Key: "S:" = Show Synset (semantic) relations, "W:" = Show Word (lexical) relations
Display options for sense: (gloss) "an example sentence"
Noun
S: (n) jurisprudence, law, legal philosophy (the branch of philosophy concerned with the law and the principles that lead courts to make the decisions they do)
S: (n) law, jurisprudence (the collection of rules imposed by authority) "civilization presupposes respect for the law"; "the great problem for jurisprudence to allow freedom while enforcing order"
S: (adj) adjective, procedural (relating to court practice and procedure as opposed to the principles of law) "adjective law"
S: (adj) substantive, essential (defining rights and duties as opposed to giving the rules by which rights and duties are established) "substantive law"
S: (adj) undue (not appropriate or proper (or even legal) in the circumstances) "undue influence"; "I didn't want to show undue excitement"; "accused of using undue force"
S: (adj) alterable ((of the punishment ordered by a court) capable of being changed to one less severe)
S: (adj) unalterable (of a sentence; that cannot be changed) "an unalterable death sentence"
S: (adj) incompetent, unqualified (legally not qualified or sufficient) "a wife is usually considered unqualified to testify against her husband"; "incompetent witnesses"
S: (adj) revertible (to be returned to the former owner or that owner's heirs)
S: (adj) fungible (of goods or commodities; freely exchangeable for or replaceable by another of like nature or kind in the satisfaction of an obligation)
S: (adj) ancestral, hereditary, patrimonial, transmissible (inherited or inheritable by established rules (usually legal rules) of descent) "ancestral home"; "ancestral lore"; "hereditary monarchy"; "patrimonial estate"; "transmissible tradition"
S: (adj) intra vires (within the legal power or authority or a person or official or body etc)
S: (adj) ultra vires (beyond the legal power or authority of a person or official or body etc) "an ultra vires contract"
S: (adj) covert ((of a wife) being under the protection of her husband) "a woman covert"
S: (adj) moot (of no legal significance (as having been previously decided))
S: (adj) testate (having made a legally valid will before death)
S: (adj) intestate (having made no legally valid will before death or not disposed of by a legal will) "he died intestate"; "intestate property"
S: (adj) null, void (lacking any legal or binding force) "null and void"
S: (adj) evidentiary (pertaining to or constituting evidence) "evidentiary technique"; "an evidentiary fact"
S: (adj) appellate, appellant (of or relating to or taking account of appeals (usually legal appeals)) "appellate court"
S: (adj) residuary (entitled to the residue of an estate (after payment of debts and specific gifts)) "the residuary part of the estate"; "the residuary beneficiary"
S: (adj) reversionary (of or relating to or involving a reversion (especially a legal reversion)) "reversionary annuity"; "reversionary interest"
S: (adv) therefor ((in formal usage, especially legal usage) for that or for it) "ordering goods and enclosing payment therefor"; "a refund therefor"
S: (n) award, awarding (a grant made by a law court) "he criticized the awarding of compensation by the court"
S: (n) appointment ((law) the act of disposing of property by virtue of the power of appointment) "she allocated part of the trust to her church by appointment"
S: (n) remission, remitment, remit ((law) the act of remitting (especially the referral of a law case to another court))
S: (n) novation ((law) the replacement of one obligation by another by mutual agreement of both parties; usually the replacement of one of the original parties to a contract with the consent of the remaining party)
S: (n) subrogation ((law) the act of substituting of one creditor for another)
S: (n) disbarment (the act of expelling a lawyer from the practice of law)
S: (n) chance-medley (an unpremeditated killing of a human being in self defense)
S: (n) derogation ((law) the partial taking away of the effectiveness of a law; a partial repeal or abolition of a law) "any derogation of the common law is to be strictly construed"
S: (n) recission, rescission ((law) the act of rescinding; the cancellation of a contract and the return of the parties to the positions they would have had if the contract had not been made) "recission may be brought about by decree or by mutual consent"
S: (n) production ((law) the act of exhibiting in a court of law) "the appellate court demanded the production of all documents"
S: (n) law, practice of law (the learned profession that is mastered by graduate study in a law school and that is responsible for the judicial system) "he studied law at Yale"
S: (n) comparative negligence ((law) negligence allocated between the plaintiff and the defendant with a corresponding reduction in damages paid to the plaintiff)
S: (n) concurrent negligence ((law) negligence of two of more persons acting independently; the plaintiff may sue both together or separately)
S: (n) contributory negligence ((law) behavior by the plaintiff that contributes to the harm resulting from the defendant's negligence) "in common law any degree of contributory negligence would bar the plaintiff from collecting damages"
S: (n) criminal negligence, culpable negligence ((law) recklessly acting without reasonable caution and putting another person at risk of injury or death (or failing to do something with the same consequences))
S: (n) barratry (the offense of vexatiously persisting in inciting lawsuits and quarrels)
S: (n) champerty (an unethical agreement between an attorney and client that the attorney would sue and pay the costs of the client's suit in return for a portion of the damages awarded) "soliciting personal injury cases may constitute champerty"
S: (n) maintenance, criminal maintenance (the unauthorized interference in a legal action by a person having no interest in it (as by helping one party with money or otherwise to continue the action) so as to obstruct justice or promote unnecessary litigation or unsettle the peace of the community) "unlike champerty, criminal maintenance does not necessarily involve personal profit"
