legal vocab
General Law School Terms
- 1L, 2L, 3L — Abbreviations representing each year of law school
- Bluebook — Citation manual used as a guide for legal citations in court documents and law journals
- Case Law — Law derived from judicial court decisions rather than statutes enacted by legislatures or regulations issued by administrative agencies
- Case Brief — A concise summary of a legal case, including the facts, procedural history, issues presented, holding, reasoning, and implications
- Clerking — Working as a clerk, typically for a judge, to assist with legal research, drafting opinions, and other legal tasks
- Common Law — A system of law based on judicial decisions rather than statutes
- Con Law — Abbreviation for Constitutional Law
- Crim — Abbreviation used for Criminal Law
- Defendant — The party accused or sued in a court of law
- Discovery — The process through which parties to a case obtain evidence from one another
- FRCP (Federal Rules of Civil Procedure) — A set of rules governing civil procedure in the United States federal courts
- Hypo (Hypothetical) — A fictional legal scenario designed as an analytical exercise or to assess a student's understanding of legal principles
- IRAC* (Issue, Rule, Application, Conclusion) — A systematic method used to break a legal problem into parts: identify the Issue, state the legal Rule, Apply the rule to the facts, and draw a Conclusion. *Variations of this process include CREAC, CRAC, and more
- K — Abbreviation for Contracts
- Legal Research Platforms — You will likely use legal databases like Westlaw, and Lexis to research the law
- Moot Court — Simulated court proceeding where law students practice in appellate advocacy by arguing hypothetical cases
- MPRE® (Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination) — An exam on legal ethics and professional responsibility required for bar admission in most US jurisdictions
- Outline — Main points of a course or topic, organized to aid in the understanding of legal subjects
- Plaintiff — The party bringing a case against another party in a court of law
- Precedent — A court decision with authority to bind subsequent legal decisions that have similar facts or legal issues
- Remedies — Methods through which courts enforce legal judgments
- Socratic Method — A teaching technique that uses questioning to uncover students' understanding of case facts and rulings
- Statute — A written law passed by a legislative body
- UBE® (Uniform Bar Examination) — A standardized bar exam developed by the National Conference of Bar Examiners(NCBE®)
- UCC (Uniform Commercial Code) — A set of laws governing commercial transactions between states with the intention to harmonize the law of sales and other commercial transactions across the country
Civil Procedure
- Common Nucleus of Operative Fact — Standard to determine whether claims are related for purposes of supplemental jurisdiction
- De Novo — Anew; from the beginning
- Diversity Jurisdiction — A federal court’s exercise of authority over a case involving parties who are citizens of different states and an amount in controversy greater than a statutory minimum
- Domicile — The place a person resides with intent to remain and to treat as their permanent home
- Impleaded — Added as a third party to a lawsuit
- In rem — Involving or determining the status of a thing
- Interpleader — An action by a person holding property to force all potential claimants to litigate ownership or possession
- Intervenor — A nonparty who joins an ongoing lawsuit
- Jurisdiction — A court's competence to hear and determine cases
- Long-Arm Statute — Statute that authorizes personal jurisdiction over nonresidents who engage in some activity in the state or cause some action to occur within the state
- Peremptory — Final; not open to appeal or challenge
- Personal Jurisdiction — A court's authority to rule on matters involving the party being sued in a lawsuit
- Quasi in rem — Involving or determining the rights of a person having interest in property located in the forum state
- Res Judicata — “A matter judged;” claim preclusion for a matter already litigated
- Subpoena — A court order to appear and testify; subpoena duces tecum is a court order to appear and bring specified documents
- Subject Matter Jurisdiction — The authority of a court to decide on specific kinds of issues and deliver a resolution
- Summary Judgment — A judgment granted when there is no genuine issue of material fact for the trier of fact to determine
Criminal Law
- Abetting — Encouraging or assisting another in committing a crime
- Accomplice — A person who, with the requisite mens rea, aids or abets a principal prior to or during the commission of the crime
- Actus Reus — “Guilty act,” the wrongful act or omission that is the required conduct for a crime
- Depraved-Heart Murder — A killing that results from reckless indifference to an unjustifiably high-risk to human life
- Felony Murder — An unintended killing proximately caused by and during the commission or attempted commission of an inherently dangerous felony
- Heat of Passion — Provoked by a situation that could inflame the passion of a reasonable person to the extent that it could cause that person to momentarily act out of passion rather than reason
- Inchoate — Not fully formed or developed; preparing for or seeking to commit another crime
- Malice — A reckless disregard of or indifference to a high risk of harm, without excuse or justification
- Mens Rea — “Guilty mind;” the required mental state for a crime
- Merger — The absorption of a lesser-included offense into the greater
- Peremptory — Final; not open to appeal or challenge
- Premeditation — Reflection and planning that precedes the commission of a crime
- Principal — The person whose acts or omissions are the actus reus of the crime; the perpetrator of the crime
- Reckless — A conscious disregard of a substantial and unjustifiable risk
- Specific Intent — A subjective desire or specific objective to accomplish a prohibited result
- Strict Liability — Liability that requires only proof of the actus reus; no specific mens rea is necessary to support a conviction
Contracts and Sales
- Acceptance — An objective manifestation by the offeree to be bound by the terms of the offer
