empezar lección
Basic or fundamental judicial rights extended to a person with rights at issue.
Nemo Debet Bis Vexari Pro Una Et Eadem Causa
empezar lección
Latin: No-one shall be tried or punished twice in regards to the same event.
Nemo Judex In Parte Sua
empezar lección
Latin: no person can judge a case in which he or she is party or in which he/she has an interest.
New Evidence
empezar lección
Evidence of matters that occurred subsequent to the order appealed from.
Nolle Prosequi
empezar lección
Latin: no prosecution.
Non-joinder
empezar lección
When a person, who should have been made a party to a legal proceedings, has been forgotten or omitted.
Norwich Order
empezar lección
Pre-action third party discovery to an intended plaintiff without notice to the intended defendant.
Notice of Motion
empezar lección
A formal notice to participants in litigation of an intent to seek specific relief in an action.
Oath
empezar lección
A religious or solemn affirmation to tell the truth or to take a certain action.
Obiter Dictum
empezar lección
Latin: an observation by a judge on a matter not specifically before the court or not necessary in determining the issue before the court.
Obstructing Justice
empezar lección
An act which tends to impede or thwart the administration of justice.
Onus
empezar lección
Latin: the burden.
Opening Statement
empezar lección
A lawyer or litigant's initial remarks at trial, to the finder of fact, either a judge or jury, setting out their road-map or case theory.
Open Justice
empezar lección
A principle of the common law that proceedings ought to be open to the public, including the contents of court files and public viewing of trials.
Out-of-Court Settlement
empezar lección
An agreement between two litigants to settle a matter privately before the Court has rendered its decision.
Overriding Error
empezar lección
A standard of appellate review, an error that must have altered the result or may well have altered the result.
Palpable Error
empezar lección
A standard of appellate review, an error that is readily or plainly seen.
Particulars
empezar lección
The material facts which a party to litigation alleges are true and which that party will seek to prove at trial in support of the relief claimed.
Party and Party Costs
empezar lección
The standard award of costs being, in the result, a partial indemnity to the successful party to litigation for his or her litigation expenses.
Past Recollection Recorded
empezar lección
An exception to the hearsay rule, whereby evidence of which a witness has no current recall can nonetheless be admitted for the truth of its contents as it was recorded at a time when the witness was able to verify its accuracy.
Pauper's Oath
empezar lección
An affidavit of indigence, of poverty.
Pendente Lite
empezar lección
Latin: during litigation.
Peremption
empezar lección
A period of time fixed by law for the existence of a right.
Peremptory Challenge
empezar lección
Also "preemptory challenge"; a party's challenge of a prospective juror for which no reason or justification need be given.
Per Incuriam
empezar lección
Latin: through want of care.
Perpetual Injunction
empezar lección
A permanent injunction.
Personal Interest
empezar lección
An interest in either the subject matter or a relationship with the parties before a judicial body.
Personal Jurisdiction
empezar lección
The court's authority to determine a claim affecting a specific person.
Personal Knowledge
empezar lección
Something a witness actually saw or heard.
Perverse Verdict
empezar lección
A decision of a jury which runs altogether contrary to the evidence presented before it.
Petition
empezar lección
The formal, written document submitted to a court, and which asks for the court to redress what is described in the petition as being an injustice of some kind.
Petitory Suit
empezar lección
An action in maritime law in which a person seeks to obtain a judgment as to title of a vessel independently of possession.
Piecemeal Litigation
empezar lección
Circumstances in which more than one court is seized of the adjudication of the same issue.
Pierringer Release
empezar lección
A proportionate share settlement agreement
Plaintiff
empezar lección
The person who initiates, who brings or files a case with a court; who sues.
Pleadings
empezar lección
That core document(s) of a party to litigation in which he or she formally sets out the facts and the law which support that party's position.
Plea to the Jurisdiction
empezar lección
A preliminary challenge to a court's authority to decide the action before it.
Poinding
empezar lección
Scottish law: The seizure of a judgment debtor's personal property to satisfy the terms of the judgment.
Polygraph
empezar lección
A lie-detector machine.
Possessory Action
empezar lección
Where a party entitled to possession of a vessel seeks to recover that vessel.
Practice of Law
empezar lección
The giving of legal advice or of representation of another as agent in a court of law or through rules of court, or in the preparation of legal documents or in dispute or contractual negotiation.
Præcipe or Precipe
empezar lección
Latin: an initiating document presented to a court clerk to be officially issued on behalf of the court or a the covering memo or letter from the lawyer (or plaintiff) which accompanies and formally asks for the writ to be issued by the court officer.
Preemptory Challenge
empezar lección
Also "peremptory challenge"; a party's challenge of a prospective juror for which no reason or justification need be given.
Preponderance
empezar lección
Evidence that persuades a judge or jury to lean to one side as opposed to the other, during the course of litigation.
Prescription
empezar lección
A method of acquiring or extinguishing rights through the inaction of the legal owner.
Present Memory Revived
empezar lección
A facilitative mechanism used at trial to assist a witness in recalling his or her memory, thus revived.
