A
Abstract of title - A shortened history of the title
to land.
Acceleration clause - A provision in a mortgage, note,
etc., which allows a lender to demand monies due under the instrument
when there has been a default such as nonpayment, etc.
Accessory - In criminal law, one who contributes to
or aids in the commission of a crime.
Acquit - To certify the innocence of someone charged
with a crime.
Adjudication - The formal giving or pronouncing of a judgment
or decree.
Administrator - A person appointed by the court to
administer.
Admission - Voluntary acknowledgements made by a party
that certain facts are true.
Adverse possession - Acquiring title to land by possessing
the land for a certain period of time and under certain conditions.
Affidavit - A written statement of facts sworn to as
true by the person making it.
Affirmative defense - In a pleading, a matter constituting
a defense.
Agent - Someone who acts for another.
Alimony - Allowances that one spouse pays the other
for maintenance while they are separated or after they are divorced.
Allegation - Assertion made in a pleading that the
party expects to prove.
Amicus Curiae - A person with a strong interest in
the subject matter may petition the court for permission to file a brief.
Amortization - The payment of a debt by installments.
Annulment - When the court voids a marriage due to
preexisting conditions that would have prevented a valid marriage from
being entered into.
Answer - A pleading in which a defendant responds to
the plaintiff’s complaint.
Appeal - A procedure in which a party resorts to a
superior court to review the decision of an inferior (lower) court.
Appellant - The party who appeals a decision to a higher
court.
Appellate Court - A court having jurisdiction of appeal
and review.
Appellee - The party against whom an appeal was taken.
Arraignment - Proceeding in which the accused is brought
before the court to plead to a criminal charge.
Assault - An attempt to inflict injury upon another,
when coupled with ability to inflict the injury.
Assumption of the risk - An affirmative defense in
a personal injury case, meaning that a person cannot recover for an
injury received when he/she voluntarily exposes himself to a known and
appreciated danger.
Attachment - The act of taking property by some type
of order to bring a person or property into legal custody.
B
Bail (verb) - To procure release on one charged with
an offense.
Bailiff - A court officer who has charge of a court
session.
Bankrupt - When an individual, under the Bankruptcy
Act, is unable to pay debts as they become due.
Battery - The use of physical force against another.
Bench warrant - A court-issued warrant for the attachment
or arrest of a person.
Bind over - To hold for trial or further inquiry.
Brief - A written document.
Burglary - While every state defines it differently,
it is commonly defined as breaking into and entering a dwelling with
the intent to commit a felony therein.
C
Caption - The heading of a pleading, motion, deposition,
or other legal document which shows the name of the court, the names
of the parties, docket or file number, title of the action, as well
as other pertinent information.
Cause of Action - A combination of law and fact sufficient
enough for someone to seek a remedy through a court.
Certiorari - (Latin: “to be informed of”)
Writ issued by a superior to a lower court requiring the lower court
to produce a certified record of proceedings for judicial review. The
writ is often used as a means of gaining appellate review. In the United
States Supreme Court and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, the writ is
most frequently used as a way of selecting the cases that will be reviewed.
Change of Venue - The transfer of a lawsuit from one
county to another county, or from one court to another court in the
same county or district.
Charge to Jury - The final address by a judge to a
jury instructing the jury as to the law relevant to a case and how the
law must be applied. The charge is given immediately before the jury
retires to deliberate on a verdict.
Chattel - An article of tangible personal property,
as opposed to real property.
Circuit Court - A court that has jurisdiction over
various counties or districts.
Circumstantial Evidence - Testimony, not based on actual
personal knowledge or observation of the facts in controversy, which
the court or jury may determine to be true from deductions.
Citation to Legal Authority - Reference to a statute,
code, regulation, court decision, constitutional provision, or quotation
from a body of law to support a statement of the law.
Civil Action - A lawsuit brought to enforce private
rights; in general, any type of action except criminal proceedings.
Clerk of Courts - The officer who generally acts as
the administrative agent of the court.
Responsibilities include, but are not limited to, accepting filings,
recording orders of court, and calculating sentences imposed in criminal
matters.
Code - A collection of laws, rules, or regulations systematically
arranged and enacted by legislative authority.
Codicil - A supplement or addition to a will that may
explain, modify, add to, subtract from, qualify, alter, restrain, or
revoke provisions in the existing will.
Collateral Estoppel Doctrine - Commonly referred to
as “issue preclusion.” When a court renders a decision in
a case based upon its disposition of certain issues, those same issues
cannot be litigated again in another case in which a party to the previous
case, who litigated or had the opportunity to litigate the decided issues,
participated.
Common Law - The body of principles and rules based
on judicial precedent rather than on legislative enactments.
Common-Law Marriage - Created by two people without
a ceremony involving an agreement to enter into a marriage relationship,
cohabitation, and the parties holding themselves out to the public as
married.
Commutation - The change of a punishment to one that
is less severe, such as the reduction of a criminal defendant’s
punishment from a death sentence to life imprisonment.
Comparative Negligence - Under this statute or doctrine,
a plaintiff’s recovery will be diminished by the percentage amount
of negligence attributable to the plaintiff in causing his or her injuries.
In Pennsylvania, a plaintiff may recover, despite his/her own negligence,
if his/her negligence was less than 50 percent of the cause of
the injuries. The term also refers to the allocation of percentages
of negligence between multiple defendants.
Compensatory Damages - Awarded in a civil action as
compensation, indemnity, or restitution to a plaintiff for losses or
damages incurred as a result of the acts of another. The purpose of
compensatory damages is to place the plaintiff in the position that
he/she was in prior to the injury. Examples of compensatory damages
are economic damages, such as lost wages and medical bills, and non-economic
damages, such as pain, suffering, and disfigurement.
Complaint - The initial pleading filed by a plaintiff
in a civil lawsuit. Also refers to the written document detailing criminal
charges filed against a criminal defendant.
Condemnation - The legal process by which private property
is appropriated for public use without the owner’s consent through
the power of eminent domain, but for which the owner is paid just compensation
by the public body for such appropriation.
Consent Decree - An agreement of parties to a lawsuit,
based upon stipulated facts, which is sanctioned by the court. It also
refers to a disposition of criminal charges under the Pennsylvania Juvenile
Act, by where a juvenile admits to participation in criminal activity,
but does not obtain a record of conviction.
Consideration - Generally, something of value or a
promise to forgo an existing liability provided in exchange for a person’s
entering into a contract.
Contempt of Court - An intentional act designed to
hinder a court’s administration of justice. Direct contempt is
committed in the immediate presence and view of the court. Constructive,
or indirect, contempt is the failure or refusal to obey lawful court
orders.
Contingent Fee - Attorney’s fee calculated as
a percentage of the amount recovered by a client.
