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Sources of Glossary:  This glossary of terms was compiled by the Nation Association of Court Managers (NACM) Trial Court Management Committee (Cameron Burke) Chair, Gilbert Austin, Ed Brekke, Mary Majich Davis, John Dunmire, Marsha Edwards, John Ferry, Jr., Charles Foster, Paul Kuntz, Dottie McDonald, Elena Moreno, Dennis Metrick, David Edgar, Dennis Morgan, Jaci Morgan, Todd Nuccio, Yvonne Pettus, Jack Provo, Dale Stockley, Harvey Solomon, Jennifer Wenger, Nora Wilcher, Yolande Williams, and Robert Zastany). NACM extends it's appreciation to the American Bar Association, The Administrative Office of the US Courts, The Washington State Administrative Office of the Courts, and the Idaho State Administrative Office of the Courts for permission to use some of their excellent material.  NACM, 300 Newport Avenue, Williamsburg, VA  23185; Phone:  757-259-1841; Website:  www.nacmnet.org.  Additional vocabulary came from the Center for Civic Values in Albuquerque, NM.  Leslie Harvel, Don Zelenka, and Paul Horne, Jr. are the contributing editors for this section.
 
A
Abstract of Title:
A chronological summary of all official records and recorded documents affecting the title to a parcel of real property.
 
Accomplice: 1. A partner in a crime. 2. A person who knowingly and voluntarily participates with another in a criminal activity.
 
Acknowledgment: 1. A statement of acceptance of responsibility. 2. The short declaration at the end of a legal paper showing that the paper was duly executed and acknowledged.
 
Acquit: To find a defendant not guilty in a criminal trial.
 
Action: Case, cause, suit, or controversy disputed or contested before a court of justice.
 
Additur: An increase by a judge in the amount of damages awarded by a jury.
    
Adjudication: Giving or pronouncing a judgment or decree. Also the judgment given.
 
Ad Litem: A Latin term meaning for the purposes of the lawsuit. For example, a guardian “ad litem” is a person appointed by the court to protect the interests of a minor or legally incompetent person in a lawsuit.
 
Administrator: 1. One who administers the estate of a person who dies without a will. 2. A court official.
 
Admissible evidence: Evidence that can be legally and properly introduced in a civil or criminal trial.
 
Admonish: To advise or caution. For example the Court may caution or admonish counsel for wrong practices.
 
Adversary System: The trial method used in the U.S. and some other countries. This system is based on the belief that truth can best be determined by giving opposing parties full opportunity to present and establish their evidence, and to test by cross-examination the evidence presented by their adversaries. All this is done under the established rules of procedure before an impartial judge and/or jury.
 
Affiant: A person who makes and signs an affidavit.
 
Affidavit: A written statement of facts confirmed by the oath of the party making it, before a notary or officer having authority to administer oaths. For example, in criminal cases, affidavits are often used by police officers seeking to convince courts to grant a warrant to make an arrest or a search. In civil cases, affidavits of witnesses are often used to support motions for summary judgment.
 
Affirmative Defense: Without denying the charge, the defendant raises circumstances such as insanity, self-defense, or entrapment to avoid civil or criminal responsibility.
 
Affirmed: In the practice of appellate courts, the word means that the decision of the trial court is correct.
 
Aid and Abet: To actively, knowingly or intentionally assist another person in the commission or attempted commission of a crime.
 
Allegation: A statement of the issues in a written document (a pleading) which a person is prepared to prove in court. For example, an indictment contains allegations of crimes against the defendant.
 
Alternative Dispute Resolution: Settling a dispute without a full, formal trial. Methods include mediation, conciliation, arbitration, and settlement, among others.
 
Amicus Curiae: (a-mi’kus ku’ri-e) A friend of the court. One not a party to a case who volunteers to offer information on a point of law or some other aspect of the case to assist the court in deciding a matter before it.
 
Answer: The defendant’s response to the plaintiff's allegations as stated in a complaint. An item-by-item, paragraph-by-paragraph response to points made in a complaint;  part of the pleadings.
 
Appeal: A request made after a trial,  asking another court (usually the court of appeals) to decide whether the trial was conducted properly. To make such a request is “to appeal” or “to take an appeal.” One who appeals is called the appellant.
 
Appearance: 1. The formal proceeding by which a defendant submits to the jurisdiction of the court. 2. A written notification to the plaintiff by an attorney stating that he or she is representing the defendant.
 
Appellate:  The party who initiates an appeal.  Sometimes called a petitioner.
 
Appellate Court: A court having jurisdiction to hear appeals and review a trial court’s decision.
 
Appellee: (ap-e-le’) The party against whom an appeal is taken. Sometimes called a respondent.
 
Arbitration: A form of alternative dispute resolution in which the parties bring their dispute to a neutral third party and agree to abide by his or her decision. In arbitration there is a hearing at which both parties have an opportunity to be heard.
 
Arraignment: A proceeding in which an individual who is accused of committing a crime is brought into court, told of the charges, and asked to plead guilty or not guilty. Sometimes called a preliminary hearing or initial appearance.
 
Arrest: To take into custody by legal authority.
 
Assault: Threat to inflict injury with an apparent ability to do so. Also, any intentional display of force that would give the victim reason to fear or expect immediate bodily harm.
 
Attachment: Taking a person’s property to satisfy a court-ordered debt.
 
Attorney of Record: The principal attorney in a lawsuit, who signs all formal documents relating to the suit.
 
B
Bail:
Money or other security (such as a bail bond) provided to the court to temporarily allow a person’s release from jail and assure their appearance in court. “Bail” and “bond” are often used interchangeably.
 
Bail Bond: An obligation signed by the accused to secure his or her presence at the trial. This obligation means that the accused may lose money by not properly appearing for the trial. Often referred to simply as bond.
 
Bailiff: A court attendant who keeps order in the courtroom and has custody of the jury.
 
Bankruptcy: Refers to statutes and judicial proceedings involving persons or businesses that cannot pay their debts and seek the assistance of the court in getting a fresh start. Under the protection of the bankruptcy court, debtors may be released from or “discharged” from their debts, perhaps by paying a portion  of each debt. Bankruptcy judges preside over these proceedings. The person with the debts is called the debtor and the people or companies to whom the debtor owes money to are called creditors.
 
Bar: 1. Historically, the partition separating the general public from the space occupied by the judges, lawyers, and other participants in a trial. 2. More commonly, the term means the whole body of lawyers.
 
Bar Examination: A state examination taken by prospective lawyers in order to be admitted and licensed to practice law.
 
Battery: A beating, or wrongful physical violence. The actual threat to use force is an assault; the use of it is a battery, which usually includes an assault.  
 
Bench: The seat occupied by the judge. More broadly, the court itself.  
 
Bench Trial: Trial without a jury in which a judge decides the facts.
 
Bench Warrant: An order issued by a judge for the arrest of a person.
 
Beneficiary: Someone named to receive property or benefits in a will. In a trust, a person who is to receive benefits from the trust.
 
Bequeath: To give a gift to someone through a will.
 
Bequests: Gifts made in a will.
 
Best Evidence: Primary evidence; the best evidence available. Evidence short of this is “secondary.” That is, an original letter is “best evidence,” and a photocopy is “secondary evidence.”
 