Priest and Penitent Privilege
empezar lección
A privilege suggesting the exclusion from evidence of matters discussed during a confession between a Roman Catholic priest and a penitent.
Prison Mailbox Rule
empezar lección
(USA) A rule of procedure which deems that any court document mailed by a self-represented inmate is deemed filed on the date of delivery to prison authorities for mailing.
Probative
empezar lección
Tending to prove.
Pro Bono
empezar lección
Latin: for the good.
Pro Se
empezar lección
Latin: on one’s own behalf.
Purge
empezar lección
To apologize or the taking of such other action as may be deemed by a court of law to suffice for the purposes of vacating a charge of contempt of court.
Quasi-Judicial
empezar lección
Administrative tribunals or government officials which, in their decision-making process, are subject to the rules of natural justice.
Queen's Bench
empezar lección
Originally, the common criminal court of the common law; later, the general superior court.
Question of Discretion
empezar lección
Where an appeal predominantly takes issue with the lower court's exercise of judicial discretion.
Question of Fact
empezar lección
Questions about what actually took place between the parties.
Question of Law
empezar lección
Questions touching the scope, effect or application of a rule of law which the courts apply in determining the rights of parties.
Question of Mixed Law and Fact
empezar lección
An appellate standard of review of a lower court's order where the appeal issues are divided between question(s) of fact and question(s) of law.
Qui Tam
empezar lección
Latin: who as well.
Quo Warranto
empezar lección
Latin: legal procedure taken to stop a person or organization from doing something for which it may not have the legal authority, by demanding to know by what right they exercise the controversial authority.
Ratio Decidendi
empezar lección
Latin: reasons for a decision.
Reconvention
empezar lección
A rule of jurisdiction which enables a counterclaim against another who, although otherwise beyond the jurisdiction of the court, has voluntarily submitted to jurisdiction by iniating the principal action.
Recross Examination
empezar lección
The resumption of cross-examination by the original cross-examiner in order to respond to matters that may have arisen during the re-examination of a witness.
Recusation
empezar lección
An application made to a judge that he/she not hear a particular case because of a real or perceived conflict of interest; that the judge recuse himself (abstain) from the case.
Red Herring
empezar lección
An irrelevant legal issue.
Redirect Examination
empezar lección
The re-opening of an examination-in-chief after cross-examination, to cover matters that may have arisen during cross-examination.
Remedy
empezar lección
Remedial judicial action to right a wrong or to prevent a infringement upon a legal right.
Replevin
empezar lección
A legal action taken to reclaim goods which have been distrained.
Res Judicata
empezar lección
Latin: already subject to judicial determination.
Res Noviter Veniens Ad Notitiam
empezar lección
Latin: Fact(s) newly coming to knowledge.
Respondent
empezar lección
The party that responds to a claim filed in court against them by a plaintiff.
Retraxit
empezar lección
Latin: a withdrawal of a legal action.
Reverse Payment
empezar lección
A payment by a patent holder to an infringer in consideration of the infringer's cease and desist.
Rules of Court
empezar lección
Rules of procedure and conduct during the sitting of a court of law uniformly applicable to litigants and their lawyers, and governing the hearings of claims and motions, and defences or responses thereto.
Runaway Witness
empezar lección
A witness who, while under cross-examination, is unresponsive.
Scandalizing the Court
empezar lección
Personal scurrilous abuse of a judge as a judge.
Sealing Order
empezar lección
A Court order that restricts access to or disclosure of any record or document filed in a proceeding.
Security for Costs
empezar lección
Payment or deposit of money or some form of security in lieu thereof, into court, by a litigant to secure the payment of such costs if such person does not prevail.
Sequestered Jury
empezar lección
A jury which has been confined to a location where they can be shielded from outside distractions while their deliberations are ongoing.
Sequestration
empezar lección
The taking of someones property, voluntarily (by deposit) or involuntarily (by seizure), by court officers or into the possession of a third party, awaiting the outcome of a trial in which ownership of that property is at issue.
Sharp Practice
empezar lección
Prohibited conduct by a licensed lawyer in taking, or attempting to take advantage of a slip or overlooked technical matter by the other side to litigation, and to agree to reasonable requests which either prejudice his client or the interests of justice.
Sine Die
empezar lección
Latin: without a day. Taken to mean without fixing a day for continuation.
Solicitor and Client Costs
empezar lección
An award of all costs associated with litigation.
Solicitor and Own Client Costs
empezar lección
One of the most punitive awards of costs, requiring a party to pay the other's legal bill.
Special Costs
empezar lección
A scale of costs generally equivalent to solicitor and client costs and also approaching complete indemnity to the successful litigant.
Special Jury
empezar lección
A jury drawn to certain specifications given the alleged complexities of the matter to be tried.
Standard of Review
empezar lección
The applicable threshold of an appeallable error; often distinguishable as between questions of law, of fact, or mixed questions of fact and law.
Standing
empezar lección
The ability to sue and speak to the Court on a controversy based on personal interest in the outcome.
Stare Decisis
empezar lección
Latin: stay with what has been decided.
Statement of Claim
empezar lección
The document which sets out the plaintiff's allegations of fact and thus, engages the judicial process by seeking trial.
