Term | Definition |
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Judgment | The first 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. |
Judgment and sentence | The official document of a judge's disposition of a case sentencing a defendant to DOC or jail custody. |
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. |
Jurat | Certificate of officer or person whom writing was sworn before. In common term is employed to designate certificate of competent administering office that writing was sworn to by person who signed it. |
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. |
Jurisprudence | The study of law and the structure of the legal system. |
Juror disqualified | Juror excused from a trial. |
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. |
Jury Commissioner | The court officer responsible for choosing the panel of persons to serve as potential jurors for a particular court term. |
Jury polled | Each individual juror is asked to affirm his or her verdict in open court at the conclusion of a trial. |
Jury selection list | A panel from which jurors, who will hear the case, are drawn. |
Jury trial | A trial in which the jury judges the facts and the judge rules on the law. |
Justiciable | Issues and claims capable of being properly examined in court. |
Juvenile | A child under 18 years of age. |
Kangaroo court | Term descriptive of a sham legal proceeding in which a person's rights are totally disregarded and in which the result is a foregone conclusion because of the bias of the court or other tribunal. |
Kentucky rule | In the allocation of dividents by trustees as between income and principal, all dividends whether paid in cash or stock are regarded as income through in most jurisdictions accepting this rule a dividend paid in the stock of the issuing corporation is considered principal and brings about an adjustment in the basis of such stock in the portfolio. |
Kissing the book | he ceremony of touching the lips to a copy of the Bible, used in administering oaths. It is the external symbol of the witness' acknowledgement of the obligation of the oath. |
Knowingly and willfully | This phrase, in reference to violation of a statute, means consciously and intentionally. |
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. |