Beyond a Reasonable Doubt: The standard in a criminal case requiring that the jury be satisfied to a moral certainty that every element of a crime has been proven by the prosecution. This standard of proof does not require that the state establish absolute certainty by eliminating all doubt, but it does require that the evidence be so conclusive that all reasonable doubts are removed from the mind of the ordinary person.
 
Bill of Particulars: A statement of the details of the charge made against the defendant.
 
Bind Over: To hold a person for trial on bond (bail) or in jail. If the judicial official conducting a hearing finds probable cause to believe the accused committed a crime, the official will bind over the accused, normally by setting bail for the accused’s appearance at trial.
 
Booking: The process of photographing, fingerprinting, and recording identifying data of a suspect. This process follows the arrest.
 
Brief: A written argument prepared by counsel to file in court setting forth both facts and law in support of a case.
 
Burden of Proof: In the law of evidence, the necessity or duty of affirmatively proving a fact or facts in dispute on an issue raised between the parties in a lawsuit. The responsibility of proving a point (the burden of proof) is not the same as the standard of proof. Burden of proof deals with which side must establish a point or points; standard of proof indicates the degree to which the point must be proven. For example, in a civil case the burden of proof rests with the plaintiff, who must establish his or her case by such standards of proof as a preponderance of evidence or clear and convincing evidence.
 

Capital crime:
A crime punishable by death.
 
Calendar: List of cases scheduled for hearing in court.
 
Caption: The heading on a legal document listing the parties, the court, the case number, and related information.
 
Case Law: Law based on previous decisions of appellate courts, particularly  the Supreme Court.
 
Cause: A lawsuit, litigation, or action. Any question, civil or criminal, litigated or contested before a court of justice.
 
Cause of action: The facts that give rise to a lawsuit or a legal claim.
 
Caveat: A warning; a note of caution.
 
Certification: 1. Written attestation. 2. Authorized declaration verifying that an instrument is a true and correct copy of the original.
 
Certiorari: A means of getting an appellate court to review a lower court’s decision. The loser of a case will often ask the appellate court to issue a writ of certiorari, which orders the lower court to convey the record of the case to the appellate court and to certify it as accurate and complete. If an appellate court grants a writ of certiorari, it agrees to take the appeal. This is often referred to as granting cert.
 
Challenge: An objection, such as when an attorney objects at a hearing to the seating of a particular person on a civil or criminal jury.
 
Challenge for Cause: Objection to the seating of a particular juror for a stated reason (usually bias or prejudice for or against one of the parties in the lawsuit). The judge has the discretion to deny the challenge. This differs from peremptory challenge.
 
Chambers: A judge’s private office. A hearing in chambers takes place in the judge’s office outside of the presence of the jury and the public.
 
Change of Venue: Moving a lawsuit or criminal trial to another place for trial.
 
Charge to the Jury: The judge’s instructions to the jury concerning the law that applies to the facts of the case on trial.
 
Chief Judge: Presiding or Administrative Judge in a court.
 
Circumstantial Evidence: All evidence except eyewitness testimony. One example is physical evidence, such as fingerprints, from which an inference can be drawn.
 
Citation: 1. A reference to a source of legal authority. 2. A direction to appear in court, as when a defendant is cited into court, rather than arrested.
 
Civil Actions: Non-criminal cases in which one private individual or business sues another to protect, enforce, or redress private or civil rights.
 
Civil Case:  A case involving disputes involving two or more people, between people and companies, or between people and government agencies.
 
Civil Procedure: The rules and process by which a civil case is tried and appealed, including the preparations for trial, the rules of evidence and trial conduct, and the procedure for pursuing appeals.
 
Class Action: A lawsuit brought by one or more persons on behalf of a larger group.
 
Clemency or Executive Clemency: Act of grace or mercy by the president or governor to ease the consequences of a criminal act, accusation, or conviction. It may take the form of commutation or pardon.
 
Closing Argument: The closing statement, by counsel, to the trier of facts  after all parties have concluded their presentation of evidence. 
 
Codicil: (kod’i-sil) An amendment to a will.
 
Commit: To send a person to prison, asylum, or reformatory by a court order. 
 
Common Law: The term generally referrs to the "Judge-made law" (case law or decision law).  The common law originated in England and now used in the majority of the states in the United States. It is based on judicial decisions rather than legislative action.  Common law is distinguished from statutes (laws enacted by legislatures).
 
Commutation: The reduction of a sentence, as from death to life imprisonment.
  
Comparative Negligence: A legal doctrine by which acts of the opposing parties are compared to determine the liability of each party to the other, making each liable only for his or her percentage of fault. See also contributory negligence.
 
Complainant: The party who complains or sues; one who applies to the court for legal redress. Also called the plaintiff.
 
Complaint: The first legal document filed in a legal lawsuit.  It includes a statement of the wrong or harm done to the plaintiff by the defendant and a request for a specific remedy from the court.  A complaint in a criminal case is a sworn statement regarding the defendant's actions that constitute a crime.
 
Conciliation: A form of alternative dispute resolution in which the parties bring their dispute to a neutral third party, who helps lower tensions, improve communications, and explore possible solutions. Conciliation is similar to mediation, but it may be less formal.
 
Concurrent Sentences: Sentences for more than one crime that are to be served at the same time, rather than one after the other. See also cumulative sentences.
 
Condemnation: The legal process by which the government takes private land for public use, paying the owners a fair price.
 
Consecutive Sentences: Successive sentences, one beginning at the expiration of another, imposed against a person convicted of two or more violations.
 
Conservatorship: Legal right given to a person to manage the property and financial affairs of a person deemed incapable of doing that for himself or herself. (See also guardianship. Conservators have somewhat less responsibility than guardians.)
 
Constitution: A set of customs, traditions, rules and laws that sets forth the way a government is organized and operated.
 
Contempt of Court: Willful disobedience of a judge’s command or of an official court order.
 
Continuance: Postponement of a legal proceeding to a later date.
 
Contract: A legally enforceable agreement between two or more competent parties made either orally or in writing.
 
Contributory Negligence: A legal doctrine that says if the plaintiff in a civil action for negligence also was negligent, he or she cannot recover damages from the defendant for the defendant’s negligence. Most jurisdictions have abandoned the doctrine of contributory negligence in favor of comparative negligence.
 
Conviction: A judgment of guilt against a criminal defendant.
 
Corpus Delicti: Body of the crime. The objective proof that a crime has been committed. It sometimes refers to the body of the victim of a homicide or to the charred shell of a burned house, but the term has a broader meaning. For the state to introduce a confession or to convict the accused, it must prove a corpus delicti, that is, the occurrence of a specific injury or loss and a criminal act as the source of that particular injury or loss.
 
Corroborating Evidence:  Supplementary evidence that tends to strengthen or confirm the initial evidence.
 
Counsel: Legal adviser; a term used to refer to lawyers in a case.
 
Counterclaim: A claim made by the defendant in a civil lawsuit against the plaintiff. In essence, a counter lawsuit within a lawsuit.
 
Court Administrator/Clerk of Court: An officer appointed by the Court or elected to oversee the administrative, non-judicial activities of the court.
 