Statement of Defence
empezar lección
A defendant's written answer or reply to a statement of claim, admitting or denying each and every one of the facts contained in the statement of claim and alleging such facts as the defendant wishes to assert at trial in opposition to the plaintiff's case.
Statute of Limitations
empezar lección
A procedural rule which limits the time in which a party may bring an action for a right which has already accrued.
Statute of Repose
empezar lección
The deadline set by statute on the assertion of a right by litigation.
Statutory Lien
empezar lección
A lien arising solely by force of a statute on specified circumstances or conditions.
Stay
empezar lección
To stop; to suspend; also known as a stay of proceedings; when a law suit is suspended either indefinitely or until the occurrence of a condition imposed by the court.
Stenographer
empezar lección
An individual employed to receive and transcribe dictation.
Stipulated Judgment
empezar lección
USA: consent order.
Stipulation
empezar lección
(USA law) An agreement between the parties with respect to an issue before the court.
Style of Cause
empezar lección
The formal title of the proceedings in a court of law, usually the action number, the name of the court and the full, formal and complete name(s) of the plaintiff(s) and that of all defendant(s).
Sub Judice
empezar lección
Latin: under judicial consideration.
Subpoena
empezar lección
Latin: an order of a court which requires a person to be present at a certain time and place or suffer a penalty (subpoena means, literally, under penalty).
Substantive Law
empezar lección
Core law which determines rights and obligations, as opposed to procedural law.
Summary Judgment
empezar lección
A court order dismissing a claim summarily, upon application, and based on the allegation that there is no claim or defence with a reasonable prospect of success.
Summary Trial
empezar lección
The trial of an action by way of affidavit evidence only or by use of truncated process.
Summons
empezar lección
In the USA, this is one of the initial documents issued in a civil suit; giving the defendant notice of the claim and an opportunity to defend it.
Super Injunction
empezar lección
An injunction obtained in a secret convening of the court where in the result, the court file, the names of the parties and even the terms of the injunction order are secret except as between the parties, counsel, the judge and the court staff.
Supersedeas
empezar lección
An application to a court to stay proceedings; most frequently, to stay enforcement or collection proceedings upon a judgment.
Supersedeas Bond
empezar lección
A contract by which a surety obligates itself to pay a final judgment rendered against its principal under the conditions stated in the bond.
Surplusage
empezar lección
Superfluous allegations, especially in regards to pleadings.
Tales
empezar lección
The act of supplementing a jury otherwise incomplete.
Talesmen
empezar lección
Additional jurors summoned to complete a jury.
Taxation of Costs
empezar lección
The formal quasi-judicial review of a bill of costs or other determination of costs payable by one litigant to another.
Temporal Jurisdiction
empezar lección
Jurisdiction of a state or of a court of law over a legal action as it may be affected by the effects or passage of time.
Testimony
empezar lección
The oral evidence of a witness in a judicial proceeding, such as a trial.
Theory of the Case
empezar lección
A short, succinct statement of the theme of an action as evidence will be presented, organized and support at trial.
Third Party
empezar lección
A person who is not privy to a contract or a party in a lawsuit.
Transit In Rem Judicatam
empezar lección
Latin: The cause of action is changed into matter of record, which is of a higher nature, and the inferior remedy is merged in the higher.
Trial
empezar lección
The resolution of a dispute by examination of evidence submitted by opposing litigants by a tribunal or Court of law, and determination of (1) guilt (in a criminal trial) or (2) of a civil dispute of fact or law.
Ubi Jus Ibi Remedium
empezar lección
Latin: For every wrong, the law provides a remedy.
Ultra Petita
empezar lección
Latin: beyond that which is sought.
Ultra Vires
empezar lección
Latin: without authority.
Unfavourable Witness
empezar lección
When a witness called by a party merely gives unfavorable answers to questions posed during examination in chief, that party may not cross examine the witness but may still lead evidence in contradiction.
Venue
empezar lección
Location or proposed district of a judicial hearing.
Verdict
empezar lección
French: truth told; the decision of a jury.
View
empezar lección
The displacement of a judge and jury to the location of events which are being described at trial.
Viva Voce
empezar lección
Latin: by voice.
Voir Dire
empezar lección
A mini-hearing held during a trial on the eligibility of prospective jurors or the admissibility of contested evidence.
Want of Prosecution
empezar lección
An application to a judge to dismiss a law suit alleging that the litigant has inexcusably delayed moving the litigation along and that under the circumstances, the litigation ought to be dismissed.
Warrant
empezar lección
A document giving a person legal authority to do a certain thing.
Withdrawal
empezar lección
A cancellation of a statement of defence or counterclaim by a defendant.
Without Prejudice
empezar lección
A reservation made on a statement that it cannot be used against in future dealings or litigation.
Witness
empezar lección
A person who perceives an event (by seeing, hearing, smelling or other sensory perception).
Writ
empezar lección
An official court document, signed by a judge or bearing an official court seal, which commands the person to whom it is addressed, to do something specific.
Zealous Witness
empezar lección
A witness who demonstrates disproportionate enthusiasm while testifying.

Debes iniciar sesión para poder comentar.