A
Abate
To temporarily
suspend proceedings. A court may enter an order abating a case until some
prerequisite is performed or discovery obtained. Typically, during the time of
abatement, time is also suspended as if the clock was stopped until the action
for which the abatement was ordered is completed.
Abatement
The process of abating. See Abate.
Abundans
cautela non nocet
There is no wrong in abundant caution. A court should not
find fault with your taking extreme care in doing what you do. This is one of
the ancient maxims of our common law, intended to protect us from corruption in
high places. When walking in a snake pit, tread cautiously! For more about
maxims, order our tutorial collection.
Actionable
Used to describe an injury for which one has the right to
sue.
Abridge
To make shorter by removal of surplus, excess,
or less important text. In complex cases, a party might write an abridged
(condensed) version of a memorandum of law or other legal argument to serve as
an introduction to the longer version that contains all the details. The
abridgment is provided to give an overview so that, upon reading the unabridged
version, one may have a clearer idea of what the writer intends to convey.
Abridgement
The shorter version that results from abridging. See Abridge.
Abuse
of Discretion
In all jurisdictions judges are given discretion to decide
certain matters based upon the law and facts presented. They are required to do
this, however, within what is called the reasonableness
test.
Abuse of
Power
The act of any government official that exceeds his or her authority.
This differs from abuse of discretion, in that no government official (judge,
legislator, executive officer, or local bureau employee) ever has discretion to
act outside his or her authority. When an officer of government acts outside his
or her authority, the law provides a remedy in the writ of mandamus.
Admission
Any fact admitted by the other side is admitted for all
purposes. Defendants must either admit, deny, or allege that they have no
knowledge of the allegations of the
complaint.
A primary and powerful tool for
discovery, is the request for
admissions that can be served on any party, stating facts or the application of
law to facts and demanding that the party served admit or deny. Learn how to use
this powerful discovery tool with our tutorials.
Adverse Possession
Literally possession adverse to that of the lawful
owner, i.e., occupying property (usually land) that legally belongs to someone
else. In the common law, if an individual or his family moved onto the property
of a landowner who did nothing to eject him, and if the occupation continued for
a long time (e.g., seven years in some jurisdictions) the interloper could go to
the court and obtain a decree of ownership equivalent to a deed. The non-owner
was required to remain on the land continuously for the necessary period, and
the property use had to be open and hostile, i.e., the would-be owner couldn't
hide in a cave.
The principle is alive today in some jurisdictions, where a
squatter may obtain right of title by occupying the property of another in an
open manner hostile to the true owner's rights (i.e., without admitting to
anyone that the true owner is the proper owner).
In sparsely populated Olde England of the Middle Ages and in
our expanding Wild Wild West of the Nineteenth Century, this method of obtaining
title to land was quite common. Squatters simply came onto some portion of the
vast tracts of land that formerly were not criss-crossed by highways and
communications systems and, when the requisite time established by local law had
passed, they applied to the land office or the local courts for title. Today the
practice is seldom seen, though it does survive in several jurisdictions in
America and other parts of the world.
Ad Litem
Literally, "for the
suit". For the purpose of the pending litigation.
Occasionally courts will appoint an attorney to represent a
party who cannot represent itself, e.g., an unborn child or a defaulted debtor
who left town owing money on his mortgage. Such an attorney is called an
attorney ad litem (properly italicized). If a guardian is appointed by
the court to stand in the shoes of an incapacitated person or minor, that
guardian is called a guardian ad litem, indicating that the guardian is
only serving for the purpose of the present litigation.
Affiant
One who gives an affidavit, i.e.,
the person making allegations either sworn or affirmed before an officer of the
court such as a notary. The one who
signs an affidavit in the presence of a notary is an affiant, as is one who
gives testimony at a deposition (known more frequently as a deponent) or at a
hearing or trial (known as a sworn witness). The word comes from a root
referring to faith or trust, thus one who
gives his affidavit is pledging himself trustworthy. In order for his
trustworthiness to be relevant to the
outcome of a case in court, however, the affiant must be sworn (i.e., give his
solemn oath to tell the truth) or affirmed (pledge that he is aware the
punishment for falsehood is the court's penalty for perjury).