Court: Government entity authorized to resolve legal disputes. Judges sometimes use “court” to refer to themselves in the third person, as in “the court has read the briefs.”
 
Court Costs: The expenses of prosecuting or defending a lawsuit, other than the attorneys’ fees. An amount of money may be awarded to the successful party (and may be recoverable from the losing party) as reimbursement for court costs.
 
Court Reporter: A person who makes a word-for-word record of what is said in court and produces a transcript of the proceedings upon request.
 
Crime:  An act, or failure to act, forbidden by law and designated a crime in the statutes.
 
Criminal Case:  A case brought by the government, through a prosecutor, against a person thought to have broken the law. (criminal law is a broad field of law involving action taken by the state against a person accused of committing a crime.)
 
Cross-Claim: A claim by codefendant or  coplaintiffs against each other and not against persons on the opposite side of the lawsuit.
 
Cross-Examination: The questioning of a witness produced by the other side. 
 
Cumulative Sentences: Sentences for two or more crimes to run consecutively, rather than concurrently. 
 
Custody: Detaining of a person by lawful process or authority to assure his or her appearance to any hearing; the jailing or imprisonment of a person convicted of a crime.
  
D
Damages: Money awarded by a court to a person injured by the unlawful act or negligence of another person.
 
Decision: The judgment reached or given by a court of law.
 
Declaratory Judgment: A judgment of the court that explains what the existing law is or expresses the opinion of the court without the need for enforcement.
 
Decree: An order of the court. A final decree is one that fully and finally disposes of the litigation. An interlocutory decree is a preliminary order that often disposes of only part of a lawsuit.
 
Defamation: That which tends to injure a  person's reputation. Libel is published defamation, whereas slander is spoken.
 
Default: A failure to respond to a lawsuit within the specified time. 
 
Default Judgment: A judgment entered against a party who fails to appear in court or respond to the charges.
 
Defendant: In a civil case, the person being sued. In a criminal case, the person accused of the crime.
 
De Novo: Anew. A trial de novo is a new trial of a case.
 
Deposition: An oral statement made before an officer authorized by law to administer oaths. Such statements are often taken to examine potential witnesses, to obtain discovery, or to be used later in trial.
 
Descent and Distribution Statutes: State laws that provide for the distribution of estate property of a person who dies without a will. Same as intestacy laws.
 
Directed Verdict: Now called Judgment as a matter of Law. An instruction by the judge to the jury to return a specific verdict.
 
Direct Evidence: Proof of facts by witnesses who saw acts done or heard words spoken.
 
Direct Examination: The first questioning of witnesses by the party on whose behalf they are called.
 
Disbarment: Form of discipline of a lawyer resulting in the loss (often permanently) of that lawyer’s right to practice law. It differs from censure (an official reprimand or condemnation) and from suspension (a temporary loss of the right to practice law). 
 
Discovery: The pretrial process by which one party discovers the evidence that will be relied upon in the trial by the opposing party.
 
Dismissal: The termination of a lawsuit. A dismissal without prejudice allows a lawsuit to be brought before the court again at a later time. In contrast, a dismissal with prejudice prevents the lawsuit from being brought before a court in the future.
 
Dispute:  A conflict of claims or rights for which a legal suit may be brought.
 
Dissent: The disagreement of one or more judges with the decision of the majority.
 
Diversion: The process of removing some minor criminal, traffic, or juvenile cases from the full judicial process, on the condition that the accused undergo some sort of rehabilitation or make restitution for damages.
 
Docket: A list of cases to be heard by a court or a log containing brief entries of court proceedings.
 
Domicile:
The place where a person has his or her permanent legal home. A person
may have several residences, but only one domicile.
 
Double Jeopardy: Putting a person on trial more than once for the same crime. It is forbidden by the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
 
Due Process of Law: The right of all persons to receive the guarantees and safeguards of the law and the judicial process. It includes such constitutional requirements as adequate notice, assistance of counsel, and the rights to remain silent, to a speedy and public trial, to an impartial jury, and to confront and secure witnesses.
 
E
Elements of a Crime: Specific factors that define a crime which the prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable doubt in order to obtain a conviction. 
 
Eminent Domain: The power of the government to take private property for public use through condemnation.
 
En Banc: All the judges of a court sitting together. Appellate courts can consist of a dozen or more judges, but often they hear cases in panels of three judges. If a case is heard or reheard by the full court, it is heard en banc.
 
Enjoining:  An order by the court telling a person to stop performing a specific act.
 
Entrapment: A defense to criminal charges alleging that agents of the government induced a person to commit a crime he or she otherwise would not have committed.
 
Equal Protection of the Law: The guarantee in the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that all persons be treated equally by the law. Court decisions have established that this guarantee requires that courts be open to all persons on the same conditions, with like rules of evidence and modes of procedure; that persons be subject to no restrictions in the acquisition of property, the enjoyment of personal liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, which do not generally affect others; that persons are liable to no other or greater burdens than such as are laid upon others, and that no different or greater punishment is enforced against them for a violation of the laws.
 
Equity: Generally, justice or fairness. Historically, equity refers to a separate body of law developed in England in reaction to the inability of the common-law courts, in their strict adherence to rigid writs and forms of action, to consider or provide a remedy for every injury. The king therefore established the court of chancery, to do justice between parties in cases where the common law would give inadequate redress. The principle of this system of law is that equity will find a way to achieve a lawful result when legal procedure is inadequate. Equity and law courts are now merged in most jurisdictions.
 
Escheat: (es-chēt) The process by which a deceased person’s property goes to the state if no heir can be found.
 
Escrow: Money or a written instrument such as a deed that, by agreement between two parties, is held by a neutral third party (held in escrow) until all conditions of the agreement are met.
 
Estate: An estate consists of personal property (car, household items, and other tangible items), real property, and intangible property, such as stock certificates and bank accounts, owned in the individual name of a person at the time of the person’s death. It does not include life insurance proceeds (unless the estate was made the beneficiary) or other assets that pass outside the estate (like joint tenancy asset).
 
Estate Tax: Generally, a tax on the privilege of transferring property to others after a person’s death. In addition to federal estate taxes, many states have their own estate taxes.
 
Estoppel: A person’s own act, or acceptance of facts, which preclude his or her later making claims to the contrary.
 
Et al: And others.
 
Evidence: Information presented in testimony or in documents that is used to persuade the fact finder (judge or jury) to decide the case for one side or the other. 
 
Exempt Property: In bankruptcy proceedings, this refers to certain property protected by law from the reach of creditors. 
 
Exceptions: Declarations by either side in a civil or criminal case reserving the right to appeal a judge’s ruling upon a motion. Also, in regulatory cases, objections by either side to points made by the other side or to rulings by the agency or one of its hearing officers.
 
Exclusionary Rule: The rule preventing illegally obtained evidence to be used in any trial.  Also referred to as "fruit of the poisonous tree."
 
Execute: To complete the legal requirements (such as signing before witnesses) that make a will valid. Also, to execute a judgment or decree means to put the final judgment of the court into effect.
 
Executor: A personal representative, named in a will, who administers an estate.
 