Continuance - A postponement granted by the court at
the request of either or both parties, or by the court on its own motion.
Contract - An enforceable oral or written agreement,
between two or more parties, which creates an obligation to do or not
to do a particular thing.
Contributory Negligence - The concept that a plaintiff,
who sues a defendant on a basis of negligence, is not entitled to recover
any damages if he/she committed an act of negligence that contributed
to the injury suffered. Contributory negligence has been abandoned in
Pennsylvania to the extent that it would completely preclude a plaintiff’s
recovery if the plaintiff is determined to have been in any way causally
negligent. See also “Comparative Negligence.”
Conversion - The improper use, possession, or destruction
of another’s personal property.
Copyright - An intangible right of ownership granted
by statute to the author or originator of certain literary, musica,l
or other artistic productions.
Corpus Delicti - Objective proof that a crime has been
committed; for example, the corpse of a murdered person or the charred
remains of a house burned down.
Corroborating Evidence - Supplementary evidence tending
to strengthen or confirm evidence previously introduced.
Counterclaim - Claim brought by the defendant in a
lawsuit against the plaintiff. A counterclaim neither answers nor denies
the plaintiff’s claim, but rather asserts an independent claim
against the plaintiff arising out of the same transaction or occurrence
that gave rise to the plaintiff’s original claim.
Court of Common Pleas - The county courts under the
Pennsylvania Constitution. The trial courts are of original and general
jurisdiction.
Court Reporter - A person who transcribes testimony
during court proceedings, depositions, or other proceedings authorized
by a court or rule of court.
Cross-claim - Claim brought by a defendant in a lawsuit
against a co-defendant in the suit arising out of the same transaction
or occurrence that gave rise to the plaintiff’s original claim
or of a counterclaim. It often refers to a claim that another defendant
is liable to the plaintiff or is responsible to indemnify another defendant.
Cross-examination - The questioning of a witness in
a legal proceeding by a party that has not called the witness as his/her witness.
Custodian - Generally, a person or financial institution
with control of property or other assets. In bankruptcy law, a third
party with authority to take charge of a debtor’s assets for the
benefit of all creditors.
D
Damages - Monetary compensation or indemnity recovered
in the courts by any person who has suffered an injury or loss caused
by an unlawful act, omission, or negligence of another person.
Debtor - In general, a person who is liable to pay
a claim. In bankruptcy law, a person who voluntarily files a petition
of bankruptcy or has such a petition filed against him/her.
De Facto - (Latin: “in fact” or “actually”)
Used to describe a state of affairs or a set of circumstances that exist
in reality, though perhaps not officially. A matter of conduct founded
upon the conduct or practice of a person, organization, or government
agency rather than upon the law.
De Jure - A state of affairs or condition where there
has been complete compliance with all legal requirements.
De Minimus - Something that is so minimal or small
that it does not justify relief from a court.
De Novo - Often refers to a new court proceeding, or
a trial or hearing for the second time, which is held in the same manner
as if it had not been previously heard and as if no decision had been
previously rendered.
Decedent - An individual who has died.
Declaratory Judgment - A binding judicial determination
of the rights of the parties in a lawsuit where there is doubt as to
the parties’ legal rights or status.
Decree - A decision or order of the court. A final
decree is one that fully and finally disposes of litigation whereas
an interlocutory decree is a provisional or preliminary decree that
does not fully and finally dispose of litigation.
Deed - A signed document or instrument used to convey
title to real property from one individual or entity to another.
Defamation - The intentional publication of false,
derogatory statements about another. Verbal statements constitute slander,
while written statements constitute libel.
Defendant - The party against whom a lawsuit is filed.
Deposition - Testimony of a witness taken under oath
in the presence of a court reporter, but not in a courtroom. May be
used to discover evidence or to preserve testimony for later use in
court.
Design Patent - Patent granted for the drawing or depiction,
chiefly of an ornamental nature, of an original plan or conception to
be used in manufacturing, or textile arts, or the fine arts.
Discrimination - Unfair treatment or denial of a privilege
based on sex, age, race, nationality, religion, or being handicapped.
Devise - A gift of real property made in a will.
Direct Examination - The interrogation of a witness
by the party on whose behalf the witness is called.
Directed Verdict - In a case in which the party with
the burden of proof has failed to present a prima facie case for jury
consideration, the trial judge may direct the jury to enter a verdict
without allowing the jury to consider it, because, as a matter of law,
there can be only one such verdict.
Disbarment - Action taken by a court revoking an attorney’s
license to practice law.
Discovery - The process used by parties to court cases
by which one party obtains information and facts known or possessed
by the other party or by witnesses. Discovery includes, but is not limited
to, interrogatories, requests for production of documents, depositions,
and requests for admissions.
Dismissal with Prejudice - Final judgment against the
plaintiff on a case that prohibits bringing an action on the same cause
in the future. In contrast, dismissal without prejudice allows the plaintiff
to sue again for the same cause.
Dissent - The disagreement of one or more judges of
a court with the decision of the majority of the court. In written court
opinions, it is referred to as a “dissenting opinion.”
Dissolution - The process by which a corporation, partnership,
or other legal entity is legally terminated.
Docket - The court’s formal record of a legal
proceeding.
Domicile - The location of a person’s permanent
home, which is intended to be his or her permanent residence. A person
may have several residences, but only may have one domicile.
Double Jeopardy - A prohibition in common law and constitutional
law that prohibits an individual from being prosecuted or placed in
jeopardy twice for the same crime.
Due Diligence - In reference to business acquisition
or merger, investigation of the financial, physical, and legal condition
of a company before the transaction is completed.
Due Process - In general, an individual’s right
to have notice of legal proceedings and a fair opportunity to be heard.
Duress - Any means, such as threats of bodily harm,
used to force an individual to do something against his/her will.
E
Easement - The right for someone other than a property
owner to use the property for a specific purpose, such as the right
to maintain a public path through a farmer’s field.
Embezzlement - The fraudulent misappropriation of money
entrusted to another.
Eminent Domain - The power of a government body to
appropriate private property for public use through condemnation proceedings
in which the private property owner is paid fair compensation for the
appropriation by the government.
En Banc - Refers to a hearing or argument before all
of the judges of the court sitting together depending on the court,
a panel of judges.
Encumbrance - A liability or claim levied on property,
such as a mortgage, lien, or assessment.
Enjoin - To require a person or entity, by injunction,
to perform or to abstain from some act.
Entity - A legally identifiable being with specific
legal rights and which may be held legally liable, such as an individual,
partnership, corporation, or governmental body.
Entrapment - The act of officers or agents of the government
in inducing a person to commit a crime that the person would not otherwise
have committed, except for the provocations of a law enforcement official.
