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Section Thomson Title: Reuters Subsection Law School Survival Guide Eikon / Access visual identity Occabor sent eum quidici similibus, ex estiae. Optatiatur aut lam, sit, Glossary natur? Quis of cuptium terms nam fugiam iur sitiis et occusamus mi, sumque perum quis excerumque doluptam, sam nosam atiur reprat. Acitatis ad quatest, officae cessequi toruntis ipsa dolum id magnia cus eaque comnimollora quisti sitaspe rchicia vellab imusdamus acepratis con re vel int doluptate non eos nimus. Gent pel elese resseditis niatis cusdae volorro volupid molores voluptat qui desequunt. Do you speak lawyer? Get the 411 on terms you ll need to know throughout law school 1

Are you fluent in lawyer language? You will be by the end of your third year of law school. As you re exposed to new tasks throughout your education, understanding the right terms will save time and can help you interpret the law. Get the 411. Lawyer Lingo. 2

A Act Adjudication Administrative Agency Administrative Law Advisory Opinion An alternative name for statutory law. When introduced into the first house of the legislature, a piece of proposed legislation is known as a bill. When passed to the next house, it may then be referred to as an act. After enactment, the terms law and act may be used interchangeably. The formal pronouncing or recording of a judgment or decree by a court. A governmental authority, other than a legislature or court, which issues rules and regulations or adjudicates disputes arising under its statutes and regulations. Administrative agencies usually act under authority delegated by the legislature. Law that affects private parties, promulgated by governmental agencies other than courts or legislative bodies. These administrative agencies derive their power from legislative enactments and are subject to judicial review. An opinion rendered by a court at the request of the government or an interested party that indicates how the court would rule on a matter should adversary litigation develop. An advisory opinion is thus an interpretation of the law without binding effect. 3

Amicus curiae Annotations Answer Appellant Appellee Arbitration Means, literally, friend of the court. A party with strong interest in or views on the subject matter of the dispute will petition the court for permission to file a brief, ostensibly on behalf of a party but actually to suggest a rationale consistent with its own views. (1) statutory: brief summaries of the law and facts of cases interpreting statutes passed by congress or state legislatures that are included in codes; or (2) textual: expository essays of varying length on significant legal topics chosen from selected cases published with the essays. The pleading filed by the defendant in response to plaintiff s complaint. The party who requests that a higher court review the actions of a lower court. The party against whom an appeal is taken (usually, but not always, the winner in the lower court). It should be noted that a party s status as appellant or appellee bears no relation to his or her status as plaintiff or defendant in the lower court. The hearing and settlement of a dispute between opposing parties by a third party. This decision is often binding by prior agreement of the parties. B Bill A legislative proposal introduced in the legislature. The term distinguishes unfinished legislation from enacted law. 4

Black Letter Law Boolean Search Brief An informal term indicating the basic principles of law generally accepted by the courts and/or embodied in the statutes of a particular jurisdiction. A form of search strategy used in databases, such as Westlaw. In a Boolean search, connectors such as and, or, and not are used to construct a complex search to return more specific results. A written statement prepared by the counsel arguing a case in court. It contains a summary of the facts of the case, the pertinent laws, and an argument of how the law applies to the facts supporting counsel s position. C Certiorari Citation Citators It is most commonly used to refer to the Supreme Court of the United States, which uses the writ of certiorari as a discretionary device to choose the cases it wishes to hear. The term s origin is Latin, meaning to be informed of. The reference to authority necessary to substantiate the validity of one s argument or position. Citation to authority and supporting references is both important and extensive in any form of legal writing. A set of books and online sources that provide the subsequent judicial history and interpretation of reported cases or lists of cases and legislative enactments construing, applying, or affecting statutes. In America, the most widely used citator is KeyCite. 5

Civil Law Claim Class Action Code Common Law Compiled Statutes (1) Roman law embodied in the code of Justinian, which presently prevails in most countries of Western Europe other than Great Britain and that is the foundation of Louisiana law; (2) the law concerning noncriminal matters in a common law jurisdiction. (1) the assertion of a right, as to money or property; (2) the accumulation of facts that give rise to a right enforceable in court. A lawsuit brought by a representative party on behalf of a group, all of whose members have the same or a similar grievance against the defendant. In popular usage, a compilation of statutes. Technically, in a code, the laws in force and judicial decrees having the force of law, are rewritten and arranged in classified order. Repealed and temporary acts are eliminated, and the revision is reenacted. The origin of the Anglo-American legal systems. English common law was largely customary law and unwritten, until discovered, applied, and reported by the courts of law. In a narrow sense, common law is the phrase still used to distinguish case law from statutory law. In popular usage, a code. Technically, it is a compilation of acts printed verbatim as originally enacted but in a new classified order. The text is not modified; however, repealed and temporary acts are omitted. 6

Complaint Consideration Conversion Counterclaim The plaintiff s initial pleading. Under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, it is no longer full of the technicalities demanded by the common law. A complaint need only contain a short and plain statement of the claim, an indication of the type of relief requested, and an indication that the court has jurisdiction to hear the case. Something to be done, or abstained from, by one party to a contract to induce another party to enter into a contract. The wrongful appropriation to oneself of the personal property of another. A claim made by the defendant against the plaintiff in a civil lawsuit; it constitutes a separate cause of action. D Damages Database Monetary compensation awarded by a court for an injury caused by the act of another. Damages may be actual or compensatory (equal to the amount of loss shown), exemplary or punitive (in excess of the actual loss), or nominal (a trivial amount). In legal research, it usually refers to a commercial service searched online. A full-text database provides the complete text of documents such as court cases or newspaper articles. Westlaw is a full-text database. 7