- Accord — An agreement by one party to a contract to accept performance from the other party that differs from the performance that was promised in the existing contract, in satisfaction of the other party’s existing duty
- Anticipatory Repudiation — A promisor’s indication of intention not to perform before the time for performance is due
- Bilateral Contract — A promise by one party is exchanged for a promise by the other
- Condition — A future event that must take place before a party’s contractual rights or obligations are created, destroyed, or enlarged
- Consideration — Bargained for change in the legal position between the parties
- Integration — The full expression of the agreement between parties to a contract
- Mailbox Rule — The principle that an acceptance that is mailed within the allotted response time is effective and binding when sent, unless the offer provides otherwise
- Merchantability — Suitability for buying and selling; implied warranty promising a product is fit for the ordinary purpose for which it was intended
- Mutual Assent — Agreement by both parties to a contract in the form of offer and acceptance
- Offer — An objective manifestation of a willingness by the offeror to enter into an agreement that creates the power of acceptance in the offeree
- Parol Evidence Rule — Common-law principle that prevents a party to a written contract from presenting extrinsic evidence of a prior or contemporaneous agreement that contradicts the terms of the contract as written
- Predominant — The strongest or main, as a predominant element
- Promissory Estoppel — A common-law doctrine to enforce promises that were made and relied upon
- Quasi — Almost; analogous to
- Satisfaction — The performance of the accord agreement; it will discharge both the original contract and the accord contract
- Suretyship — A contract to answer for the debt or duty of another
- Tender — To offer or present
- Unilateral Contract — One party promises to do something in return for an act of the other party
Real Property
- Assignment — A complete transfer of the tenant's remaining lease term
- Bona Fide Purchaser — An innocent party who purchases property without notice of any other party’s claim to title
- Color of Title — A claim to title based upon a written instrument that appears valid but is legally defective
- Concurrent — At the same time, as a concurrent estate is owned or possessed by two or more persons simultaneously
- Defeasible Fee — An estate whose rights of ownership are dependent upon the occurrence or non-occurrence of an event
- Dominant Estate — The property benefitted by an easement over another parcel
- Executory — Not yet fully executed or performed
- Habitable — Suitable for residential use
- Holdover Tenant — A renter who remains in possession after expiration of the lease
- Laches — A plaintiff’s undue delay in pursuing a claim that causes prejudice to the defendant
- Marketable Title — Title free from defects
- Reversion — A future interest that is retained by the grantor after the conveyance of less than the entire estate
- Retaliatory Eviction — A landlord’s eviction of a residential tenant as retaliation for the tenant’s reporting a housing code violation
- Run With the Land — Pass with the transfer of property, as a real covenant
- Servient Estate — The property burdened by an easement imposed upon it in favor of another parcel
- Subjacent — Underneath or below, as support of the surface by the underlying land
- Sublease — Any transfer for less than the entire duration of the lease
- Survivorship — The right of a surviving joint tenant(s) to automatically take the deceased tenant’s interest
- Tacking — The adding of one possessor’s period of possession to the prior adverse possessor to meet the statute of limitations
- Touch and Concern the Land — Affect the promisor and promisee as landowners, not as individuals, as a real covenant
- Vested — Fully and unconditionally guaranteed as a legal right, benefit, or privilege
Torts
- Abnormally Dangerous — Creating a foreseeable and highly significant risk of physical harm even when reasonable care is exercised; generally describing an activity not commonly engaged in
- Apprehension — Fear, anxiety, or awareness, in Torts, of imminent harmful or offensive contact
- “But For” Test — Doctrine that the defendant’s conduct is a factual cause of the harm if the plaintiff’s injury would not have occurred without the defendant’s tortious act or omission
- Chattel — Tangible, personal property
- Contributory Fault — A plaintiff’s failure to exercise reasonable care for her own safety that contributes to her injury
- Eggshell Plaintiff — A fragile plaintiff; basis for the rule that the extent of damages need not be foreseeable; also referred to as “thin-skull” plaintiff
- Extreme and Outrageous — Exceeds the possible limits of human decency
- Frolic and Detour — Describes the occasion when an agent/employee deviates from the assigned task of the principal/employer; a frolic is major whereas a detour is typically minor
- Intermeddling — Intentionally interfering with another; bringing about a physical contact
- Invitee — Someone invited to enter or remain on the land for the purpose for which the land is held open to the public or for a purpose connected to business dealings with the land possessor
- Joint and Several Liability — Principle by which each of two or more tortfeasors who is found liable for a single and indivisible harm to the plaintiff is subject to liability to the plaintiff for the entire harm
- Licensee — Someone who enters the land of another with the express or implied permission of the land possessor or with a privilege
- Offensive — Disagreeable to a person of ordinary sensibilities (reasonable person)
- Res Ipsa Loquitur — “The thing speaks for itself;” the doctrine allowing a trier of fact to infer the existence of negligence in the absence of direct evidence
- Respondeat Superior — The liability of an employer for an employee’s torts
- Superseding Cause — Any intervening event that breaks the chain of proximate causation between the defendant’s tortious act and the plaintiff’s harm
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