Legal Terms

Document Sample
Legal Terms
AN



A–Z



OF

LEGAL TERMS

TERMS

LEGAL





Abatement A reduction, allowance or rebate



Abrogate To repeal, cancel or annul



Abscond To secretly go away, to evade the law



Absolute Complete and unconditional



Accessory A person who is concerned with a serious crime,

but who does not actually commit it. An accessory

before the fact might, for example, have persuaded

or encouraged someone else to commit the crime.

An accessory after the fact might have helped the

criminal to hide or escape.



Acquittal The opposite of conviction, usually after a person

has been found guilty. If a person is acquitted, he

or she cannot be prosecuted again for the same

offence.



Adjournment A temporary halt in the hearing of a court case.

Can be at the request of either party to the case, or

the judge or magistrate can call an adjournment for

his or their own reasons.



Administrator A person appointed to manage the property of

another, usually after the other person has died

without making a will.



Affidavit A written statement in the name of the person

called the deponent, by whom it is voluntarily

signed and sworn to or affirmed. The statement

must contain certain facts which the deponent can

prove.



Affiliation proceedings The name of the court action taken by an

unmarried mother claiming maintenance for the

child from the father.



Affirmation A statement that something is true which may be

made instead of an oath, if an oath is contrary to

the person’s religious beliefs or if the person has

no religious belief.



Agent A person employee to act on behalf of another.

Anything done by the agent, within the scope of his

authority, binds his principal.



Alienation The power of an owner or tenant to pass on his or

her interest in the property to someone else.





Appearance Entering an appearance is a formal step taken by a

defendant notifying the plaintiff that he or she

intends to contest or take part in the proceedings. If

the defendant does not enter an appearance, the

plaintiff can take steps to obtain judgement without

the defendant.



Appellant One who appeals to a higher court from the

decision of a lower court.



Arrears Debts not paid at the due date



Assign To transfer property



Attorney A person appointed by another to act in his place

or represent him.



Averment An allegation made in pleadings before a court.

Award The decision of an arbitrator in arbitrator

proceedings. It can be enforced in the same way

as a judgement or order made by a court.



Bail An accused person is given bail when released

from custody, either on his or her recognisance or

with sureties (see below). If the accused person

does not appear in court on the set date, he or she

is guilty of an offence and the set sum of money

will be forfeited.



Bailiff A court officer employed to do such things as serve

documents and execute court orders.



Bailment When one person (the bailor) hands over goods to

another (the bailee) on conditions that they will

return after a certain time. For example, when you

give clothes to a cleaner to be dry cleaned, this is a

bailment.



Bankruptcy Procedure under which a person’s property is

taken over and distributed amongst his or her

creditors.



Bench The judges of a court of law.



Bequest A gift of personal property (as opposed to real

estate) by will.



Bill of sale A document which transfers ownership of goods

when possession is unchanged. Usually used as a

type of mortgage as security for a loan.



By-laws Rules made by some authority (for example, local

council) which are binding.



Capital Capital bears the same relation to income as a tree

does to fruit. For example, if you own a house, that

is capital and the rents are income. If you sell the

house, the interest is income. Capital is the fund or

body from which income is derived.



Caveat A warning. If someone puts a caveat on the

certificate of title of a property, it is a warning to

intending purchasers that there is an outstanding

interest over the property.



Chattels Any property other than absolute ownership of

land.



Circumstantial evidence A series of circumstances which seem to indicate

guilt where there is no direct evidence. It is

sometimes regarded as better evidence than direct

evidence which can be fabricated or mistaken. For

example, if a person was accused of murder by

poisoning, circumstantial evidence, such as the fact

that the person bought some poison earlier, can be

proved without doubt.



Civil action As opposed to criminal action, is between private

individuals or organisations. One party seeks to

prevent, stop or be compensated for harm caused

by the other party.



Codicil If a person wants to change or add to his or her

will, he or she can make a codicil. It is attached to

the will and becomes part of it if it is properly

signed and witnessed.



Common law Is that part of the law which is developed by judges

in the course of deciding cases. Since judges are

bound by earlier case decisions, a body of law has

gradually developed.



Consideration Value given in return for some other benefit to

equal value. Not necessarily money.



Constitution The form in which a state (or organisation) is

organised. The Australian Constitution sets up the

structure of our government and defines the

powers of the parliament, the executive and the

judiciary.



Constructive A right, liability or status created by law without

reference to the intention of the parties. For

example, constructive notice is when a person is

held to have notice of something because they

would have known about it had they made proper

enquiries.



Contempt of Court Failure to obey a court order, some act of

resistance, or insult to the court, or conduct likely to

prejudice the fair trial of an accused person.



Contingent Something which depends on the happening of an

event.