Demurrer A means of objecting to the sufficiency in law of a pleading by admitting the actual allegations made but disputing that they frame an adequate legal claim. E En banc Encyclopedia Executive Order A session in which the entire bench of the court will participate in the decision rather than the regular quorum. The circuit courts of appeals usually sit in groups of three judges but for important cases may expand the bench to nine members, when they are said to be sitting en banc. A work containing expository statements on principles of law, topically arranged, with supporting footnote references to cases in point. An order issued by the president under specific authority granted to the president by Congress. There is no precise distinction between a presidential proclamation and an executive order; however, a proclamation generally cover matters of widespread interest, and an executive order often relates to the conduct of government business or to the organization of the executive department. G Grand jury A jury of six to twenty-three persons that sits permanently for a specified period and that hears criminal accusations and evidence and then determines whether indictments should be made. 8

H Headnote Hornbook A brief summary of a legal rule or significant facts in a case that precedes the printed opinion in reports. The popular reference to a series of treatises published by West each of which reviews a certain field of law in summary, textual form, as opposed to a casebook that is designed as a teaching tool and includes many reprints of court opinions. I Injunction A judge s order that a person do, or refrain from doing, a certain act. An injunction may be preliminary or temporary, pending trial of the issue presented, or it may be final if the issue has already been decided in court. J Jurisdiction The power given to a court by a constitution or a legislative body to make legally binding decisions over certain persons or property, or the geographical area in which a court s decisions or legislative enactments are binding. K Key Number A building block of the major indexing system devised for American case law, developed by West. The Key Number is a permanent number given to a specific point of this case law. A researcher can use a Key Number to find related materials. 9

L Legislative history Liability Information embodied in legislative documents that provides the meanings and interpretations (intent) of statutes. The condition of being responsible either for damages resulting from an injurious act or for discharging an obligation or debt. M Mandatory Authority The authority that a given court is bound to follow. Mandatory authority is found in constitutional provisions, legislation, and court cases. O Opinion Oral Argument An expression of the reasons why a certain decision (the judgment) in a case was reached. A majority opinion represents the principles of law that the majority deem operative. A concurring opinion agrees with the result but disagrees with the majority s reasoning. A dissenting opinion disagrees with the majority and thus disagrees with the majority s reasoning and the principles of law. A spoken presentation of reasons for a desired decision directed to an appellate court by attorneys for the parties. 10

P Parallel Citation Persuasive Authority Popular Name Table Primary Authority A citation refers to the same case printed in two or more different reports. That law or reasoning which a given court may, but is not bound to, follow. For example, decisions from one jurisdiction may be persuasive authority in the courts of another jurisdiction. Compare with mandatory authority. A table listing popular names by which some cases and statutes have become known, and identifying for each popular name the official name and citation of the case or statute. Constitutions, statutes, administrative regulations issued pursuant to enabling legislation, and case law. Primary authority may be either mandatory or persuasive. All other legal writings are secondary authority and are never binding on courts. 11

R Regulations Restatements of the Law Rules or orders issued by various governmental departments to carry out the intent of the law. Agencies issue regulations to guide the activity of their employees and to ensure uniform application of the law. Regulations are not the work of the legislature and do not have the effect of law in theory. In practice, however, because of the intricacies of judicial review of administrative action, regulations can have an important effect in determining the outcome of cases involving regulatory activity. United States government regulations appear first in the federal register, published five days a week, and are subsequently arranged by subject in the Code of Federal Regulations. Systematic restatements of the existing common law in certain areas, published by the American Law Institute since 1923. The restatements are valuable secondary research sources but are not binding as law. S Synopsis A brief or partial survey; a summary or outline. All Westlaw cases start with a Synopsis, which explain a summary of the case, how it arrived, the outcome, and major holdings. T Treatise An exposition, which may be critical, evaluative, interpretative, or informative, on case law or legislation. Usually, it is more exhaustive than an encyclopedia article but less detailed and critical than a law review article. 12

Treaty Trespass An agreement between two or more sovereign nations. An unlawful interference with one s person, property, or rights. At common law, trespass was a form of action brought to recover damages for any injury to one s person or property or relationship with another. U Uniform laws Unofficial reports Statutes drafted for adoption by the several states in the interest of uniformity. A considerable number of uniform laws on various subjects have been approved by the national conference of commissioners on uniform state laws, and have been adopted in one or more jurisdictions in the united states and its possessions. The uniform commercial code is now the law in forty-nine states. Court reports published without statutory direction. They are not distinguished from official reports on grounds of varying quality or accuracy of reporting. V Venue The particular geographical area where a court with jurisdiction may try a case. 13

W Waiver Westlaw Writ Wrongful death The voluntary relinquishment of a known right. The computerized legal research system of West. Westlaw provides the full text of court decisions, statutes, administrative materials, ALR annotations, law review articles, reporter services, Supreme Court briefs, and other items. Key Word searches, Natural Language searches, field searches, and citator searches are available. A written order, of which there are many types, issued by a court and directed to an official or party, commanding the performance of some act. A type of lawsuit brought by or on behalf of a deceased person s beneficiaries, alleging that the death was attributable to the willful or negligent act of another. 14