Exhibit: A document or other item introduced as evidence during a trial or hearing.
Exonerate: Removal of a charge, responsibility or duty.
 
Ex Parte: On behalf of only one party, without notice to any other party. For example, a request for a search warrant is an ex parte proceeding, since the person subject to the search is not notified of the proceeding and is not present at the hearing. 
 
Ex Parte Proceeding: The legal procedure in which only one side is represented. It differs from adversary system or adversary proceeding.
 
Ex Post Facto: After the fact. The
Constitution prohibits the enactment of ex post facto laws. These are laws that permit conviction and punishment for a lawful act performed before the law was changed and the act made illegal. 
 
Extenuating Circumstances:  Circumstances which render a crime less aggravated, heinous, or reprehensible than it would otherwise be.
 
Expungement: Official and formal erasure of a record or partial contents of a record.
 
Extradition: The process by which one state or country surrenders to another state, a person accused or convicted of a crime in the other state.
 
F
Federalism or Federal System:  As applied to the United States, a division of powers between the Federal or US government and the governments of the 50 states.  The states have powers of their own, such as power to create a public school system.  The federal government has powers such as coinage and the regulating of foreign trade.  Both have concurrent powers in such areas as taxation and public health and welfare.
 
Felony: A most serious crime with penalties of imprisonment ranging from a year and a day to life, or, in some states, punishable by death.
 
Fiduciary: A person having a legal relationship of trust and confidence to another and having a duty to act primarily for the others benefit, e.g., a guardian, trustee, or executor.
 
File: To place a paper in the official custody of the clerk of court/court administrator to enter into the files or records of a case.
 
Finding: Formal conclusion by a judge or regulatory agency on issues of fact. Also, a conclusion by a jury regarding a fact.
 
Fraud: Intentional deception to deprive another person of property or to injure that person in some other way.
 
G
Garnishment: A legal proceeding in which a debtor’s money, in the possession of another (called the garnishee), is applied to the debts of the debtor, such as when an employer garnishes a debtor’s wages. (not allowed in South Carolina)
 
General Jurisdiction: Refers to courts that have no limit on the types of criminal and civil cases they may hear.
 
Good Time: A reduction in sentenced time in prison as a reward for good behavior. It usually is one third to one half off the maximum sentence.
 
Grand Jury: A body of persons sworn to inquire into crime and if appropriate, bring accusations (indictments) against the suspected criminals.
 
Grantor or Settlor: The person who sets up a trust.
 
Grievance:  A legal dispute.
 
Grounds:  The basis or foundation for some action; legal reasons for filing a lawsuit.
 
Guardian: A person appointed by will or by law to assume responsibility for incompetent adults or minor children. If a parent dies, this will usually be the other parent. If both die, it probably will be a close relative.

Guardianship: Legal right given to a person to be responsible for the food, housing, health care, and other necessities of a person deemed incapable of providing these necessities for himself or herself. A guardian also may be given responsibility for the person’s financial affairs, and thus perform additionally as a conservator. (See also conservatorship.)
 
H
Habeas Corpus: A writ commanding that a person be brought before a judge. Most commonly, a writ of habeas corpus is a legal document that forces law enforcement authorities to produce a prisoner they are holding and to legally justify his or her confinement.
 
Harmless Error: An error committed during a trial that was corrected or was not serious enough to affect the outcome of a trial and therefore was not sufficiently harmful (prejudicial) to be reversed on appeal.
 
Hearsay: Statements by a witness who did not see or hear the incident in question but heard about it from someone else. Hearsay is usually not admissible as evidence in court.
 
Homicide:  The killing of one person by another.
 
Hostile Witness: A witness whose testimony is not favorable to the party who calls him or her as a witness. A hostile witness may be asked leading questions and may be cross-examined by the party who calls him or her to the stand.
 
Hung Jury: A jury whose members cannot agree upon a verdict.
 
 I
Incarcerate: To confine in jail.
 
Immunity: Grant by the court, which assures someone will not face prosecution in return for providing criminal evidence.
 
Impeachment of a Witness: An attack on the credibility (believability) of a witness, through evidence introduced for that purpose.
 
Impartial:  Objective; provision of the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution requiring the judge or the jury not to favor one party over another or to prejudge the merits of the case.
 
Inadmissible: That which, under the rules of evidence, cannot be admitted or received as evidence.
 
In Camera: In chambers, or in private. A hearing in camera takes place in the judge’s office outside of the presence of the jury and the public.
 
Independent Executor: A special kind of executor, permitted by the laws of certain states, who performs the duties of an executor without intervention by the court.
 
Indeterminate Sentence: A sentence of imprisonment to a specified minimum and maximum period of time, specifically authorized by statute, subject to termination by a parole board or other authorized agency after the prisoner has served the minimum term.
 
Indictment: A written accusation by a grand jury charging a person with a crime.
 
Indigent: Needy or impoverished. A defendant who can demonstrate his or her indigence to the court may be assigned a court-appointed attorney at public expense.
 
Information: Accusatory document, filed by the prosecutor, detailing the charges against the defendant. An alternative to an indictment, it serves to bring a defendant to trial.
 
In Forma Pauperis: In the manner of a pauper. Permission given to a person to sue without payment of court fees on claim of indigence or poverty.
 
Infraction: A violation of law not punishable by imprisonment. Minor traffic offenses generally are considered infractions.
 
Inheritance Tax: A state tax on property that an heir or beneficiary under a will receives from a deceased person’s estate. The heir or beneficiary pays this tax.
 
Initial Appearance: In criminal law, the hearing at which a judge determines whether there is sufficient evidence against a person charged with a crime to hold him or her for trial. The Constitution bans secret accusations, so initial appearances are public unless the defendant asks otherwise; the accused must be present, though he or she usually does not offer evidence. Also called first appearance or arraignment.
 
Injunction: Writ or order by a court prohibiting a specific action from being carried out by a person or group. A preliminary injunction is granted provisionally, until a full hearing can be held to determine if it should be made permanent.
 
In Propria Persona: Person who presents his or her own case in a court of law without the aid or assistance of a lawyer. See Pro Se.
 
Instructions: Judge’s explanation to the jury before it begins deliberations of the questions it must answer and the applicable law governing the case. Also called charge.
 
Intangible Assets: Nonphysical items such as stock certificates, bonds, bank accounts, and pension benefits that have value and must be taken into account in estate planning.
 
Interlocutory: Provisional; not final. An interlocutory order or an interlocutory appeal concerns only a part of the issues raised in a lawsuit.
 
Interrogatories: Written questions asked by one party in a lawsuit for which the opposing party must provide written answers.
 
Intervention: An action by which a third person who may be affected by a lawsuit is permitted to become a party to the suit.  Differs from the process of becoming an amicus curiae.
 
Inter Vivos Gift: A gift made during the giver’s life.
 
Inter Vivos Trust: Another name for a living trust.
 
Intestacy Laws: See descent and distribution statutes.
 
Intestate: Dying without a will.
 
Intestate Succession: The process by which the property of a person who has died without a will passes on to others according to the state’s descent and distribution statutes. If someone dies without a will, and the court uses the state’s interstate succession laws, an heir who receives some of the deceased’s property is an intestate heir.
 