Equity - The side of the court that hears and decides
cases based upon general unwritten rules of fairness as opposed to the
rules of common law. Equity courts award non-monetary remedies in contrast
to courts of law, which award monetary remedies.
Escrow - An agreement whereby a writing, deed, money,
or security is placed in the custody of a third person (escrow agent)
pending the occurrence of a specified contingency, performance of a
specified condition, or receipt of a specified notice authorizing release.
Estate - The total property owned by a person, both
real and personal, as well as property rights and rights in an action,
including all of the liabilities of an individual. Most often refers
to the holdings of a personal representative of someone who has died,
but also may refer to the holdings of a guardian holding property for
the benefit of a minor or an incapacitated person. See also “Marital
Estate.”
Estoppel - A principle that provides that a person
is legally precluded from denying facts as the result of previous acts
or failures to act or acceptance of facts, which were relied upon by
another party.
Et al. - An abbreviation meaning “and others,”
such as where there are several plaintiffs.
Et seq. - An abbreviation meaning “and the following.”
Et ux. - An abbreviation meaning “and wife,”
such as where a grantor’s wife joins in the conveyance of real
property.
Evidence - Anything tending to prove or disprove a
disputed fact. Examples of evidence include, but are not limited to:
testimony (oral statements made in court), tangible evidence (things
or objects that have physical existence), documentary evidence (letters,
memoranda, reports or other writings), and demonstrative evidence (procedure
or re-creation where the cause and effect of an event are shown or acted
out). See also “Circumstantial Evidence,” “Rules of
Evidence”, and “Parol Evidence Rule.”
Ex Parte - Acts done on behalf of one party only without
the knowledge of another party or without another party being given
the opportunity to participate. Ex parte communications between a party
and a court are frowned upon and avoided whenever possible.
Ex Post Facto - An act or fact occurring after a previous
act or fact, and relating to it. An ex post facto law, which makes a
crime greater in magnitude when prosecuted than when the crime was committed,
is unconstitutional under both the United States Constitution and the
Pennsylvania Constitution.
Exclusionary Rule - Doctrine prohibiting the use in
criminal prosecutions of evidence determined to have been obtained in
violation of an individual’s constitutional rights, such as the
suppression of a defendant’s statements made to authorities without
having been provided the appropriate Miranda warnings.
Execute - To sign a document. It also refers to a creditor’s
selling of a debtor’s property through a Sheriff or Constable
to satisfy a judgment.
Execution - Often used to refer to the imposition of
capital punishment, meaning the killing of a criminal defendant for
having committed first-degree murder. It also refers to an individual’s
signing of a document.
Executor or Executrix - A person appointed by an individual
who made a will to carry out the provisions of the will. The executor/trix
is responsible for collecting the assets of the decedent, paying all
outstanding liabilities of the decedent and ensuring that the beneficiaries
of the will receive the property to which they are entitled under the
will.
Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies - Doctrine requiring that the
person seeking relief in a matter relating to an administrative subject
must try all available administrative remedies before going to court.
Exhibit - A paper, document or tangible article introduced
as evidence at a hearing or trial and displayed to the court and jury
during a trial or hearing.
Expert Testimony - Testimony usually consisting of
opinion evidence given on a scientific, technical, or professional matter
by persons qualified to speak authoritatively because of special training,
skill, experience, or familiarity about a subject.
Extradition - The surrender of an accused or convicted
criminal by a custodial jurisdiction to another jurisdiction outside
of its own territory and within the other jurisdiction’s territory.
F
Fact Question - Issues in a trial or hearing concerning
facts, and how or whether they occurred as opposed to questions of law.
Failure of Consideration - Not achieving the expected
value of something given to induce a person to enter into a contract.
False Pretenses - Intentional misrepresentation of
existing fact to obtain another’s property.
Fee Simple - Absolute and perpetual ownership of real
property without limitation or condition.
Felony - An offense more serious than a misdemeanor,
often punishable by death or imprisonment for more than one year. Felonies
are graded as first, second, and third degree, with first-degree felonies
being the most severe.
Fiduciary - A person who manages money or property
for someone else. For example, the executor of an estate, the director
of a corporation or the trustee of a trust stand in a fiduciary capacity,
whose obligations are defined by law in a fiduciary code.
Foreclosure - A legal proceeding to enforce payment
of a debt through the sale of property upon which a creditor holds a
lien.
Forfeit - To lose or to be forced to give up property,
a right, or a privilege as a result of error, misconduct, crime, or negligence.
Forgery - Intentionally falsifying or altering a document
with the intent to defraud.
Fraud - An intentional misrepresentation designed to
deprive another of property or rights, or to inflict injury in some manner.
Full Faith and Credit Clause - Provides that all states must recognize
the legislative acts, public records, and judicial decisions of other
states (Article IV, section 1 of the United States Constitution).
G
Garnishment - A statutory proceeding in which a creditor
seizes a debtor’s property or money, which is in the possession
or control of a third party, or garnishee (such as a financial institution
holding a bank account), to apply to the debts of the debtor.
Gift - The transfer of ownership from one person or
entity to another for no consideration.
Grand Jury - A body of citizens whose duties consist
of receiving complaints and accusations in criminal cases, hearing the
evidence, determining whether probable cause exists that a crime has
been committed, and issuing indictments when it is decided that a trial
should take place.
Grantee - The person or entity to whom property is
conveyed.
Grantor - The person or entity who conveys property
to another.
Gross Negligence - Failure to perform a manifest duty
in reckless disregard of the consequences to another person’s
life or property.
Guaranty - A promise to answer for payment of debt
or performance obligation of another.
Guardian Ad Litem - An attorney appointed by the court
to represent the interests or potential interests of a minor or an incapacitated
person in a pending court proceeding.
H
Habeas Corpus - (Latin: “you have the body”)
A variety of writs to bring an individual before a court or judge. Most
commonly refers to a writ directing the release a person from unlawful
imprisonment.
Harmless Error Doctrine - The concept that minor or
harmless error committed by a lower court during trial was not prejudicial
to the rights of a party and does not require reversal of the judgment
by an appellate court.
Hearing - A legal proceeding in which witnesses are
heard and evidence is presented. Hearings are used primarily by legislative
and administrative agencie,s and can be adjudicative or merely investigatory
in nature.
Hearsay - Testimony that is not derived from a witness
personal knowledge; therefore, it is generally inadmissible in a judicial
proceeding unless it falls within one of the many exceptions which provides
for admissibility.
Holding Company - Company whose business is owning
stock in and supervising management of other companies in whose stock
it usually has a controlling interest.
Holograph - Refers to a will or deed handwritten entirely
by the testator/trix or grantor and not witnessed.