S: (n) false pretense, false pretence ((law) an offense involving intent to defraud and false representation and obtaining property as a result of that misrepresentation)
S: (n) resisting arrest (physical efforts to oppose a lawful arrest; the resistance is classified as assault and battery upon the person of the police officer attempting to make the arrest)
S: (n) sedition (an illegal action inciting resistance to lawful authority and tending to cause the disruption or overthrow of the government)
S: (n) sexual assault, sexual abuse, sex crime, sex offense (a statutory offense that provides that it is a crime to knowingly cause another person to engage in an unwanted sexual act by force or threat) "most states have replaced the common law definition of rape with statutes defining sexual assault"
S: (n) kidnapping, snatch ((law) the unlawful act of capturing and carrying away a person against their will and holding them in false imprisonment)
S: (n) constructive possession ((law) having the power and intention to have and control property but without direct control or actual presence upon it)
S: (n) criminal possession ((law) possession for which criminal sanctions are provided because the property may not lawfully be possessed or may not be possessed under certain circumstances)
S: (n) intervention ((law) a proceeding that permits a person to enter into a lawsuit already in progress; admission of person not an original party to the suit so that person can protect some right or interest that is allegedly affected by the proceedings) "the purpose of intervention is to prevent unnecessary duplication of lawsuits"
S: (n) objection ((law) a procedure whereby a party to a suit says that a particular line of questioning or a particular witness or a piece of evidence or other matter is improper and should not be continued and asks the court to rule on its impropriety or illegality)
S: (n) recusation ((law) an objection grounded on the judge's relationship to one of the parties)
S: (n) filibuster ((law) a tactic for delaying or obstructing legislation by making long speeches)
S: (n) debarment (the act of prevention by legal means) "they achieved his debarment from holding public office"
S: (n) recusation, recusal ((law) the disqualification of a judge or jury by reason of prejudice or conflict of interest; a judge can be recused by objections of either party or judges can disqualify themselves)
S: (n) alienation ((law) the voluntary and absolute transfer of title and possession of real property from one person to another) "the power of alienation is an essential ingredient of ownership"
S: (n) trust busting ((law) government activities seeking to dissolve corporate trusts and monopolies (especially under the United States antitrust laws))
S: (n) obstruction of justice (impeding those who seek justice in a court (as by trying to influence or intimidate any juror or witness or officer of the court); can result in a finding of contempt of court)
S: (n) due process, due process of law ((law) the administration of justice according to established rules and principles; based on the principle that a person cannot be deprived of life or liberty or property without appropriate legal procedures and safeguards)
S: (n) legal action, action, action at law (a judicial proceeding brought by one party against another; one party prosecutes another for a wrong done or for protection of a right or for prevention of a wrong)
S: (n) lawsuit, suit, case, cause, causa (a comprehensive term for any proceeding in a court of law whereby an individual seeks a legal remedy) "the family brought suit against the landlord"
S: (n) civil suit (a lawsuit alleging violations of civil law by the defendant)
S: (n) class action, class-action suit (a lawsuit brought by a representative member of a large group of people on behalf of all members of the group)
S: (n) criminal suit (a lawsuit alleging violations of criminal law by the defendant)
S: (n) moot (a hypothetical case that law students argue as an exercise) "he organized the weekly moot"
S: (n) paternity suit, bastardy proceeding (a lawsuit filed to determine the father of a child born out of wedlock (and to provide for the support of the child once paternity is determined))
S: (n) antitrust case (a legal action brought against parties who are charged with limiting free competition in the market place)
S: (n) counterclaim (a claim filed in opposition to another claim in a legal action)
S: (n) custody case (a legal action to determine custody (usually of children following a divorce))
S: (n) adoption (a legal proceeding that creates a parent-child relation between persons not related by blood; the adopted child is entitled to all privileges belonging to a natural child of the adoptive parents (including the right to inherit))
S: (n) appeal ((law) a legal proceeding in which the appellant resorts to a higher court for the purpose of obtaining a review of a lower court decision and a reversal of the lower court's judgment or the granting of a new trial) "their appeal was denied in the superior court"
S: (n) reversal (a judgment by a higher court that the judgment of a lower court was incorrect and should be set aside)
S: (n) affirmation (a judgment by a higher court that the judgment of a lower court was correct and should stand)
S: (n) bankruptcy (a legal process intended to insure equality among the creditors of a corporation declared to be insolvent)
S: (n) receivership (a court action that places property under the control of a receiver during litigation so that it can be preserved for the benefit of all)
S: (n) custody battle (litigation to settle custody of the children of a divorced couple)
S: (n) vexatious litigation (litigation shown to have been instituted maliciously and without probable cause) "he got an injunction against vexatious litigation by his enemies"
S: (n) non prosequitur, non pros (a judgment entered in favor of the defendant when the plaintiff has not continued his action (e.g., has not appeared in court))
S: (n) final judgment, final decision (a judgment disposing of the case before the court; after the judgment (or an appeal from it) is rendered all that remains is to enforce the judgment)
S: (n) judgment in rem, judgement in rem (a judgment pronounced on the status of some particular subject or property or thing (as opposed to one pronounced on persons))