Irrevocable Trust: A trust that, once set up, the grantor may not revoke.
 
Issue: (1) The disputed point in a disagreement between parties in a lawsuit. (2) To send out officially, as in to issue an order.
 
J
Joint and Several Liability: A legal doctrine that makes each of the parties who are responsible for an injury, liable for all the damages awarded in a lawsuit if the other parties responsible cannot pay.
 
Joint Tenancy: A form of legal co-ownership of property (also known as survivorship). At the death of one co-owner, the surviving co-owner becomes sole owner of the property. Tenancy by the entirety is a special form of joint tenancy between a husband and wife.  
 
Judge: An elected or appointed public official with authority to hear and decide cases in a court of law. A Judge Pro Tem is a temporary judge.
 
Judgment: The final disposition of a lawsuit. Default judgment is a judgment rendered because of the defendant’s failure to answer or appear. Summary judgment is a judgment given on the basis of pleadings, affidavits, and exhibits presented for the record without any need for a trial. It is used when there is no dispute as to the facts of the case and one party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. Consent judgment occurs when the provisions and terms of the judgment are agreed on by the parties and submitted to the court for its sanction and approval.
 
Judicial Review: The authority of a court to review the official actions of other branches of government. Also, the authority to declare unconstitutional the actions of other branches.
 
Jurisdiction: (1) The legal authority of a court to hear and decide a case.  Concurrent jurisdiction exists when two courts have simultaneous responsibility for the same case. (2) The geographic area over which the court has authority to decide cases.
 
Jurisprudence: The study of law and the structure of the legal system.
 
Jury: Persons selected according to law and sworn to inquire into and declare a verdict on matters of fact. A petit jury is an ordinary or trial jury, composed of six to 12 persons, which hears either civil or criminal cases.
 
 
L
Lapsed Gift: A gift made in a will to a person who has died prior to the will- maker's death.
 
Larceny: Obtaining property by fraud or deceit.
 
Law: The combination of those rules and principles of conduct promulgated by legislative authority, derived from court decisions and established by local custom.
 
Law Clerks: Persons trained in the law who assist judges in researching legal opinions.
 
Leading Question: A question that suggests the answer desired of the witness. A party generally may not ask one’s own witness leading questions. Leading questions may be asked only of hostile witnesses and on cross-examination.
 
Legal Aid: Professional legal services available usually to persons or organizations unable to afford such services.
 
Legislative History:  Background of action by a legislature, including testimony before committees, written reports and debates on the legislation.
 
Leniency: Recommendation for a sentence less than the maximum allowed.
 
Letters of Administration: Legal document issued by a court that shows an administrator’s legal right to take control of assets in the deceased person’s name.
 
Letters of Appointment: Legal document issued by a court that shows an executor’s legal right to take control of assets in the deceased person’s name.
 
Liable: Legally responsible.
 
Libel: Published words or pictures that falsely and maliciously defame a person. Libel is published defamation; slander is spoken.
 
Lien: A legal claim against another person’s property as security for a debt. A lien does not convey ownership of the property, but gives the lien holder a right to have his or her debt satisfied out of the proceeds of the property if the debt is not otherwise paid.
 
Limine: A motion requesting that the court not allow certain evidence that might prejudice the jury.
 
Limited Jurisdiction: Refers to courts that are limited in the types of criminal and civil cases they may hear. For example, traffic violations generally are heard by limited jurisdiction courts.
 
Litigant: A party to a lawsuit.
 
Litigation:  A process of resolving a dispute over legal rights in court. Litigation begins when one party files a lawsuit (summons and complaint) with the Clerk of Court ane properly notifies the opposing party. It may end in mediation or at trial.
 
Living Trust: A trust set up and in effect during the lifetime of the grantor. Also called inter vivos trust.
 
M
Magistrate: Judicial officer exercising some of the functions of a judge. It also refers in a general way to a judge.
 
Malfeasance: Evil doing, ill conduct; the commission of some act which is positively prohibited by law.
 
Malicious Prosecution: An action instituted with intention of injuring the defendant and without probable cause, and which terminates in favor of the person prosecuted.
 
Mandamus: A writ issued by a court ordering a public official to perform an act.
 
Manslaughter: The unlawful killing of another without intent to kill; either voluntary (upon a sudden impulse); or involuntary (during the commission of an unlawful act not ordinarily expected to result in great bodily harm). See also murder.
 
Mediation: A form of alternative dispute resolution in which the parties bring their dispute to a neutral third party, who helps them agree on a settlement.
 
Memorialized: In writing.
 
Mens Rea: The “guilty mind” necessary to establish criminal responsibility.
 
Miranda Warning: Requirement that police tell a suspect in their custody of his or her constitutional rights before they question him or her. So named as a result of the Miranda v. Arizona ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court.
 
Misdemeanor: A criminal offense considered less serious than a felony.  Misdemeanors generally are punishable by a fine or a limited local jail term, but not by imprisonment in a state penitentiary.  A petty misdemeanor is a minor offense for which one may be fined.
 
Mistrial: An invalid trial, caused by fundamental error. When a mistrial is declared, the trial must start again from the selection of the jury.
 
Mitigating Circumstances: Those which do not constitute a justification or excuse for an offense but which may be considered as reasons for reducing the degree of blame. 
 
Moot: A moot case or a moot point is one not subject to a judicial determination because it involves an abstract question or a pretended controversy that has not yet actually arisen or has already passed. Mootness usually refers to a court’s refusal to consider a case because the issue involved has been resolved prior to the court’s decision, leaving nothing that would be affected by the court’s decision.
 
Motion: Oral or written request made by a party to an action before, during, or after a trial, upon which a court issues a ruling or order.
 
Murder: The unlawful killing of a human being with deliberate intent to kill. Murder in the first degree is characterized by premeditation; murder in the second degree is characterized by a sudden and instantaneous intent to kill or to cause injury without caring whether the injury kills or not. (See also manslaughter.)
 
N
Negligence: Failure to exercise the degree of care that a reasonable person would exercise under the same circumstances.
 
Next Friend: One acting without formal appointment as guardian for the benefit of an infant, a person of unsound mind not judicially declared incompetent, or other person under some disability.
 
No Bill: This phrase, endorsed by a grand jury on the written indictment submitted to it for its approval, means that the evidence was found insufficient to indict.
 
No-Contest Clause: Language in a will that provides that a person who makes a legal challenge to the will’s validity will be disinherited.
 
No-Fault Proceedings: A civil case in which parties may resolve their dispute without a formal finding of error or fault.
 
Nolle Prosequi: Decision by a prosecutor not to go forward with charging a crime. It translates “I do not choose to prosecute.” Also loosely called nolle pros.
 
Nolo Contendere: A plea of no contest. In many jurisdictions, it is an expression that the matter will not be contested, but without an admission of guilt. In other jurisdictions, it is an admission of the charges and is equivalent to a guilty plea.
 
Notice: Formal notification to the party that has been sued in a civil case of the fact that the lawsuit has been filed. Also, any form of notification of a legal proceeding.
 
Nunc Pro Tunc: A legal phrase applied to acts which are allowed after the time when they should be done, with a retroactive effect.
 