Horizontal Merger - A combination of two companies
that produce the same or similar products and sell them in the same
geographic market.
Hostile or Adverse Witness - A witness who is subject
to cross-examination by the party calling him or her to testify because
of a previously unknown antagonism to that party.
Hung Jury - A jury that cannot agree upon a verdict
after a suitable period of deliberation, resulting in a mistrial of
the case. In criminal cases, a hung jury allows the prosecution to try
the defendant again without violating constitutional protections against
double jeopardy.
Hypothetical Question - A combination of assumed or
proven facts upon which an expert witness is asked to state an opinion.
I
Impanel - The act of the clerk of the court in making
up a list of the jurors who have been selected for a trial after voir
dire has concluded and both sides have used their peremptory challenges
and challenges for cause. The jurors then take an oath to perform their
duty after which a trial proceeds with the introduction of evidence.
Impeachment of a Witness - To attack a witness’
credibility by cross-examination or by introduction of evidence such
as prior inconsistent statements.
Implied Contract - A contract in which a promise is
not expressed, but rather inferred from conduct or implied in law.
Imputed Negligence - Negligence that is not committed
by an individual or entity, but because of a joint legal interest or
other legal relationship, he or she is liable. It is often used in a
principal/agent situation. See also “Respondeat Superior.”
Inadmissible - Refers to evidence that, under the established
rules of evidence, cannot be admitted in court.
In Camera - In chambers; in private. Typically, it
is a review of evidence by a judge in chambers and not in open court.
In Personam - Referring to the jurisdiction that a
court obtains over an individual or other entity.
In Re - “In the matter of”; concerning;
regarding.
In Rem - Refers to a court’s jurisdiction over
a particular piece of property, real or personal.
Indemnify/Indemnification - To compensate another for a loss or damage
Independent Contractor - Person who contracts to perform
some action for another person or organization, but is not under their
control as to how the work is done.
Indictment - A written accusation, presented by a grand
jury, which charges a person with a crime.
Injunction - A court order prohibiting someone from
doing some specified act.
Insanity - In criminal law, it is used to refer to
a mental state whereby a criminal defendant, due to mental illness,
lacks the ability to form the specific intent to commit a crime.
Insolvent - Generally, lacking the means to pay debts.
In bankruptcy law, describes a person or entity that cannot pay debts
as they fall due or in the normal course of business.
Instruction - At the close of a jury trial, the explanation
given by the judge to the jury concerning the laws pertaining to the
case and the application of the laws to the facts of the case.
Instrument - A formal written legal document, such
as a lease, will, or contract.
Intangible Property - Property that is not of a physical
nature but still has value, such as bank accounts, stocks, bonds, and
mortgages.
Intellectual Property - Collective term used to refer
to intangible property rights, such as copyrights, trademarks, patents,
or trade secrets.
Inter Alia - “Among other things.”
Inter Alios - “Between other persons.”
Inter Vivos - “From one living person to another.”
Where property passes from one living person to another, as opposed
to by the death of a person.
Interlocutory - Something intervening between the beginning
and the end of a lawsuit which decides some point or matter, but is not
a final decision of the whole controversy.
Interrogatories - A pre-trial discovery device consisting
of formal written questions posed to a party or witness, who then must
provide written answers to the questions under oath.
Intervention - A procedure allowing a third person,
not originally a named party to a legal action, to voluntarily become
a party to it.
Intestate - Dying without leaving a will, which means
that the decedent’s property passes to his/her beneficiaries
according to statutory law.
J
Joint and Several Liability - Doctrine that permits
a group of defendants to be held both individually and collectively
liable for all damages suffered by the plaintiff, meaning that a plaintiff
can recover the entire amount of damages from one defendant, even if
all of the defendants are liable.
Joint Tenants with Right of Survivorship - Ownership
of real property by more than one person in which each joint tenant
owns the entire property, and in which ownership of the property remains
entirely with the surviving joint tenants upon the death of another
joint tenant.
Judge - An elected or appointed official of a trial
or appellate court whose responsibilities include conducting hearings,
trials, and other legal proceedings to determine disputed issues of fact
and law.
Judgment - Official decision of a court resolving the
issues in a legal action and stating the rights and obligations of those
involved in the action, which may be used by a creditor to levy on a
debtor’s property and execute on such property.
Judicial District - The designation of a geographic
area over which a particular court of common pleas has jurisdiction.
In Pennsylvania, most counties are judicial districts in and of themselves,
although there are some two-county judicial districts.
Juris Doctor - The degree (J.D.) bestowed by law schools
upon students who have earned sufficient academic credit to be eligible
to practice law.
Jurisdiction - The authority of a court to hear a particular
case and to render a judgment. See also “In
Rem,” “In Personam”, and “Subject Matter Jurisdiction.”
Jurisprudence - The philosophy of law, or the science
that deals with the principles of law and legal relations.
Jury - A certain number of persons who are selected
according to law, sworn to inquire about matters of fact, and declare
the truth from evidence presented. See also “Grand Jury”
and “Petit Jury.”
Jury Commissioner - An officer appointed by the court
to draw the names for the panel of jurors who shall be available to
sit for a specified term of court.
K
Kiting - The wrongful practice of writing checks against
a bank account where funds are insufficient to cover them in the hope
that before they are presented, necessary funds will be deposited.
L
Landlord - The owner, or lessor, of real property who,
for payment of rent, allows possession and use of such property by someone
else (the lessee).
Last Clear Chance Doctrine - A rebuttal to a defense
of contributory negligence that states that although a plaintiff’s
own negligence may have been self-endangering, the defendant had the
last clear chance to avoid injuring the plaintiff.
Leading Question - A question that, when posed, suggests
the answer to the witness. In most cases it can be answered with a simple
“yes” or “no.” Leading questions are permitted
on cross-examination, but are prohibited on a party’s direct examination
of its own witness.
Legal Remedy - Seeking money damages as opposed to
seeking an equitable remedy.
Levy - The legal process by which property is seized
by a sheriff, who then notifies the possessor of such property that a creditor
has a judgment against the debtor/owner of the property and intends
to sell the property to satisfy a judgment or debt.
Liable - Responsible or accountable to another.
Libel - Defamation in print, writing, pictures, or signs.
In its most general sense, any written publication that is false and
injurious to an individual’s reputation. See also “Defamation.”
Lien - Any of a variety of charges or encumbrances
on property that are imposed to secure the payment of a debt or the
performance or nonperformance of some act. Liens are enforced by foreclosure
proceedings and can be imposed on real or personal property.
Limited Tort - A limitation on financial recovery in
civil actions for personal injury resulting from automobile accidents
whereby an injured party only may recover economic damages, such as
lost wages.