S: (n) opinion, ruling (the reason for a court's judgment (as opposed to the decision itself))
S: (n) Bakke decision (a ruling by the Supreme Court on affirmative action; the Court ruled in 1978 that medical schools are entitled to consider race as a factor in their admission policy)
S: (n) finding (the decision of a court on issues of fact or law)
S: (n) verdict, finding of fact ((law) the findings of a jury on issues of fact submitted to it for decision; can be used in formulating a judgment)
S: (n) compromise verdict (a verdict resulting from improper compromises between jurors on material issues)
S: (n) directed verdict (a verdict entered by the court in a jury trial without consideration by the jury) "there cannot be a directed verdict of guilty in a criminal trial"
S: (n) actual eviction (the physical ouster of a tenant from the leased premises; the tenant is relieved of any further duty to pay rent)
S: (n) eviction, constructive eviction (action by a landlord that compels a tenant to leave the premises (as by rendering the premises unfit for occupancy); no physical expulsion or legal process is involved)
S: (n) retaliatory eviction (an eviction in reprisal for the tenant's good-faith complaints against the landlord; illegal in many states)
S: (n) legitimation (the act of rendering a person legitimate) "he has filial rights because he obtained letters of legitimation from the king"; "his parents' subsequent marriage resulted in his legitimation"
S: (n) trial ((law) the determination of a person's innocence or guilt by due process of law) "he had a fair trial and the jury found him guilty"; "most of these complaints are settled before they go to trial"
S: (n) Scopes trial (a highly publicized trial in 1925 when John Thomas Scopes violated a Tennessee state law by teaching evolution in high school; Scopes was prosecuted by William Jennings Bryan and defended by Clarence Darrow; Scopes was convicted but the verdict was later reversed)
S: (n) review ((law) a judicial reexamination of the proceedings of a court (especially by an appellate court))
S: (n) judicial review (review by a court of law of actions of a government official or entity or of some other legally appointed person or body or the review by an appellate court of the decision of a trial court)
S: (n) plea (an answer indicating why a suit should be dismissed)
S: (n) double jeopardy (the prosecution of a defendant for a criminal offense for which he has already been tried; prohibited in the fifth amendment to the United States Constitution)
S: (n) test case, test suit (a representative legal action whose outcome is likely to become a precedent)
S: (n) defense, defence, denial, demurrer (a defendant's answer or plea denying the truth of the charges against him) "he gave evidence for the defense"
S: (n) entrapment (a defense that claims the defendant would not have broken the law if not tricked into doing it by law enforcement officials)
S: (n) retrial (a new trial in which issues already litigated and to which the court has already rendered a verdict or decision are reexamined by the same court; occurs when the initial trial is found to have been improper or unfair due to procedural errors)
S: (n) hearing ((law) a proceeding (usually by a court) where evidence is taken for the purpose of determining an issue of fact and reaching a decision based on that evidence)
S: (n) administrative hearing (a hearing that takes place outside the judicial process before hearing examiners who have been granted judicial authority specifically for the purpose of conducting such hearings)
S: (n) competence hearing (a hearing to determine legal capacity (to determine whether the defendant can understand the charges and cooperate with a lawyer in preparing a defense))
S: (n) fair hearing (a hearing that is granted in extraordinary situations where the normal judicial process would be inadequate to secure due process because the person would be harmed or denied their rights before a judicial remedy became available (as in deportation or loss of welfare benefits))
S: (n) quo warranto (a hearing to determine by what authority someone has an office or franchise or liberty)
S: (n) legal separation, separation ((law) the cessation of cohabitation of man and wife (either by mutual agreement or under a court order))
S: (n) condemnation ((law) the act of condemning (as land forfeited for public use) or judging to be unfit for use (as a food product or an unsafe building))
S: (n) drug war (conflict between law enforcement and those who deal in illegal drugs)
S: (n) parole ((law) a conditional release from imprisonment that entitles the person to serve the remainder of the sentence outside the prison as long as the terms of release are complied with)
S: (n) probation ((law) a way of dealing with offenders without imprisoning them; a defendant found guilty of a crime is released by the court without imprisonment subject to conditions imposed by the court) "probation is part of the sentencing process"
S: (n) bar ((law) a railing that encloses the part of the courtroom where the judges and lawyers sit and the case is tried) "spectators were not allowed past the bar"
S: (n) bench ((law) the seat for judges in a courtroom)
S: (n) court, courtroom (a room in which a lawcourt sits) "television cameras were admitted in the courtroom"
S: (n) dock (an enclosure in a court of law where the defendant sits during the trial)
S: (n) messuage ((law) a dwelling house and its adjacent buildings and the adjacent land used by the household)
S: (n) color of law, colour of law (a mere semblance of legal right; something done with the apparent authority of law but actually in contravention of law) "the plaintiff claimed that under color of law the officer had deprived him of his civil rights"
S: (n) effect, force ((of a law) having legal validity) "the law is still in effect"
S: (n) infection ((international law) illegality that taints or contaminates a ship or cargo rendering it liable to seizure)
S: (n) advowson (the right in English law of presenting a nominee to a vacant ecclesiastical benefice)