Contact An agreement which can be enforced in court. In

some cases, the contract must be written (for

example, land dealings). Otherwise it can be

written or verbal or both. To be enforceable, the

agreement must be between adults (minors can

contract only if it can be shown it was to his/her

benefit) who know what they are doing and who

intend to make an enforceable contract. The

purpose of the contract must be legal and all the

essential terms of the contract must have been

agreed to (if you agree to buy something, but the

price is not yet settled, the contract must be written,

there must also be valuable consideration or give

and take on both sides. An agreement to give

someone something for nothing is not a contract.



Conveyance A method of transferring property.



Copyright The right to prevent anyone else from printing or

copying an original work. Copyright covers literary,

artistic, or musical works, films, recordings and

broadcasts. Copyright lasts for fifty year after the

death of the author.



Corroboration Evidence which confirms other evidence.



Costs As a general rule, if you win a court case you are

entitled to have your costs paid by other party.

However, it is up to the judge to decide and in the

Family Law Court each party usually pays his or

her own costs. If you are awarded costs, the other

party will usually have to pay your solicitor’s fee,

provided it is reasonable, and ‘party and party’

costs, which include court fees, stamps and

barristers’ charges.



Courter claim If driver A, who was involved in an accident, claims

damages against driver B and driver B responds by

claiming that driver A caused the accident and

must therefore pay B damages, that is a counter

claim. The parties are suing each other in one

action instead of each suing the other in separate

court actions.



Convenant An agreement creating an obligation, contained in

a deed. For example, if a person decides to sell

part of land, he or she may require the purchaser to

agree that any building will be in brick. The

agreement becomes a convenant which is noted

on the title deed. All later purchasers of the

property will be bound by it.



Credit The time in which a creditor will allow a debtor to

pay, or the total amount which is permitted to be

owed.



Creditor A person to whom a debt is owing.



Custody Care and control. In relation to a child, one person

can have custody while another is the legal

guardian. Day to day care and control is

undertaken by the custodian, but major decisions

about the child’s upbringing and education must be

made by the guardian.



Damages Compensation for loss suffered through another’s

fault.

De facto In fact (though not in law).



Debenture A certificate of right to drawback or a document

issued by a company or public body as evidence of

a debt or as a security for a loan, with interest.



Debt A sum of money due from one person to another.



Decree An order of a court after hearing a case. A decree

absolute is final and conclusive. A decree nisi is

temporary or conditional.



Deed A document, signed, sealed and delivered, to

prove the parties’ agreement to its content.



Deed poll A unilateral dee, for example, to pay a debt or to

appear in court when required.



Defense A document served on a plaintiff in answer to the

plaintiff’s statement of claim.



Demurrage The detention of a ship for longer than the time

needed for loading or unloading. The money

payable to the ship owner for such a delay.



Deponent A person who makes an affidavit or deposition.



Deposition A statement on oath of a witness in a court hearing.



Devise A gift of real estate in a will.



Discharge To take away the binding force of a right or

obligation. Thus, payment discharge a debt.



Divorce The dissolution of marriage.



Domicile or domicil The country in which a person is permanently

resident. It depends on the physical fact of

residence plus the intention of remaining. If a

person has no place where he or she is

permanently resident, domicil is country of birth.



Donee The recipient of a gift.



Donor A giver of a gift.



Duplicity A pleading in court can be rejected for duplicity if it

contains more claims, charges or defences than

one. For example, you can’t say that you are not

guilty of murder because you were acting in self-

defence and you were insane. You must choose

one or the other. You can’t be charged with murder

and manslaughter for the one act.

Duress Pressure caused by injury or threat which is likely

to interfere with a person’s freedom of thought or

action. Acts done under duress are usually invalid.



Easement A right enjoyed by an owner of land over the land

of another, such as rights of way, rights of light or

right of support.



Encroachment The unauthorised extension of the boundaries of

the land. For example, a house might be built so

that it extends over a boundary on to a neighbour’s

land.



Encumbrance A liability which is attached to property. For

example, a mortgage is an encumbrance. If a

mortgaged house is sold, the buyer gets it subject

to the mortgage unless the mortgage is discharge

earlier.



Equitable That which is fair, or which arises from the liberal

interpretation of a law or which is part of the law of

equity as opposed to common law.



Equity A body of rules which was developed to

supplement the common law. It was based on the

principles of fairness or natural justice.



Estate An interest in land.



Evidence All the legal means which tend to prove or disprove

a fact



Ex parte An application to a court made either by an

interested person who is not a party to the dispute

or by one party in the absence of another.



Executor The person appointed in a will to be responsible for

seeing that the provisions of the will are carried out.