Non-economic damages, such as pain and suffering, may not be recovered
unless the individual has sustained a “serious bodily injury.”
In contrast, a full tort selection currently available in Pennsylvania
motor vehicle insurance policies gives an insured the right to make
claims and file suit for injuries that are not serious.
Lis Pendens - A pending lawsuit. Generally, the purpose
of filing a notice of lis pendens on public records is to warn all persons
that the title to certain property is in litigation, the outcome of
which may affect the title to, any lien on, or possession of the property.
Litigant - A party to a lawsuit.
Locus Delicti - The place where a criminal offense
occurred.
Long Arm Statute - Permits a court to exercise personal
jurisdiction over a person or business that does not reside in the state
where the court is located.
M
Malfeasance - Intentionally committing an unlawful
act.
Malicious Prosecution - An action for recovery of damages
that resulted to a person, property, or reputation from previous civil
or criminal proceedings that were prosecuted or pursued with malice
and without probable cause.
Malpractice - The failure of a professional person,
such as a doctor, lawyer, or engineer, to abide by accepted standards
of practice, which results in injury, loss, or damage.
Mandamus - (Latin: “we command”) A writ
traditionally used in federal court to remedy abuses of judicial power
in a lower court.
Mandatory Sentence - Legislatively established minimum
sentences to which a criminal defendant must, at a minimum, be sentenced
following conviction of a particular crime.
Manslaughter - The unlawful killing of another without
malice. Manslaughter is classified as either voluntary or involuntary,
depending upon the circumstances.
Marital Property - The property accumulated by spouses
while married to each other, and which is subject to equitable distribution
upon dissolution of the marriage.
Marriage - The legal union of two individuals in the
bonds of matrimony.
Master - An officer of the court, usually an attorney,
who is appointed by the court to assist it in specific judicial duties
that may arise in a case, such as a domestic relations matter. Such
duties may include taking testimony and making a report and recommended
result to the court.
Material Evidence - Evidence that is relevant to issues
in dispute.
Mechanic’s Lien - A claim created by state statutes
and obtained by a contractor or subcontractor against real property
as a result of the contractor or subcontractor having made improvements
to the real property.
Memorandum of Law - A document prepared by an attorney
before a hearing, trial, or other legal proceeding that outlines for
the court the basic facts and legal arguments concerning the matters
at issue.
Mens Rea - Guilty mind. An element of criminal responsibility
that must be proved to secure a conviction for a criminal offense.
Misdemeanor - A criminal offense, which is less severe
than a felony, and often is punishable by probation, fine, or imprisonment
other than in a penitentiary. Misdemeanors are graded as first, second,
and third degree misdemeanors, with first-degree misdemeanors being
the most severe.
Misfeasance - The improper performance of a lawful
act.
Mistrial - A trial terminated by the court due to a
prejudicial event or error occurring during the trial, or as the result
of a jury being unable to reach a verdict.
Mitigating Circumstance - A circumstance that does
not constitute a justification or excuse for an offense, but may reduce
the degree of culpability or punishment. It is often used in sentencing
proceedings for criminal offenses, especially in cases of first-degree
murder where a prosecutor seeks the death penalty.
Moot - An issue that is not settled by a judicial decision
due to an occurrence of events over a period of time.
Moral Turpitude - An act or behavior of baseness, vileness,
or dishonesty of a high degree. A crime of moral turpitude is defined
as one demonstrating depravity in the private and social duties that
an individual owes to others and society at large.
Motion - A written or oral application addressed to
the court that requests an action be taken, such as issuing a specific
order.
Municipal Courts - Courts whose geographic authority
is confined to a city or community.
Murder - The unlawful killing of a human being by another
with malice aforethought. Murder has three degrees of culpability: first,
second, and third-degree, with first-degree being the most severe.
N
Negligence - An act or the omission to do something
which a reasonable and prudent person would, or would not, do under
similar circumstances.
Negotiable Instrument - A document, such as a check,
note, or bill that evidences an established financial liability or promise
from one person to another, which may be transferred from one person
to another for consideration.
No-Fault Divorce - A divorce based on the irretrievable
breakdown of a marriage, which involves mutual consent of the parties
or a lapse of two years after legal separation when parties have lived
separate and apart for more than two years.
Nolo Contendere - (Latin: “I will not contest
it”) A plea entered in a criminal case by the defendant which
indicates that the prosecution has enough evidence to establish the
defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt; however, it is not
an admission or denial of the charges. Such a plea is likely in antitrust
actions, for instance, because the plea may not be used against the
defendant in a civil action based upon the same acts.
Non Obstante Veredicto - "Notwithstanding the verdict".
A judgment entered by the court for one party despite a jury’s
verdict against that party. A motion for a directed verdict is a precondition
to a granting of a “judgment n.o.v.”
Notice of Appeal - A document that gives notice of
an intention to appeal, which is filed with the appellate court and
served on the opposing party.
Novation - Substitution of a new contract, debt, or
obligation for an existing one.
O
Objection - In a trial, calling the court’s attention
to improper proposed evidence or to a trial procedure.
An objection requires a ruling by a court, which either sustains or
overrules the objection.
Of Counsel - Counsel assisting in the preparation,
management, or presentation on appeal of a case, as opposed to the principal
attorney of record.
Opinion - The formal written decision rendered by a
judge or court in a case reciting the governing facts and legal principles
of a case, and the reasons upon which the decision is based.
Opinion Evidence - Evidence consisting of what a witness
believes or infers concerning disputed facts, as opposed to a witness’
personal knowledge of a fact. Except in the case of expert witnesses,
opinion evidence has limited admissibility.
Option - The right to purchase or lease something at
agreed-upon terms and price within a set period of time.
Order - A written statement of a judge or court that
compels an individual or entity to do or not do something.
Ordinance - A law enacted by the legislative body of
a borough, township, or city that is enforceable within the borough,
township, or city.
Original Jurisdiction - The authority of a court to
hear and decide a case in its initial presentation. The Court of Common
Pleas exercises original jurisdiction in the majority of cases.
P
Panel - The whole body of persons summoned as jurors
for a term of court or those selected to hear a particular case.
Pardon - Action by a governor or the United States
president that relieves a criminal defendant from serving the sentence
imposed.
Parole - Releasing a criminal defendant after serving
part of a sentence.
Parol Evidence Rule - When parties have a written agreement,
all previous oral agreements and negotiations, or parol evidence, merge
with the written agreement and may not be used to prove the terms of
the agreement unless there was a mutual mistake or fraud in the preparation
of the written agreement.
Party - Someone named in a legal matter who has a direct
interest in the outcome of it.