S: (n) human right ((law) any basic right or freedom to which all human beings are entitled and in whose exercise a government may not interfere (including rights to life and liberty as well as freedom of thought and expression and equality before the law))
S: (n) easement ((law) the privilege of using something that is not your own (as using another's land as a right of way to your own land))
S: (n) privilege ((law) the right to refuse to divulge information obtained in a confidential relationship)
S: (n) entitlement (right granted by law or contract (especially a right to benefits)) "entitlements make up the major part of the federal budget"
S: (n) civil right (right or rights belonging to a person by reason of citizenship including especially the fundamental freedoms and privileges guaranteed by the 13th and 14th amendments and subsequent acts of Congress including the right to legal and social and economic equality)
S: (n) civil liberty (fundamental individual right protected by law and expressed as immunity from unwarranted governmental interference)
S: (n) habeas corpus (the civil right to obtain a writ of habeas corpus as protection against illegal imprisonment)
S: (n) freedom of assembly (the right to peaceably assemble and to petition the government for redress of grievances; guaranteed by the First Amendment to the US Constitution)
S: (n) equal protection of the laws (a right guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the US Constitution and by the due-process clause of the Fifth Amendment)
S: (n) right to vote, vote, suffrage (a legal right guaranteed by the 15th amendment to the US Constitution; guaranteed to women by the 19th amendment) "American women got the vote in 1920"
S: (n) freedom from discrimination (immunity from discrimination on the basis of race or sex or nationality or religion or age; guaranteed by federal laws of the United States)
S: (n) equal opportunity (the right to equivalent opportunities for employment regardless of race or color or sex or national origin)
S: (n) eminent domain (the right of the state to take private property for public use; the Fifth Amendment that was added to the Constitution of the United States requires that just compensation be made)
S: (n) franchise, enfranchisement (a statutory right or privilege granted to a person or group by a government (especially the rights of citizenship and the right to vote))
S: (n) patent right (the right granted by a patent; especially the exclusive right to an invention)
S: (n) right of election (in probate law: the legal right of a surviving spouse to elect to take either what the deceased spouse gave under the will or the share of the estate as set forth by statute)
S: (n) right of entry (the legal right to take possession of real estate in a peaceable manner)
S: (n) right of re-entry (the legal right to resume possession (a right that was reserved when a former possession was parted with))
S: (n) right of offset ((banking) the legal right of a bank to seize deposited funds to cover a loan that is in default)
S: (n) right of privacy (a legal right (not explicitly provided in the United States Constitution) to be left alone; the right to live life free from unwarranted publicity)
S: (n) use, enjoyment ((law) the exercise of the legal right to enjoy the benefits of owning property) "we were given the use of his boat"
S: (n) usufruct (a legal right to use and derive profit from property belonging to someone else provided that the property itself is not injured in any way)
S: (n) visitation right (the right granted by a court to a parent (or other relative) who is deprived of custody of a child to visit the child on a regular basis)
S: (n) legal power, jurisdiction ((law) the right and power to interpret and apply the law) "courts having jurisdiction in this district"
S: (n) venter (the womb) "`in venter' is legal terminology for `conceived but not yet born'"
S: (n) presumption ((law) an inference of the truth of a fact from other facts proved or admitted or judicially noticed)
S: (n) rationale, principle ((law) an explanation of the fundamental reasons (especially an explanation of the working of some device in terms of laws of nature)) "the rationale for capital punishment"; "the principles of internal-combustion engines"
S: (n) mens rea, malice aforethought ((law) criminal intent; the thoughts and intentions behind a wrongful act (including knowledge that the act is illegal); often at issue in murder trials)
S: (n) premeditation ((law) thought and intention to commit a crime well in advance of the crime; goes to show criminal intent)
S: (n) mitigating circumstance ((law) a circumstance that does not exonerate a person but which reduces the penalty associated with the offense)
S: (n) probable cause ((law) evidence sufficient to warrant an arrest or search and seizure) "a magistrate determined that there was probable cause to search the house"
S: (n) nuisance ((law) a broad legal concept including anything that disturbs the reasonable use of your property or endangers life and health or is offensive)
S: (n) bail (the legal system that allows an accused person to be temporarily released from custody (usually on condition that a sum of money guarantees their appearance at trial)) "he is out on bail"
S: (n) jury system (a legal system for determining the facts at issue in a law suit)
S: (n) jus sanguinis (the principle that a person's nationality at birth is the same as that of his natural parents)
S: (n) jus soli (the principle that a person's nationality at birth is determined by the place of birth)
S: (n) preemption, pre-emption (the judicial principle asserting the supremacy of federal over state legislation on the same subject)
S: (n) relation back, relation ((law) the principle that an act done at a later time is deemed by law to have occurred at an earlier time) "his attorney argued for the relation back of the amended complaint to the time the initial complaint was filed"
S: (n) docket ((law) the calendar of a court; the list of cases to be tried or a summary of the court's activities)
S: (n) passport (a document issued by a country to a citizen allowing that person to travel abroad and re-enter the home country)
S: (n) ship's papers (official papers which a ship is legally required to have; related to ownership, cargo, etc.)