Affidavit
A statement given under oath, usually written out and signed
in the presence of a notary. Falsifying an affidavit subjects the
affiant to the
penalties of perjury.
Affidavits have extremely limited use in lawsuits.
In general they are not admissible evidence, and many
pro se
litigants (and inexperienced lawyers)
find themselves in deep trouble when they try to present an affidavit as
evidence of the truth of the matter asserted in the affidavit. Such evidence is
inadmissible
hearsay.
Very few pro se litigants understand this fact, so they count on presenting
affidavits to the court, only to find out at the worst possible moment that
their affidavits are inadmissible hearsay.
Affidavits have primarily two useful purposes.
(1) I use affidavits before a deposition to lock a witness
into his testimony. I can get the affidavit without noticing the other side.
Once I have the affidavit and thereby know what the witness is going to say, I
set the witness for deposition, giving the other side notice ... confident the
witness is not going to contradict his own affidavit. The
deposition is admissible, because
the other side had an opportunity to cross-examine. The affidavit is not
(because the affiant
was not subject to
cross-examination.)
(2) I use affidavits to verify pleadings, responses to
discovery, and in support of oppositions to motions like summary judgment
motions. The affidavit itself is not admissible. The purpose of the affidavit in
such cases as this is to put a party under the penalties of perjury - not to
prove the truth of the matter asserted.
Please be wise. Affidavits are NOT admissible evidence.
Affirm
To formally attest to the truth
of a statement (and thus subject
oneself to the court's penalties for perjury)
without giving one's oath. This practice
derived from the reluctance of Quakers to swear on a Bible, since there are
proscriptions in the King James version forbidding the giving of an oath. Holy
Writ declares, "Swear not at all." Thus Quakers refused to be sworn
prior to giving testimony in court, however they agreed to affirm their
testimony, which the law accepts today from anyone reluctant to give a formal
oath because whether sworn or affirmed the person thereafter giving testimony or
executing an affidavit is subject to the full penalties of the law for
perjury.
Affirmation
The act of affirming. See affirm.
Agreement
A meeting
of the minds. If an agreement is an exchange of promises, it constitutes a
contract, a promise for a promise. If the agreement meets other requirements of
law (e.g., it is not a promise to do an illegal act, etc.) it may be enforceable
(i.e., one party to the agreement may use the law to require the other party to
perform what was promised).
The fact that a document is entitled "Agreement"
does not in any way diminish its effect as a binding contract. If the agreement
was an exchange of promises, it is a contract.
All
Every one, omitting
none. All is nothing less than all.
There is no all that is greater than all. Either all is all or it is not
all. All is absolute.
Allegation
An allegation is a statement of law
or fact (whether true or not) made upon
the record of the court. A complaint, for example, must make certain allegations
of law or fact in order to survive the defendant's motion for dismissal for
failure to state a cause of action.
Allege
To make an allegation. For example,
a party may allege he is a resident of New York when, in fact, he has never
lived anywhere but Miami, Florida.
Amicus Brief
A brief filed by a "friend of the court". See amicus
curiae.
Amicus Curiae
Friend of the court. With permission, persons whose interests
may be affected remotely by the outcome of a case, but whose interests are not
sufficiently related to the existing parties to permit them to participate in
the case as co-plaintiff or co-defendant, may be allowed to file briefs with the
court to assist in the determination of a just and proper outcome. Sometimes
referred to simply as amicus.
Answer
The answer in a civil lawsuit is the defendant's response that answers the complaint. In many cases, the complaint is
never
answered, the defendant finding some fault with the complaint and prevailing on his
initial motions to dismiss or strike the complaint. If the defendant does not prevail on
his motions to dismiss or strike the complaint, he is required
to answer truthfully every separate allegation of the complaint or suffer a default.
Any
A part. Could be the whole. At least a part. Some amount.
Not none.
Appeal
When a party is disappointed with a trial judge's ruling, he
may under some circumstances appeal the order to a higher court. Many people are
confused about this process, however, believing one may take an appeal to the
higher court for any reason, e.g., he didn't like the ruling. In fact, appeals
are decided exclusively on fixed principles of law, and the appellant's view of
right and wrong will almost never have any effect on the appellate court. Abuse
of discretion is one effective basis for a favorable appellate decision.