Patent - A property right issued and regulated by the
United States government generally giving the owner the right to exclude
others from making, using, or selling an invention, unique idea, discovery,
invention, or process, for a definite term of years.
Per Curium - (Latin: “by the court”) An
opinion or order by the whole court, as opposed to an opinion or order
of one judge of the court.
Peremptory Challenge/Peremptory Strike - A challenge
or strike used to reject a prospective juror without stating a cause,
as opposed to a challenge for cause, which questions a prospective juror’s
ability to sit as a juror as a result of bias, prejudice, or other circumstance
that would prevent the juror from being able to deliberate fairly.
Pension Plan - A defined or fixed benefit pension plan
is where an employer promises specific benefits to each employee. A
qualified pension plan is where an employer can take a tax deduction
in the year it makes contributions, but payments are not taxable to
employees until they receive them.
Performance Bond - Type of contract bond, given by
a contractor, which protects against loss due to the inability or refusal
of a contractor to complete the contract.
Perjury - False statement of material importance made
under oath by a person who does not believe the statement is true.
Petition - A written request addressed to the court
asking for a court order or some other form of relief.
Petit Jury - A jury comprised of twelve or less persons
for the trial of a civil or criminal case.
Plaintiff - A person who initiates a civil lawsuit.
Plea - To make a defendant’s formal answer to
a plaintiff’s complaint or to a criminal indictment. The five
pleas possible for a criminal defendant are: (1) “not guilty”
(a complete denial of guilt); (2) “not guilty by reason of insanity”
(a defense of criminal insanity); (3) “no contest” (nolo
contendere) (a defendant denies guilt but admits that the facts on which
the charge is based would be sufficient evidence for a jury to convict
the defendant); (4) “guilty” (a complete admission of guilt);
and (5) “guilty but mentally ill” (a defendant admits guilt
but blames his/her criminal acts on a mental illness).
Pleading - Written documents filed by parties in civil
lawsuits that set forth the parties’ respective claims and defenses.
Generally, a pleading that contains allegations of fact requires another
party to file a “responsive pleading.”
Polling the Jury - Asking each juror individually to state his/her verdict in open court after the verdict is read.
Post-Trial Motions - A motion filed by a party that
is dissatisfied with a trial result. Post-trial motions are available
in civil and criminal cases, and are subject to specific rules concerning
the timely filing and disposition of the post-trial motions. An appeal
may be filed to an appellate court once post-trial motions have been
decided by the trial court.
Power of Attorney - A written document authorizing
an individual to take certain legal actions on behalf of another person.
Praecipe - A legal document filed by a party in a civil or criminal
case that is addressed to the clerk of the court, which directs that
Prejudicial Error - An error that requires an appellate
court to reverse the judgment of a lower court because the error may
have had a substantial effect on the outcome of the trial in the lower
court.
Synonymous with “reversible error.”
Preliminary Arraignment - Usually occurring immediately
after arrest, a preliminary arraignment is when a district justice informs
a criminal defendant of the charges that are being filed and determines
bail.
Preliminary Hearing - A hearing before a judge to determine
whether an individual charged with a crime should be held for trial.
Preliminary Objection - A responsive pleading in a
civil case in which a party alleges that another party’s previous
pleading is legally defective and asks that the court either dismiss
or strike part of or all the previous pleading.
Preponderance of the Evidence - The burden of proof
in a civil case whereby a party must present a greater weight of credible
evidence than the evidence presented by the opposing party.
Presentment - A written accusation of a crime initiated
by a grand jury, as opposed to an indictment in response to a government
suit.
Prima Facie - (Latin: “on the face of it”)
A degree of proof whereby there is enough evidence for a
reasonable person to believe that a set of events may have occurred.
Priority of Liens - The order in which liens on a property
are paid. Generally, the rule is “first in time, first in priority”;
however, certain liens, such as those for unpaid taxes, may have priority
regardless of when they were filed.
Privileged Communications - Statements protected from
forced disclosure in court based on the fact that they were made within
a “protected” relationship, such as husband/wife or attorney/client.
Pro Bono Publico - For the public good. “Pro
bono” legal work is providing legal services without
charge.
Probable Cause - In criminal law, reasonable grounds
to justify a search or arrest or to bring a person to trial.
Probate - In strict usage, a court procedure to prove
a will valid or invalid. The term generally refers to everything related
to administering an estate.
Probation - Allowing a person convicted of a criminal
offense to remain out of jail under the supervision of a probation officer
for a specified length of time. A criminal defendant’s probation
may be revoked if he/she violates a term or condition of probation,
or is convicted of a new offense during the probationary period.
Procedural Law - Generally, the body of law establishing
the method of enforcing rights, as compared to “substantive”
laws establishing what those rights are.
Product Liability - Legal responsibility of manufacturers
and sellers of products to compensate persons harmed by their products.
Promissory Note - A written promise to pay a determined
sum of money to a named person according to specified terms.
Promulgate - Announce officially.
Property Bond - Posting real estate as bail to secure
a criminal defendant’s appearance in court.
Prosecutor - One who instigates the prosecution upon
which an accused is arrested, or one who prosecutes another for a crime
in the name of the government.
Protection from Abuse Order - An order of court that
prohibits someone, such as a spouse, from verbally or physically harassing,
stalking, or assaulting such other person. A violation of a protection
from abuse order may result in immediate incarceration.
Prothonotary - The public officer who acts as the principal
clerk of courts in civil matters.
Proximate Cause - Cause sufficiently closely related to its effect,
in time and foreseeability, to justify imposing legal consequences for
Public Defender - Attorney employed by government or
appointed by court to represent indigent criminal defendants.
Punitive Damages - Damages awarded to a plaintiff to
punish a defendant for committing acts found to be outrageous and not
tolerable in a civilized society.
Q
Quash - To vacate an appeal, an indictment, summons,
or subpoena.
Quasi-judicial - An act that is done, or authority
that is exercised by a public body, which is in part administrative
and in part the hearing and determination of facts.
Quid Pro Quo - Something for something; a fair return
or consideration.
Quitclaim Deed - A deed that does not state a grantor’s
interest in real property, but rather states that the grantor transfers
to a grantee whatever interest he/she possesses. A quitclaim deed
contains no warranties of title.
Quo Warranto - A lawsuit challenging the legal right
of a person who holds a particular public office to hold that office.
Quorum - A sufficient number of members of a governing
body gathered at a particular time and place to permit official action
or deliberations of such governing body.
R
Real Estate - Property consisting of land, buildings,
and anything permanently affixed to the land and buildings, such as
fences or light fixtures.
Reasonable Doubt - Doubt based on the exercise of rational
judgment and the presence or absence of evidence to support a conclusion.
Usually refers to the standard used to determine the guilt or innocence
of a defendant in a criminal case.