S: (n) manifest (a customs document listing the contents put on a ship or plane)
S: (n) transcript, copy (a reproduction of a written record (e.g. of a legal or school record))
S: (n) joint resolution (a resolution passed by both houses of Congress which becomes legally binding when signed by the Chief Executive (or passed over the Chief Executive's veto))
S: (n) debenture (a certificate or voucher acknowledging a debt)
S: (n) letters testamentary (a legal document from a probate court or court officer informing you of your appointment as executor of a will and empowering you to discharge those responsibilities)
S: (n) act, enactment (a legal document codifying the result of deliberations of a committee or society or legislative body)
S: (n) law (legal document setting forth rules governing a particular kind of activity) "there is a law against kidnapping"
S: (n) enabling legislation (legislation that gives appropriate officials the authority to implement or enforce the law)
S: (n) occupational safety and health act, federal job safety law (a law passed by the United States Congress that created the Occupational Safety and Health Administration to prevent employees from being injured or contracting diseases in the course of their employment)
S: (n) advice and consent (a legal expression in the United States Constitution that allows the Senate to constrain the President's powers of appointment and treaty-making)
S: (n) statute book (a record of the whole body of legislation in a given jurisdiction)
S: (n) bill, measure (a statute in draft before it becomes law) "they held a public hearing on the bill"
S: (n) appropriation bill (a legislative act proposing to authorize the expenditure of public funds for a specified purpose)
S: (n) bill of attainder (a legislative act finding a person guilty of treason or felony without a trial) "bills of attainder are prohibited by the Constitution of the United States"
S: (n) bottle bill (a statute that would require merchants to reclaim used bottles)
S: (n) farm bill (a statute that would regulate farm production and prices)
S: (n) Riot Act (a former English law requiring mobs to disperse after a magistrate reads the law to them)
S: (n) criminal law (the body of law dealing with crimes and their punishment)
S: (n) court order (a writ issued by a court of law requiring a person to do something or to refrain from doing something)
S: (n) decree, edict, fiat, order, rescript (a legally binding command or decision entered on the court record (as if issued by a court or judge)) "a friend in New Mexico said that the order caused no trouble out there"
S: (n) consent decree (an agreement between two parties that is sanctioned by the court; for example, a company might agree to stop certain questionable practices without admitting guilt)
S: (n) curfew (an order that after a specific time certain activities (as being outside on the streets) are prohibited)
S: (n) decree nisi (a decree issued on a first petition for divorce; becomes absolute at some later date)
S: (n) divestiture (an order to an offending party to rid itself of property; it has the purpose of depriving the defendant of the gains of wrongful behavior) "the court found divestiture to be necessary in preventing a monopoly"
S: (n) prohibition (a law forbidding the sale of alcoholic beverages) "in 1920 the 18th amendment to the Constitution established prohibition in the US"
S: (n) stay (a judicial order forbidding some action until an event occurs or the order is lifted) "the Supreme Court has the power to stay an injunction pending an appeal to the whole Court"
S: (n) stay of execution (an order whereby a judgment is precluded from being executed for a specific period of time)
S: (n) injunction, enjoining, enjoinment, cease and desist order ((law) a judicial remedy issued in order to prohibit a party from doing or continuing to do a certain activity) "injunction were formerly obtained by writ but now by a judicial order"
S: (n) brief, legal brief (a document stating the facts and points of law of a client's case)
S: (n) amicus curiae brief (a brief presented by someone interested in influencing the outcome of a lawsuit but who is not a party to it)
S: (n) will, testament (a legal document declaring a person's wishes regarding the disposal of their property when they die)
S: (n) probate, probate will (a judicial certificate saying that a will is genuine and conferring on the executors the power to administer the estate)
S: (n) codicil (a supplement to a will; a testamentary instrument intended to alter an already executed will)
S: (n) living will (a document written by someone still legally capable requesting that he should be allowed to die if subsequently severely disabled or suffering terminal illness) "after he discovered he had AIDS he drew up a living will"
S: (n) deed, deed of conveyance, title (a legal document signed and sealed and delivered to effect a transfer of property and to show the legal right to possess it) "he signed the deed"; "he kept the title to his car in the glove compartment"
S: (n) assignment (the instrument by which a claim or right or interest or property is transferred from one person to another)
S: (n) title deed (a legal document proving a person's right to property)
S: (n) trust deed, deed of trust (a written instrument legally conveying property to a trustee often used to secure an obligation such as a mortgage or promissory note)
S: (n) muniments (deeds and other documentary evidence of title to land)
S: (n) warrant (a writ from a court commanding police to perform specified acts)
S: (n) search warrant (a warrant authorizing law enforcement officials to search for objects or people involved in the commission of a crime and to produce them in court; the warrant describes the locations where the officials may search)
S: (n) bench warrant, arrest warrant (a warrant authorizing law enforcement officials to apprehend an offender and bring that person to court)
S: (n) assize (an ancient writ issued by a court of assize to the sheriff for the recovery of property)
S: (n) certiorari, writ of certiorari (a common law writ issued by a superior court to one of inferior jurisdiction demanding the record of a particular case)
S: (n) execution, writ of execution (a routine court order that attempts to enforce the judgment that has been granted to a plaintiff by authorizing a sheriff to carry it out)
S: (n) execution, execution of instrument ((law) the completion of a legal instrument (such as a contract or deed) by signing it (and perhaps sealing and delivering it) so that it becomes legally binding and enforceable)
S: (n) venire facias (a judicial writ ordering a sheriff to summon people for jury duty)
S: (n) mandamus, writ of mandamus (an extraordinary writ commanding an official to perform a ministerial act that the law recognizes as an absolute duty and not a matter for the official's discretion; used only when all other judicial remedies fail)
S: (n) attachment (a writ authorizing the seizure of property that may be needed for the payment of a judgment in a judicial proceeding)
S: (n) fieri facias (a writ ordering a levy on the belongings of a debtor to satisfy the debt)
S: (n) scire facias (a judicial writ based on some record and requiring the party against whom it is brought to show cause why the record should not be enforced or annulled)
S: (n) summons, process (a writ issued by authority of law; usually compels the defendant's attendance in a civil suit; failure to appear results in a default judgment against the defendant)
S: (n) subpoena, subpoena ad testificandum (a writ issued by court authority to compel the attendance of a witness at a judicial proceeding; disobedience may be punishable as a contempt of court)
S: (n) subpoena duces tecum (a writ issued by a court at the request of one of the parties to a suit; it requires a witness to bring to court or to a deposition any relevant documents under the witness's control)
S: (n) gag order (a court order restricting information or comment by the participants involved in a lawsuit) "imposing a gag order on members of the press violates the First Amendment"