Nuncupative Will: An oral (unwritten) will.
 
O
Oath:
Written or oral pledge by a person to keep a promise or speak the truth.
 
Objection: The process by which one party takes exception to some statement or procedure. An objection is either sustained (allowed) or overruled by the judge.
 
On a Person’s Own Recognizance:  Release of a person from custody without the payment of any bail or posting of bond, upon the promise to return to court.
 
Opening Statement: The initial statement made by attorneys for each side, outlining the facts each intends to establish during the trial. 
 
Opinion: A judge’s written explanation of a decision of the court or of a majority of judges. A dissenting opinion disagrees with the majority opinion because of the reasoning and/or the principles of law on which the decision is based. A concurring opinion agrees with the decision of the court but offers further comment. A per curiam opinion is an unsigned opinion “of the court.”
 
Oral Argument: An opportunity for lawyers to summarize their position before the court and also to answer the judges’ questions.
 
Order: A written or oral command from a court directing or forbidding an action.
 
Ordinance:  The laws passed by local government.
 
Overrule: A judge’s decision not to allow an objection. Also, a decision by a higher court finding that a lower court decision was in error. 
 
P
Pardon:
A form of executive clemency preventing criminal prosecution or removing or extinguishing a criminal conviction.
 
Parens Patriae: The doctrine under which the court protects the interests of a juvenile. 
 
Parole: The supervised conditional release of a prisoner before the expiration of his or her sentence. If the parolee observes the conditions, he or she need not serve the rest of his or her term.
 
Party: A person, business, or government agency actively involved in the prosecution or defense of a legal proceeding.
 
Patent: A government grant giving an inventor the exclusive right to make or sell his or her invention for a term of years.
 
Peremptory Challenge: A challenge that may be used to reject a certain number of prospective jurors without giving a reason.
 
Perjury: The criminal offense of making a false statement under oath.
 
Permanent Injunction: A court order requiring that some action be taken, or that some party refrain from taking action. It differs from forms of temporary relief, such as a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction.
 
Personal Property: Tangible physical property (such as cars, clothing, furniture, and jewelry) and intangible personal property.  This does not include real property such as land or rights in land.
 
Personal Recognizance: In criminal proceedings, the pretrial release of a defendant without bail upon his or her promise to return to court. See also own recognizance.
 
Personal Representative: The person who administers an estate. If named in a will, that person’s title is an executor. If there is no valid will, that person’s title is an administrator. 
 
Person in Need of Supervision: Juvenile found to have committed a status offense rather than a crime that would provide a basis for a finding of delinquency. Typical status offenses are habitual truancy, violating a curfew, or running away from home. These are not crimes, but they might be enough to place a child under supervision. In different states, status offenders might be called children in need of supervision or minors in need of supervision.
 
Petitioner: The person filing an action in a court of original jurisdiction. Also, the person who appeals the judgment of a lower court. The opposing party is called the respondent.
 
Plaintiff: The person who files the complaint in a civil lawsuit. Also called the complainant; one who initiates the court action.
 
Plea: In a criminal proceeding, it is the defendant’s declaration in open court that he or she is guilty or not guilty. The defendant’s answer to the charges made in the indictment or information.
 
Plea Bargaining or Plea Negotiating:  The process through which an accused person and a prosecutor negotiate a mutually satisfactory disposition of a case. Usually it is a legal transaction in which a defendant pleads guilty in exchange for some form of leniency. It often involves a guilty plea to lesser charges or a guilty plea to some of the charges if other charges are dropped. Such bargains are not binding on the court.
Pleadings: The written statements of fact and law filed by the parties to a lawsuit.
 
Polling the Jury: The act, after a jury verdict has been announced, of asking jurors individually whether they agree with the verdict.
 
Pour-Over Will: A will that leaves some or all estate assets to a trust established before the will-maker’s death.
 
Power of Attorney: Formal authorization of a person to act in the interests of another person.  
 
Precedent: A prior judicial decision that serves as an example or rule to authorize or justify another decision.
 
Preliminary Hearing: Another term for arraignment.
 
Pre-Injunction: Court order requiring action or forbidding action until a decision can be made whether to issue a permanent injunction. It differs from a temporary restraining order. 
 
Preponderance of the Evidence: Greater weight of the evidence, the common standard of proof in civil cases.
 
Pre-Sentence Report: A report to the sentencing judge containing background information about the crime and the defendant to assist the judge in making his or her sentencing decision.
 
Presentment: Declaration or document issued by a grand jury that either makes a neutral report or notes misdeeds by officials charged with specified public duties. It ordinarily does not include a formal charge of crime. A presentment differs from an indictment. 
 
Pretermitted Child: A child born after a will is executed, who is not provided for by the will. Most states have laws that provide for a share of estate property to go to such children. 
 
Pre-Trial Conference: A meeting between the judge and the lawyers involved in a lawsuit to narrow the issues in the suit, agree on what will be presented at the trial, and make a final effort to settle the case without a trial.
 
Prima Facie Case: A case that is sufficient and has the minimum amount of evidence necessary to allow it to continue in the judicial process.
 
Probable Cause: A reasonable belief that a crime has or is being committed; the basis for all lawful searches, seizures, and arrests.
 
Probate: The court-supervised process by which a will is determined to be the will maker’s final statement regarding how the will-maker wants his or her property distributed. It also confirms the appointment of the personal representative of the estate.  Probate also means the process by which assets are gathered; applied to pay debts, taxes, and expenses of administration; and distributed to those designated as beneficiaries in the will.
 
Probate Court: The court with authority to supervise estate administration.
 
Probate Estate: Estate property that may be disposed of by a will.
 
Probation: An alternative to imprisonment allowing a person found guilty of an offense to stay in the community, usually under conditions and under the supervision of a probation officer. A violation of probation can lead to its revocation and to imprisonment. 
 
Pro Bono Publico: For the public good.  Lawyers representing clients without a fee are said to be working pro bono publico.
 
Pro Hac Vice: (proh hock vee-chay) Latin for "this time only," the phrase refers to the application of an out-of-state lawyer to appear in court for a particular trial, even though he/she is not licensed to practice in the state where the trial is being held. The application is usually granted, but sometimes the court requires association with a local attorney.
 
Pro Se: A Latin term meaning “on one’s own behalf”; in courts, it refers to persons who present their own cases without lawyers.
 
Prosecutor: A trial lawyer representing the government in a criminal case and the interests of the state in civil matters. In criminal cases, the prosecutor has the responsibility of deciding who and when to prosecute.
 
Proximate cause: The act that caused an event to occur. A person generally is liable only if an injury was proximately caused by his or her action or by his or her failure to act when he or she had a duty to act.
 
Public Defender: A public officer who provides Constitutionally-guaranteed defense for those who are accused of criminal offenses but cannot afford to hire an attorney.
 
Q
Quash:
To vacate or void a summons, subpoena, etc.
 
R
Ratification:
 The process of approving an amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which is spelled out in Article Five of that document.
 
Real Property: Land, buildings, and other improvements affixed to the land.
 