Rebuttal - That which tends to explain, contradict, or disprove
evidence offered by the adverse party.
Receiver - In bankruptcy, an appointee of the court
who manages the assets of the bankrupt party, pending legal action.
Record Costs - Fees paid to the court or agents of
a court and the sheriff as part of a civil lawsuit.
Recusal - A judge’s withdrawal from hearing a
lawsuit because of personal interest, or bias, or the appearance of bias.
Redirect Examination - Questioning of a witness by
a party after the witness has been subjected to cross-examination by
opposing parties.
Referee - A person to whom a pending case is referred
by the court in order for that person to take testimony and report to
the court.
Register or Registrar - A court officer whose duty
it is to keep official public records, such as the register of wills
or recorder of deeds.
Registered Trademark - Governmental registration granted
for words and/or symbols employed to identify the source of goods or
services.
Remand - To send a case back to a lower court for further
action.
Removal - Usually refers to an order by a court directing
the transfer of a case to another court.
Replevin - A lawsuit filed to obtain possession of
personal property wrongfully held by someone else.
Reply - Generally, a pleading by a plaintiff in response
to a pleading by a defendant.
Res Ipsa Loquitur - “The thing speaks for itself.”
The doctrine imposes negligence upon a defendant without the plaintiff
actually proving negligence. Use is limited to cases in which the cause
of the plaintiff’s injury was entirely under the control of the
defendant, and the injury only could have been caused by negligence of
the defendant.
Res Judicata - A rule of law which states that once
a final judgment has been rendered by a court, the matter can not be
re-litigated between the parties.
Rescission - The act of withdrawing, nullifying, voiding,
or canceling a contract.
Respondeat Superior - “Let the master answer.”
A doctrine which means that an employer or principal is responsible
for the acts and omissions of its employees or agents for acts or omissions
occurring within the scope of their duties as employees or agents.
Respondent - The party who answers a petition or an
appeal, such as an appellee.
Responsive Pleading - A pleading filed by a party in
a civil lawsuit that either contains objections to a party’s previous
pleading, or admits or denies allegations of fact contained in another
party’s pleading.
Restitution - When a criminal defendant pays money
to the victim of a crime to reimburse the victim for a financial loss
occurring as a result of the defendant’s criminal activity.
Restraining Order - Issued by a court as a temporary
measure to keep someone from acting until the court has determined whether
to issue an injunction against the act.
Restrictive Covenant - Provision in a deed that puts
limitations on the use of the property; or, in a partnership or employment
contract, provision that limits an individual’s freedom to do
the same sort of work after the contract ends.
Retain - The act of a client to employ legal counsel.
Retainer - Often refers to the initial fee paid by
a client to an attorney to secure the attorney’s services.
Reversible Error - See “Prejudicial Error.”
Robbery - The taking of property from another by force
or with the threat of force.
Rule to Show Cause - An order of court stating that
a further order of court will become final unless a party files exceptions
and/or a response within a defined time period.
Rule of Court - An order made by a court establishing
the general rules of practice before the court.
Rules of Evidence - Rules, statutes, and case decisions
that govern what evidence can be admitted in hearings and trials.
S
Satisfaction - To pay a debt in its entirety.
Search - A government official’s inspection of
private property, either real or personal, for the purpose of discovering
weapons, contraband, or evidence.
Search Warrant - A written order issued by a court
that directs an officer to search a specific location for evidence of
criminal activity.
Seizure - The detention of an individual or his/her property that restricts the individual’s or the property’s
freedom of movement.
Sentence - Following a verdict of guilty, or a plea
of guilty, guilty but mentally ill, or nolo contendere, a sentence is
the judgment in a criminal action in which a court imposes its punishment
as a fine, probation, imprisonment, or a combination thereof.
Servant - An employee or one who acts for the benefit
of another.
Service of Process - Official notification authorized
by a rule of court that a person has been named as a party to a lawsuit
or has been accused of some offense. Process consists of a summons,
citation, or warrant to which a copy of a complaint or pleading may be
attached.
Sentencing Guidelines - Guidelines promulgated by the
U.S. Sentencing Commission or the Pennsylvania Commission on Sentencing
that provide for recommended ranges of minimum sentences to which a
criminal defendant may be sentenced.
Settlement - An agreement reached between disputing
parties.
Several Liability - Liability attaching to a party
sufficient to support a suit without reference to anyone else’s
liability.
Sheriff - The elected county official whose principal
duties include aiding the criminal and civil courts, such as keeping
order in a courtroom, protecting participants in civil and criminal
cases, service of process, executing judgments, and holding judicial
sales.
Silent Partner - An investor who does not manage a
company but shares in profits and losses.
Sine Qua Non - An indispensable requisite or condition.
Slander - Injuring another’s reputation, business,
or means of livelihood by false and derogatory spoken words. See also
“Defamation.”
Sovereign Immunity - The doctrine that a government
or governmental agency can not be sued without the consent of the Legislature.
Specific Intent - The formulation of intent necessary
to make an act criminal. It refers to a criminal defendant’s designed
purpose that his/her act created the expected result.
Specific Performance - In equity, a court order compelling
a party to do a specific act. Where damages would be inadequate compensation
for a breach of contract, a contractor may be compelled to perform the
act that was agreed upon.
Spin-off - Subsidiary of a corporation organized by
a parent corporation. Part of the assets of the parent are transferred
to the subsidiary, whose stock is then transferred to the parent's shareholders
without requiring that they give up any of their stock in the parent.
Standard of Proof - Degree of proof required in a specific
kind of case. In criminal law, it is proof beyond a reasonable doubt,
and in the majority of civil cases it is proof by the preponderance
of the evidence.
Stare Decisis - Refers to general policy of the courts
not to overturn precedents established through litigation.
Statute - An act of a legislature, which constitutes
a law.
Statute of Limitations - The time limit within which
an action must be brought after its cause arises. Statutes vary in length
depending on the type of case. The unexcused failure to commence an
action within that time bars it forever. Statutes of limitations apply
to civil and criminal cases.
Stay - A court order that temporarily suspends a case
or the implementation of a court order.
Stipulation - An agreement by opposing attorneys with
respect to any matter involved in a proceeding.
Strict Liability - Doctrine that holds defendants liable
for harm caused by their actions regardless of their intentions or lack
of negligence or fault. Often applied to manufacturers or sellers of
defective products.
Subject Matter Jurisdiction - The authority of a court to hear cases
involving particular issues.
Subpoena - A court-authorized document compelling witnesses
to appear to give testimony or to produce certain documents, or both.
A subpoena duces tecum compels production of certain specific documents
and other items by a witness when responding to a subpoena.