S: (n) garnishment (a court order to an employer to withhold all or part of an employee's wages and to send the money to the court or to the person who won a lawsuit against the employee)
S: (n) citation (a summons that commands the appearance of a party at a proceeding)
S: (n) monition, process of monition (a summons issued after the filing of a libel or claim directing all parties concerned to show cause why the judgment asked for should not be granted)
S: (n) ticket (a summons issued to an offender (especially to someone who violates a traffic regulation))
S: (n) bill of Particulars (the particular events to be dealt with in a criminal trial; advises the defendant and the court of the facts the defendant will be required to meet)
S: (n) pleading ((law) a statement in legal and logical form stating something on behalf of a party to a legal proceeding)
S: (n) affirmative pleading (any defensive pleading that affirms facts rather than merely denying the facts alleged by the plaintiff)
S: (n) answer (the principal pleading by the defendant in response to plaintiff's complaint; in criminal law it consists of the defendant's plea of `guilty' or `not guilty' (or nolo contendere); in civil law it must contain denials of all allegations in the plaintiff's complaint that the defendant hopes to controvert and it can contain affirmative defenses or counterclaims)
S: (n) evasive answer ((law) an answer by a defendant that fails to admit or deny the allegations set forth in the complaint)
S: (n) plea ((law) a defendant's answer by a factual matter (as distinguished from a demurrer))
S: (n) dilatory plea (a plea that delays the action without settling the cause of action; it can challenge the jurisdiction or claim disability of the defendant etc. (such defenses are usually raised in the defendant's answer))
S: (n) libel (the written statement of a plaintiff explaining the cause of action (the defamation) and any relief he seeks)
S: (n) defective pleading (any pleading that fails to conform in form or substance to minimum standards of accuracy or sufficiency)
S: (n) demurrer ((law) any pleading that attacks the legal sufficiency of the opponent's pleadings)
S: (n) rebutter, rebuttal ((law) a pleading by the defendant in reply to a plaintiff's surrejoinder)
S: (n) replication ((law) a pleading made by a plaintiff in reply to the defendant's plea or answer)
S: (n) rejoinder ((law) a pleading made by a defendant in response to the plaintiff's replication)
S: (n) special pleading ((law) a pleading that alleges new facts in avoidance of the opposing allegations)
S: (n) surrejoinder ((law) a pleading by the plaintiff in reply to the defendant's rejoinder)
S: (n) plea bargain, plea bargaining ((criminal law) a negotiation in which the defendant agrees to enter a plea of guilty to a lesser charge and the prosecutor agrees to drop a more serious charge) "his admission was part of a plea bargain with the prosecutor"; "plea bargaining helps to stop the courts becoming congested"
S: (n) special act (a legislative act that applies only to a particular person or particular district)
S: (n) rule of evidence ((law) a rule of law whereby any alleged matter of fact that is submitted for investigation at a judicial trial is established or disproved)
S: (n) legal code (a code of laws adopted by a state or nation) "a code of laws"
S: (n) penal code (the legal code governing crimes and their punishment)
S: (n) United States Code, U. S. Code (a consolidation and codification by subject matter of the general and permanent laws of the United States; is prepared and published by a unit of the United States House of Representatives)
S: (n) building code (set of standards established and enforced by local government for the structural safety of buildings)
S: (n) fire code (set of standards established and enforced by government for fire prevention and safety in case of fire as in fire escapes etc)
S: (n) sanitary code, health code (set of standards established and enforced by government for health requirements as in plumbing etc)
S: (n) specification ((patent law) a document drawn up by the applicant for a patent of invention that provides an explicit and detailed description of the nature and use of an invention)
S: (n) libel (a false and malicious publication printed for the purpose of defaming a living person)
S: (n) Bill of Rights (a statement of fundamental rights and privileges (especially the first ten amendments to the United States Constitution))
S: (n) First Amendment (an amendment to the Constitution of the United States guaranteeing the right of free expression; includes freedom of assembly and freedom of the press and freedom of religion and freedom of speech)
S: (n) Fifth Amendment (an amendment to the Constitution of the United States that imposes restrictions on the government's prosecution of persons accused of crimes; mandates due process of law and prohibits self-incrimination and double jeopardy; requires just compensation if private property is taken for public use)
S: (n) Fourteenth Amendment (an amendment to the Constitution of the United States adopted in 1868; extends the guarantees of the Bill of Rights to the states as well as to the federal government)
S: (n) Eighteenth Amendment (an amendment to the Constitution of the United States adopted in 1920; prohibited the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages; repealed in 1932)
S: (n) Nineteenth Amendment (an amendment to the Constitution of the United States adopted in 1920; guarantees that no state can deny the right to vote on the basis of sex)
S: (n) cause of action (a claim sufficient to demand judicial attention; the facts that give rise to right of action)
S: (n) submission ((law) a contention presented by a lawyer to a judge or jury as part of the case he is arguing)
S: (n) evidence ((law) all the means by which any alleged matter of fact whose truth is investigated at judicial trial is established or disproved)
S: (n) corpus delicti (the body of evidence that constitute the offence; the objective proof that a crime has been committed (sometimes mistakenly thought to refer to the body of a homicide victim))
S: (n) direct evidence (evidence (usually the testimony of a witness) directly related to the fact in dispute)
S: (n) res gestae (rule of evidence that covers words that are so closely associated with an occurrence that the words are considered part of the occurrence and as such their report does not violate the hearsay rule)
S: (n) affidavit (written declaration made under oath; a written statement sworn to be true before someone legally authorized to administer an oath)
S: (n) verification ((law) an affidavit attached to a statement confirming the truth of that statement)
S: (n) subornation (perjured testimony that someone was persuaded to give)
S: (n) alibi ((law) a defense by an accused person purporting to show that he or she could not have committed the crime in question)
S: (n) caveat ((law) a formal notice filed with a court or officer to suspend a proceeding until filer is given a hearing) "a caveat filed against the probate of a will"
S: (n) jactitation ((law) a false boast that can harm others; especially a false claim to be married to someone (formerly actionable at law))
S: (n) obiter dictum, dictum (an opinion voiced by a judge on a point of law not directly bearing on the case in question and therefore not binding)
S: (n) sidebar ((law) a courtroom conference between the lawyers and the judge that is held out of the jury's hearing)
S: (n) pretrial, pretrial conference ((law) a conference held before the trial begins to bring the parties together to outline discovery proceedings and to define the issues to be tried; more useful in civil than in criminal cases)
S: (n) arbitration ((law) the hearing and determination of a dispute by an impartial referee agreed to by both parties (often used to settle disputes between labor and management))
S: (n) citation ((law) the act of citing (as of spoken words or written passages or legal precedents etc.))