Reasonable Doubt: An accused person is entitled to acquittal if, in the minds of the jury, his or her guilt has not been proved beyond a “reasonable doubt”; that state of minds of jurors in which they cannot say they feel an abiding conviction as to the truth of the charge.
 
Reasonable Person: A phrase used to denote a hypothetical person who exercises qualities of attention, knowledge, intelligence, and judgment that society requires of its members for the protection of their own interest and the interests of others. Thus, the test of negligence is based on either a failure to do something that a reasonable person, guided by considerations that ordinarily regulate conduct, would do, or on the doing of something that a reasonable and prudent (wise) person would not do.
 
Rebut: Evidence disproving other evidence previously given or reestablishing the credibility of challenged evidence.
 
Record: All the documents and evidence plus transcripts of oral proceedings in a case. 
 
Recuse: The process by which a judge is disqualified from hearing a case, on his or her own motion or upon the objection of either party.
 
Re-Direct Examination: Opportunity to present rebuttal evidence after one’s evidence has been subjected to cross-examination.
 
Redress: To set right; to remedy; to compensate; to remove the causes of a grievance.
 
Referee: A person to whom the court refers 
a pending case to take testimony,  hear the parties, and report back to the court. A referee is an officer with judicial powers who serves as an arm of the court. 
 
Rehearing: Another hearing of a civil or criminal case by the same court in which the case was originally heard.
 
Regulation:  A law, rule, or other order prescribed by authority, especially to regulate conduct.
 
Rejoinder: Opportunity for the side that opened the case to offer limited response to evidence presented during the rebuttal by the opposing side.
 
Relief:  Deliverance from oppression, wrong, or injustice; a general designation of the assistance, redress, or benefit which a plaintiff seeks at the hands of the court.
 
Remand: To send a dispute back to the court where it was originally heard. Usually it is an appellate court that remands a case for proceedings in the trial court consistent with the appellate court’s ruling.
 
Remedy: Legal or judicial means by which a right or privilege is enforced or the violation of a right or privilege is prevented, redressed, or compensated. 
 
Remittitur: The reduction by a judge of the damages awarded by a jury. 
 
Removal: The transfer of a state case to federal court for trial; in civil cases, because the parties are from different states; in criminal and some civil cases, because there is a significant possibility that there could not be a fair trial in state court.
 
Replevin: An action for the recovery of a possession that has been wrongfully taken.
 
Reply: The response by a party to charges raised in a pleading by the other party.
 
Respondent: The person against whom an appeal is taken. See petitioner.
 
Rest: A party is said to rest or rest its case when it has presented all the evidence it intends to offer.
 
Restitution: Act of giving the equivalent for any loss, damage or injury.
 
Retainer: Act of the client in employing the attorney or counsel, and also denotes the fee which the client pays when he or she retains the attorney to act for them.
 
Return: A report to a judge by police on the implementation of an arrest or search warrant. Also, a report to a judge in reply to a subpoena, civil or criminal.
 
Reverse: To overturn the ruling of a lower court.
 
Reversible Error: A procedural error during a trial or hearing sufficiently harmful to justify reversing the judgment of a lower court.
 
Revocable Trust: A trust that the grantor may change or revoke.
 
Revoke: To cancel or nullify a legal document.
 
Robbery: Felonious taking of another’s property, from his or her person or immediate presence and against his or her will, by means of force or fear. It differs from larceny.
 
Rules of Evidence: Standards governing whether evidence in a civil or criminal case is admissible.
 
S
Search Warrant:
A written order issued by a judge that directs a law enforcement officer to search a specific area for a particular piece of evidence.
Secured Debt: In bankruptcy proceedings, a debt is secured if the debtor gave the creditor a right to repossess the property or goods used as collateral.
 
Self-Defense: Claim that an act otherwise criminal was legally justifiable because it was necessary to protect a person or property from the threat or action of another.
 
Self-Incrimination, Privilege Against:  The constitutional right of people to refuse to give testimony against themselves that could subject them to criminal prosecution. The right is guaranteed in the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Asserting the right is often referred to as taking the Fifth.
 
Self-Proving Will: A will whose validity does not have to be testified to in court by the witnesses to it, since the witnesses executed an affidavit reflecting proper execution of the will prior to the maker’s death.
 
Sentence: The punishment ordered by a court for a defendant convicted of a crime. A concurrent sentence means that two or more sentences would run at the same time. A consecutive sentence means that two or more sentences would run one after another.
 
Sentence Report: A document containing background material on a convicted person. It is prepared to guide the judge in the imposition of a sentence. Sometimes called a presentence report.
 
Sequester: To separate. Sometimes juries are separated from outside influences during their deliberations. For example, this may occur during a highly publicized trial.
 
Sequestration of Witnesses: Keeping all witnesses (except plaintiff and defendant) out of the courtroom except for their time on the stand, and cautioning them not to discuss their testimony with other witnesses. Also called separation of witnesses. This prevents a witness from being influenced by the testimony of a prior witness.
 
Service: The delivery of a legal document, such as a complaint, summons, or subpoena, notifying a person of a lawsuit or other legal action taken against him or her. Service, which constitutes formal legal notice, must be made by an officially authorized person in accordance with the formal requirements of the applicable laws.
 
Settlement: An agreement between the parties disposing of a lawsuit.
 
Settlor: The person who sets up a trust. Also called the grantor.
 
Sidebar: A conference between the judge and lawyers, usually in the courtroom, out of earshot of the jury and spectators.
 
Slander: False and defamatory spoken words tending to harm another’s reputation, business, or means of livelihood. Slander is spoken defamation; libel is published.
 
Small Claims Court: A court that handles civil claims for small amounts of money. People often represent themselves rather than hire an attorney.
 
Solicitor: In South Carolina, this is the name given to the lawyer who represents the interests of the state in criminal trials.  Each circuit (group of counties) has an elected solicitor who employs assistant solicitors as necessary. The solicitor has the responsibility of deciding who and when to prosecute.  The name comes from the English name for a lawyer who represents the interests of the monarch in the courts.
 
Sovereign Immunity: The doctrine that the government, state or federal, is immune to lawsuit unless it gives its consent.
 
Specific Performance: A remedy requiring a person who has breached a contract to perform specifically what he or she has agreed to do. Specific performance is ordered when damages would be inadequate compensation.
 
Spendthrift Trust: A trust set up for the benefit of someone who the grantor believes would be incapable of managing his or her own financial affairs.
 
Statement Against Interest:  A statement that: (A) A reasonable person in the declarant's position would have made only if the person believed it to be true because, when made, it was so contrary to the declarant's proprietary or pecuniary interest or had so great a tendencey to invalidate the declarant's claim against someone else or to expose the declarant to civil or criminal liability; and (B) is supported by corroborating circumstances that clearly indicate its trustworthiness, if it is offered in a criminal case as one that tends to expose the declarant to criminal liability.
 
Standard of Proof:  The level of evidence necessary to prevail in a legal case.  It varies depending on the nature of the case.  The standard is "beyond a reasonable doubt" (the jury has a higher degree of certainty about the defendant's guilt although need not be 100% convinced) in criminal cases, and "preponderance of the evidence" (the majority of the evidence) in most civil cases.
 
Standing: The legal right to bring a lawsuit. Only a person with something at stake has standing to bring a lawsuit.
 