Abuse
of power is another, though much less frequent, basis for an appellate court
to overturn the decision of a trial judge. Violation of the rules of evidence is
another, as when the appellant was denied due process by the trial court's
refusal to allow him to present relevant testimony or where the other party was
permitted to present evidence that exceeds what is permitted the rules. The
power to appeal is the lynchpin of our legal system, for by it alone parties are
protected from the misplaced zeal or outright corruption of trial judges. In
order to appeal effectively, however, you must make an effective record.
Purchase our materials and study them carefully so you will know how to make an
effective record (your best protection against losing at the hands of a biased
judge). If you fail to make your record at the trial level, your appeal will be
flatly denied. When something happens during the trial court proceedings that is
contrary to what is taught by Jurisdictionary®
you must make certain to object in such a way that the court record shows you
have objected and why you objected. Otherwise your appeal will have no effect
whatever. Again the principle of due process is seen. Notice and an opportunity
to be heard is always protected, so if you do not notice the court and object on
the record at the time your opponent exceeded the rules at trial, you cannot sit
back thinking you can slam-dunk him on appeal. You either object and make your
record in the trial court proceedings (thus giving your opponent and the court
an opportunity to cure the error, if the error is one that can be cured) or you
lose your right to appeal. Only by studying the principles of law taught
by Jurisdictionary®
can you be assured of knowing how the game of law is played to win.
Appellant
One who appeals, i.e., the party who carries his case to a
higher court after receiving an adverse order in the lower court.
Appellee
The one against whom an appeal is filed, i.e., the party who
must answer allegations of the appellant in appellate
court proceedings.
Appellate
The term used to describe a court or
tribunal convened to hear an appeal. Although most state
"supreme courts" are appellate courts, this term usually applies only
to the court one level above the court in which the case in question has been
heard. In Florida, for example (nearly all states follow Florida's court
system), an appeal from the county court is taken in the circuit court. Appeals
from the circuit court are taken to the district court of appeals. Appeals from
the district court of appeals may be appealable to the state's supreme
court, however state supreme court appeals are limited to a very particular
class of cases. Consult your local state laws for details.
Assault
Assault is any offer or threat to touch another (whether
or not such touching is offensive) against the other person's consent. To be actionable at
law it must be accompanied with the present ability to actually touch the other and not be
merely a threat to do so at some future time or under a particular set of circumstances
not at the moment existing. That is to say, for an assault to be actionable it must appear
to a reasonable person that the touching is
imminent and not conditional.
See battery.
Assistance
See
Writ of Assistance.
Attachment
See
Writ of Attachment.
Attest
To make a statement,
to allege.
Attorney
Literally, one to whom a responsibility has been entrusted
and authority transferred. The word comes from an older term that means "to
turn", as one turns over a duty to another who then stands in his shoes.
Today the word is synonymous with lawyer. See attorney-at-law and
attorney-in-fact.
Attorney-at-Law
One who appears in court or otherwise represents the
interests of his or her client as a lawyer and is a member of the bar,
i.e., admitted to practice as a lawyer and not a layperson holding
power of
attorney.
Attorney-in-Fact
One holding power of attorney authorizing him to act as agent
on behalf of his principal. Though an attorney-in-fact may, by virtue of his
power of attorney, stand in the shoes of his principal to deal with third
parties, he may not represent his principal in court unless he is also a member
of the bar admitted to practice as a lawyer. Also, third persons are not
required to honor his power of attorney, i.e., the power authorizes him but does
not require others to honor his demands. See
power of attorney.
Attornment
The act by which a tenant agrees to become obligated to a new
owner of the land. Seldom used today. The word has nothing to do with attorneys.
Authority
Power to act in the name of law. The power of every judge,
every legislator, every executive officer of constitutional governments derives
from the will of the people acting through due process subject to the rule of
law. Those who act outside this authority are lawless and, by their rebellion to
law, are unworthy of power. One of the perpetual struggles of mankind has been
the competition (sometimes by armed conflict) between those who seek to exercise
power without the authority of law (acting out of pride or personal whim without
regard to the rights of others) and those who seek to establish and preserve
governments wherein all officers regardless of branch (judicial, legislative,
executive) are required to obey laws established according to fixed rules of common
law called maxims. See the rule
of law.
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