S: (n) deposition ((law) a pretrial interrogation of a witness; usually conducted in a lawyer's office)
S: (n) cross-examination ((law) close questioning of a hostile witness in a court of law to discredit or throw a new light on the testimony already provided in direct examination)
S: (n) direct examination ((law) the initial questioning of a witness by the party that called the witness)
S: (n) redirect examination, reexamination ((law) questioning of a witness by the party that called the witness after that witness has been subject to cross-examination)
S: (n) disclaimer ((law) a voluntary repudiation of a person's legal claim to something)
S: (n) dissent ((law) the difference of one judge's opinion from that of the majority) "he expressed his dissent in a contrary opinion"
S: (n) discovery ((law) compulsory pretrial disclosure of documents relevant to a case; enables one side in a litigation to elicit information from the other side concerning the facts in the case)
S: (n) stipulation, judicial admission ((law) an agreement or concession made by parties in a judicial proceeding (or by their attorneys) relating to the business before the court; must be in writing unless they are part of the court record) "a stipulation of fact was made in order to avoid delay"
S: (n) allegation ((law) a formal accusation against somebody (often in a court of law)) "an allegation of malpractice"
S: (n) subornation of perjury ((law) inducing someone to make a false oath as part of a judicial proceeding) "to prove subordination of perjury you must prove the perjury and also prove that the perjured statement was procured by the accused suborner who knew that it would be false"
S: (n) combination in restraint of trade ((law) any monopoly or contract or combination or conspiracy intended to restrain commerce (which are illegal according to antitrust laws of the United States))
S: (n) Conservative Judaism (Jews who keep some of the requirements of the Mosaic law but allow for adaptation of other requirements (as some of the dietary laws) to fit modern circumstances)
S: (n) legal profession, bar, legal community (the body of individuals qualified to practice law in a particular jurisdiction) "he was admitted to the bar in New Jersey"
S: (n) Bureau of Justice Assistance, BJA (the bureau in the Department of Justice that assists local criminal justice systems to reduce or prevent crime and violence and drug abuse)
S: (n) circuit court of appeals (one of the twelve federal United States courts of appeals that cover a group of states known as a `circuit')
S: (n) circuit ((law) a judicial division of a state or the United States (so-called because originally judges traveled and held court in different locations); one of the twelve groups of states in the United States that is covered by a particular circuit court of appeals)
S: (n) military court (a judicial court of commissioned officers for the discipline and punishment of military personnel)
S: (n) moot court (a mock court where law students argue hypothetical cases)
S: (n) night court (a criminal court (in large cities) that sits at night)
S: (n) provost court (a military court for trying people charged with minor offenses in an occupied area)
S: (n) police court (a court that has power to prosecute for minor offenses and to bind over for trial in a superior court anyone accused of serious offenses)
S: (n) probate court (a court having jurisdiction over the probate of wills and the administration of estates)
S: (n) quarter sessions (a local court with criminal jurisdiction and sometimes administrative functions)
S: (n) administrative law (the body of rules and regulations and orders and decisions created by administrative agencies of government)
S: (n) civil law (the body of laws established by a state or nation for its own regulation)
S: (n) common law, case law, precedent (a system of jurisprudence based on judicial precedents rather than statutory laws) "common law originated in the unwritten laws of England and was later applied in the United States"
S: (n) maritime law, marine law, admiralty law (the branch of international law that deals with territorial and international waters or with shipping or with ocean fishery etc.)
S: (n) law of the land (a phrase used in the Magna Carta to refer to the then established law of the kingdom (as distinct from Roman or civil law); today it refers to fundamental principles of justice commensurate with due process) "the United States Constitution declares itself to be `the supreme law of the land'"
S: (n) martial law (the body of law imposed by the military over civilian affairs (usually in time of war or civil crisis); overrides civil law)
S: (n) military law (the body of laws and rules of conduct administered by military courts for the discipline, trial, and punishment of military personnel)
S: (n) domicile, legal residence ((law) the residence where you have your permanent home or principal establishment and to where, whenever you are absent, you intend to return; every person is compelled to have one and only one domicile at a time) "what's his legal residence?"