Stare Decisis: The doctrine that courts will follow principles of law laid down in previous cases. Similar to precedent.
 
Status Offenders: Youths charged with the status of being beyond the control of their legal guardian or are habitually disobedient, truant from school, or having committed other acts that would not be a crime if committed by an adult. They are not delinquents (in that they have committed no crime), but rather are persons in need of supervision, minors in need of supervision, or children in need of supervision, depending on the state in which they live. Status offenders are placed under the supervision of the juvenile court.
 
Statute of Limitations: The time within which a plaintiff must begin a lawsuit (in civil cases) or a prosecutor must bring charges (in criminal cases). There are different statutes of limitations at both the federal and state levels for different kinds of lawsuits or crimes.
 
Statutory Construction: Process by which a court seeks to interpret the meaning and scope of legislation.

Statutory Law: Law enacted by the legislative branch of government, as distinguished from case law or common law.
 
Statutory Law:  Law enacted by the legilsative branch of government, as distinguished from case law or common law.  A statute is an act of the legislature declaring, commanding or prohibiting something.  Regulation refers to rules made by government agencies that carry out the intent of a statute.  
 
Stay: To stop or hold off.  To stay a judgement is to prevent it from being enforced.
 
Stipulation: An agreement by attorneys on both sides of a civil or criminal case about some aspect of the case; e.g., to extend the time to answer, to adjourn the trial date, or to admit certain facts at the trial.
 
Strike: Highlighting in the record of a case, evidence that has been improperly offered and will not be relied upon.
 
Sua Sponte: A Latin phrase which means on one’s own behalf. Voluntary, without prompting or suggestion.
 
Subpoena: A process which requires a person to appear as a witness and give testimony in court.
 
Subpoena Duces Tecum: A court order commanding a witness to bring certain documents or records to court. 
 
Summary Judgment: A decision made on the basis of statements and evidence presented for the record without a trial. It is used when there is no dispute as to the facts of the case, and one party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
 
Summons: A notice to a defendant that he or she has been sued or charged with a crime and is required to appear in court. A jury summons requires the person receiving it to report for possible jury duty
 
Support Trust: A trust that instructs the trustee to spend only as much income and principal (the assets held in the trust) as needed for the beneficiary’s support.
 
Suppress: To forbid the use of evidence at a trial because it is improper or was improperly obtained. See also exclusionary rule.
 
Supreme Court:  The highest court of most states: the highest court of the United States.  The US Supreme Court is made up of a Chief Justice and eight associate justices appointed by the President and confirmed by Congress.  Supreme Court decisions must be followed by lower courts in similar cases.  However, the Supreme Court itself need not abide by it's earlier decisions if it becomes convinced that circumstances demand a new approach.  After a major decision by the Supreme Court, legislatures often revise laws to bring them into accord with the Constitution as interpreted by the decision.  
 
Supremecy Clause:  Article Six, Clause Two of the Constitution, which declares the federal Constitution and laws to be binding over the state constitutions and laws.
 
Surety Bond: A bond purchased at the expense of the estate to insure the executor’s proper performance. Often called a fidelity bond.
 
Survivorship: Another name for joint tenancy.
 
Sustain: A court ruling upholding an objection or a motion.
 
T
Tangible Personal Property Memorandum (TPPM):
A legal document that is referred to in a will and used to guide the distribution of tangible personal property.
 
Temporary Relief: Any form of action by a court granting one of the parties an order to protect its interest pending further action by the court.
 
Temporary Restraining Order: A judge’s order forbidding certain actions until a full hearing can be held. Usually of short duration. Often referred to as a TRO. 
 
Testamentary Capacity: The legal ability to make a will.
 
Testamentary Trust: A trust set up by a will.
 
Testator: Person who makes a will (female: testatrix).
 
Testimony: The evidence given by a witness under oath. It does not include evidence from documents and other physical evidence.
 
Third Party: A person, business, or government agency not actively involved in a legal proceeding, agreement, or transaction.
 
Third-Party Claim: An action by the defendant that brings a third party into a lawsuit.
 
Title: Legal ownership of property, usually real property or automobiles.
 
Tort: An injury or wrong committed on the person or property of another. A tort is an infringement on the rights of an individual, but not founded on a contract. The most common tort action is a suit for damages sustained in an automobile accident.
 
Transcript: A written, word-for-word record of what was said, either in a proceeding such as a trial or during some other conversation, as in a transcript of a hearing or oral deposition.
 
Trier of Fact:  The judge or jury when deciding the events that actually happened as proven in a trial.  A court trial is a type of trial where the judge is the trier of facts as well as law.  A jury trial is a type of trial where the jury is the trier of fact.
 
Trust: A legal device used to manage real or personal property, established by one person (the grantor or settlor) for the benefit of another (the beneficiary). A third person (the trustee) or the grantor manages the trust.
 
Trust Agreement or Declaration: The legal document that sets up a living trust.
Testamentary trusts are set up in a will.
 
Trustee: The person or institution that manages the property put in trust.
 
U
Unlawful Detainer:
A detention of real estate without the consent of the owner or other person entitled to its possession.
 
Unsecured: In bankruptcy proceedings, for the purposes of filing a claim, a claim is unsecured if there is no collateral, or to the extent the value of collateral is less than the amount of the debt.
 
Usury: Charging a higher interest rate or higher fees than the law allows.
 
V
Vacate:
To set aside. To vacate a judgment is to set aside that judgment. 
 
Venire: A writ summoning persons to court to act as jurors, Also refers to the people summoned for jury duty.
 
Venue: The proper geographical area (county, city, or district) in which a court with jurisdiction over the subject matter may hear a case. 
 
Verdict: A conclusion, as to fact or law,  that forms the basis for the court’s judgment. A general verdict is a jury’s finding for or against a plaintiff after determining the facts and weighing them according to the judge’s instructions regarding the law.
 
Voir Dire: Process of questioning potential jurors so that each side may decide whether to accept or oppose individuals for jury service.
 
W
Waiver:
Intentionally giving up a right.
 
Waiver of Immunity: A means authorized by statute by which a witness, before testifying or producing evidence, may relinquish the right to refuse to testify against himself or herself, thereby making it possible for his or her testimony to be used against him or her in future proceedings. 
 
Warrant: Most commonly, a court order authorizing law enforcement officers to make an arrest or conduct a search. An affidavit seeking a warrant must establish probable cause by detailing the facts upon which the request is based.
 
Will: A legal declaration that disposes of a person’s property when that person dies.
 
Without Prejudice: A claim or cause dismissed without prejudice may be the subject of a new lawsuit.
 
With Prejudice: Applied to orders of judgment dismissing a case, meaning that the plaintiff is forever barred from bringing a lawsuit on the same claim or cause.
 
Witness: A person who testifies to what he or she has seen, heard, or otherwise experienced. Also, a person who observes the signing of a will and is competent to testify that it is the will-maker’s intended last will and testament.
 
Writ: A judicial order directing a person to do something.
 
Writ of Certiorari: An order issued by the Supreme Court, in cases where It has the discretion whether or not to hear an appeal, electing to entertain the matter and review the decision of the lower court.