Substantive Law - Law dealing with rights, duties, and
liabilities between individuals or entities, as opposed to procedural
law.
Successor Liability - In corporate law, liability of
a corporation for its predecessor’s obligations.
Summons - A writ directing a sheriff or other officer
to notify a named person that an action has been instituted against
him in court. A summons may require a person to appear on a specific
date to answer a complaint.
Sunset Law - Statute requiring administrative entities
periodically to justify their continued existence to a legislature.
Sunshine Law - Requires governmental bodies to hold
open meetings.
Supersedeas - “Stay of proceedings.” A
writ or court order suspending legal proceedings or the pursuit of any
further action in regards to a pending matter. See also “Stay.”
Suppression Hearing - A hearing concerning a criminal
defendant’s motion to prohibit the use of certain evidence that
is alleged to have been obtained in violation of the defendant’s
rights. The hearing is held prior to trial and the prosecution has the
burden of producing evidence and establishing, by a preponderance of
the evidence, that the defendant’s rights were not violated in
the process of obtaining the evidence.
Supra - “Above.” As used in legal documents,
it refers the reader to a preceding part of the document.
Surety - Person who undertakes to pay money or perform
some act in place of someone else if that person does not meet his/her obligation.
T
Tangible Personal Property - Items of property that,
generally speaking, are movable and not affixed or connected to land
or buildings.
Temporary Restraining Order - An order issued by a
court in urgent situations that precludes someone from doing something
that he/she is doing or intends to do.
Tenancy - The possessing of lands, buildings, or personal
property by right or title.
Tenancy by the Entirety - Joint ownership of real estate
by husband and wife, whereby upon the death of either, the other takes
title to the whole property.
Tenant - A possessor of real estate under a lease or
other agreement with someone who has a superior claim of title to the
real estate.
Tenant in Common - Multiple owners of real or personal
property, whereby each owner owns a specific percent of the property.
Tender Offer - Takeover bid; offer to buy a company’s
stock made directly to its stockholders by another company.
Testamentary - Of or pertaining to a will.
Testate - Description of an estate where a decedent
has left a valid will.
Testator or Testatrix - The person who makes a will
or leaves a will at death.
Testimony - Oral evidence given by a witness under
oath, either orally or in the written form of an affidavit or deposition.
Theft - The unlawful taking of personal property belonging
to another.
Tipstaff - Court-appointed officer who serves the court
in various ways while it is in session.
Title - Evidence of a person’s right to hold
or possess certain real or personal property.
Tort - In civil law, an injury or wrong committed against
the person or property of another, with the exception of breach of contract.
Trademark - Words and/or symbols employed to identify
the source of goods or services.
Trade Name - Name that distinguishes a business from
its competitors.
Trade Secret - Something that gives a company a competitive
advantage, such as technical information, that is kept confidential
in the company.
Transcript - The official record of a trial, hearing,
deposition, or other legal proceeding.
Trespass - An offense against another’s person
or property, whereby an individual, without justification, physically
imposes upon the person or property of another.
Trial Court - A court that conducts hearings and trials
by accepting testimony and other evidence to reach a verdict or decision,
as opposed to an appellate court where appeals of decisions made in
trial courts are heard.
Trial De Novo - A new trial or retrial in which a case
is heard as if no trial had previously taken place.
In a trial de novo, no weight is placed on the findings or outcome in
the previous case.
Trust - An arrangement in which the owner of real or
personal property transfers ownership of such property to a trustee
who holds and manages the property for the benefit of a third party,
called a “beneficiary.” It also may refer to a document
creating a trust.
U
Undue Influence - The abuse of a confidential relationship
by one party who exercises overbearing control over another person when
convincing that person to do an act or to enter into a transaction.
It usually is to the financial benefit of the individual exercising
the control.
Uniform Commercial Code (U.C.C.) - One of the Uniform Laws
drafted by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State
Laws and the American Law Institute; governs commercial transactions.
It has been adopted in whole or substantial part by all U.S. states.
Unlawful Detainer - Forcibly restricting an individual’s
freedom of movement without probable cause or without the legal authority
to do so.
Unsecured Bail - Releasing a criminal defendant on
bail pending disposition of a criminal charge based on his/her promise
that he/she will appear at future proceedings. If the person does
not appear, he/she agrees to owe a specified amount of money as forfeited
bail.
Usury - The act or practice of charging a borrower
more than the maximum legal interest rate on a loan.
V
Vacate - Set an order or decision aside or render it
void.
Variance - Authorized departure from some regulation
or ordinance. For example, authorization to use property for a purpose
normally prohibited by a zoning ordinance.
Venue - The particular county, city or geographical
area in which a court has jurisdiction to hear and decide cases. A change
of venue for the trial may occur if negative publicity or other causes
would make it difficult to find unbiased jurors.
Verdict - The formal decision or finding of a jury
or of a judge sitting without a jury. A verdict is not a judgment, in
that a verdict is not a judicial determination. A verdict is a finding
of fact that the court may accept or reject, but only may reject for
very specific reasons. A judgment may be entered based upon a verdict.
Verdict Slip - A written question or series of questions
submitted by the court to a jury that the jury must answer to help form
the basis for the jury’s verdict.
Voir Dire - “To speak the truth.” The preliminary
examination by counsel or the court of potential jurors in order to
determine whether any prospective juror should be stricken for cause.
It also aids counsel in its exercise of peremptory challenges. Refers
also to the preliminary examination of a witness in order to determine
a witness’ qualifications or competency to testify.
W
Waiver - The expressed or implied surrender of a known
right.
Warrant of Arrest - A writ issued by a district justice,
judge, or other competent authority that requires an individual’s
arrest and presentation to the district justice or court to answer to
a specified criminal charge.
Weight of Evidence - The balance of evidence. The relative
amount of credible evidence presented by one side as compared to the
evidence presented by the other side. A party losing at trial may request
a court to set aside a verdict on the basis that the verdict was against
the weight of the evidence.
Will - The instrument that expresses an individual’s
intended disposition of his/her property upon his/her death.
Willful - An act that is intentional or voluntary,
as opposed to accidental.
With, or Without, Prejudice - A disposition or decision
“with prejudice” precludes raising that issue at any time
in the future. A disposition “without prejudice” allows
the issues resulting in such disposition to be raised again in the future.
Witness - A broad term referring to any individual
who may be called upon to provide relevant testimony at a hearing or
trial. Fact witnesses are individuals who had sensory perception of
something relevant to issues in a case. Expert witnesses are individuals
with specialized knowledge, training, and experience who can state opinions
based upon facts introduced into evidence.
Writ - An order issued from a court requiring the performance
of a specific act or the giving of authority in commission to that act.
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Special thanks to attorney Jennifer Poller for compiling these legal
definitions.