S: (n) defendant, suspect (a person or institution against whom an action is brought in a court of law; the person being sued or accused)
S: (n) amicus curiae, friend of the court (an adviser to the court on some matter of law who is not a party to the case; usually someone who wants to influence the outcome of a lawsuit involving matters of wide public interest)
S: (n) assignee ((law) the party to whom something is assigned (e.g., someone to whom a right or property is legally transferred))
S: (n) liquidator, receiver ((law) a person (usually appointed by a court of law) who liquidates assets or preserves them for the benefit of affected parties)
S: (n) litigant, litigator ((law) a party to a lawsuit; someone involved in litigation) "plaintiffs and defendants are both litigants"
S: (n) next friend ((law) a person who acts on behalf of an infant or disabled person)
S: (n) notary, notary public (someone legally empowered to witness signatures and certify a document's validity and to take depositions)
S: (n) inheritance, heritage (that which is inherited; a title or property or estate that passes by law to the heir on the death of the owner)
S: (n) accretion ((law) an increase in a beneficiary's share in an estate (as when a co-beneficiary dies or fails to meet some condition or rejects the inheritance))
S: (n) devise ((law) a gift of real property by will)
S: (n) jointure, legal jointure ((law) an estate secured to a prospective wife as a marriage settlement in lieu of a dower)
S: (n) heirloom ((law) any property that is considered by law or custom as inseparable from an inheritance is inherited with that inheritance)
S: (n) interest, stake ((law) a right or legal share of something; a financial involvement with something) "they have interests all over the world"; "a stake in the company's future"
S: (n) vested interest ((law) an interest in which there is a fixed right to present or future enjoyment and that can be conveyed to another)
S: (n) relief ((law) redress awarded by a court) "was the relief supposed to be protection from future harm or compensation for past injury?"
S: (n) nominal damages ((law) a trivial sum (usually $1.00) awarded as recognition that a legal injury was sustained (as for technical violations of a contract))
S: (n) reversion ((law) an interest in an estate that reverts to the grantor (or his heirs) at the end of some period (e.g., the death of the grantee))
S: (n) escheat (a reversion to the state (as the ultimate owner of property) in the absence of legal heirs)
S: (n) satisfaction ((law) the payment of a debt or fulfillment of an obligation) "the full and final satisfaction of the claim"
S: (n) recognizance, recognisance ((law) a security entered into before a court with a condition to perform some act required by law; on failure to perform that act a sum is forfeited)
S: (n) record (a document that can serve as legal evidence of a transaction) "they could find no record of the purchase"
S: (n) legal relation (a professional relation that is regulated by law (as between a lawyer and a client))
S: (n) fiduciary relation (the legal relation that exists when one person justifiably places reliance on another whose aid or protection is sought in some matter)
S: (n) civil death (the legal status of a person who is alive but who has been deprived of the rights and privileges of a citizen or a member of society; the legal status of one sentenced to life imprisonment)
S: (n) bigamy (the state of having two spouses at the same time)
S: (n) civil union (a voluntary union for life (or until divorce) of adult parties of the same sex) "parties to a civil union have all the same benefits, protections, and responsibilities under Vermont law as spouses in a marriage"
S: (n) common-law marriage (a marriage relationship created by agreement and cohabitation rather than by ceremony)
S: (n) rule of law (a state of order in which events conform to the law)
S: (n) legal representation (personal representation that has legal status) "an person who has been declared incompetent should have legal representation"
S: (n) diplomatic immunity (exemption from taxation or normal processes of law that is offered to diplomatic personnel in a foreign country)
S: (n) limitation ((law) a time period after which suits cannot be brought) "statute of limitations"
S: (v) recuse (challenge or except to a judge as being incompetent or interested, in canon and civil law)
S: (v) filiate (fix the paternity of) "The court filiated the child born out of wedlock"
S: (v) charge (instruct (a jury) about the law, its application, and the weighing of evidence)
S: (v) plead (enter a plea, as in courts of law) "She pleaded not guilty"
S: (v) plea-bargain (agree to plead guilty in return for a lesser charge) "If he plea-bargains, he will be sent to a medium-security prison for 8 years"
S: (v) re-examine (question after cross-examination by opposing counsel) "re-examine one's witness"
S: (v) get off (cause to be acquitted; get off the hook; in a legal case) "The lawyer got him off, even though there was no doubt in everybody's mind that he killed his wife"
S: (v) pardon (grant a pardon to) "Ford pardoned Nixon"; "The Thanksgiving turkey was pardoned by the President"
S: (v) plead (make an allegation in an action or other legal proceeding, especially answer the previous pleading of the other party by denying facts therein stated or by alleging new facts)
S: (v) bind over (order a defendant to be placed in custody pending the outcome of a proceedings against him or her) "The defendant was bound over for trial"
W: (n) trustor [Related to: law] ((law) a person who creates a trust by giving real or personal property in trust to a trustee for the benefit of a beneficiary; a person who gives such property is said to settle it on the trustee)
W: (n) settlor [Related to: law] ((law) a person who creates a trust by giving real or personal property in trust to a trustee for the benefit of a beneficiary; a person who gives such property is said to settle it on the trustee)