Expert witness A person with special skills or qualifications which

fit him/her to express an opinion in court. The

opinions of ordinary witnesses are irrelevant. The

court decides whether or not a person is expert.



Extradition The delivery, by the authorities of one country (or

state) of a person who has committed a crime in

another country to the authorities in that country.

Extradition will only take place between countries

which have extradition treaties. Extradition is not

allowed in the case of political offences.



Fee simple Absolute ownership of land as opposed to (for

example) having a lease or a life interest in the

land.

Felony A category of crimes ranking in seriousness below

treason and above misdemeanours. Murder,

bigamy and rape are felonies.



Fiduciary The relationship of one person to another where

the former must act for the benefit of the latter. The

person in a fiduciary position is not supposed to

make a personal profit or to allow his duty and his

interest to conflict.



Foreclosure When a mortgagor fails to pay off the mortgage

debt within the proper time, the mortgagee is

entitled to foreclose – to force the sale of the

property to pay the mortgage debt.



Fraud The obtaining of material advantages by unfair or

wrongful means.



Garnishee order An order to someone (usually an employee) who

owes money to a debtor to pay that money to the

debtor’s creditor.



Guardian A person who has the right and the duty to protect

another person (usually a child), their property and

their rights.



Hearing A trial or court action.



Hearsay If someone says, ‘Joe Blow said….’, that is

hearsay. If Joe blow himself says, ‘I saw….’, that is

direct evidence. As a rule hearsay evidence is not

admitted in court. The person who made the

statement should be there to give direct evidence.



Holding out A person ‘holds her/himself out’ when allowing

others to believe that he/she has certain skills or a

certain position.



Holding over Is where a tenant continues to stay on after the

lease has expired. He or she becomes a tenant

from week to week or month to month, depending

on the circumstances.



Hostile witness A witness who is hostile to the party who called him

or her. The witness may be cross-examined by the

lawyers of that party.



Implication An inference which may be drawn from facts or

circumstances. What is implied may be presumed

by law to exist, whether or not it does in fact.



Imprimatur Let it be printed.



In camera The hearing of a case in private.

In loco parentis In place of a parent.



In personam Something directed at a specific person. For

example, a right which can be enforced against a

specific person, as opposed to the world at large;

you would have such a right if you are the

beneficiary of a trust. You can enforce your rights

against the trustee and no one else.



In rem Something directed at the world at large, as

opposed to a specific person. For example, if you

own a house, your property rights can be enforced

against the world at large.



In situ In its original situation.



In specie In its own form and essence, and not in its

equivalent. For example, if you lend something,

you want to get it back – you don’t want something

else in its place.



Indemnify To make good a loss which one person has

suffered through the act or default of another.



Indemnity A contract or security designed to prevent a person

suffering as the result of the act or default of

another.



Indenture Originally a document written in duplicate on one

piece of paper and divided by cutting through the

wavy line. The two parts (counterparts) could be

fitted together to prove they were genuine. Today

the same effect is achieved by a deed.



Indictable offences The more serious crimes tried by judge and jury

rather than by a magistrate alone.



Information A formal step by which certain civil and criminal

court proceedings are started.



Injunction An order by which a party to a court action is

required to do, or not do, a certain thing.



Inquest An inquiry made by a coroner into the death of a

person, which was unexplained or happened in

suspicious circumstances.



Instrument A formal legal document.



Interest A person has an interest in a thing when he/she

has rights, titles, advantages, duties or liabilities

connected with it.



Interest is also a sum payable in return for the use

of another sum of money, called the principle.

Intestacy Dying without leaving a will. If a will disposes of

part of a person’s property, but not all of it, the

person dies partially intestate.



Joint and several obligation An obligation entered into by two or more people

whereby they are all responsible together and as

individuals. For example, if two partners owe

money, the creditor can sue them both together

and each would pay half. If, however, one

disappeared or went bankrupt, the creditor can sue

the other for the full amount.



Joint obligation An obligation entered into by two or more people

whereby they can only be sued jointly, not

separately as individuals.



Joint tenancy When land is owned by two or more people as joint

tenants there is a right of survivorship. That is,

when one dies, his or her share automatically goes

to the survivor(s). Only the last surviving owner can

dispose of the property by will.



Judgement The decision or sentence of a court. Also the

reasoning of the judge which leads him to a

decision which may be reported in law reports.



Judgement debt If one party is ordered to pay money to the other,

this is the judgement debt and interest of 10% is

payable from the date of judgement.



Jurisdiction The power of a court or judge to hear a case. Also

the geographical limits within which the orders of a

court can be enforced or executed.



Jurisprudence The philosophy or theory of law.



Jury A body of people called to decide questions of fact

(as opposed to questions of law) in a court case.

There is a right to trial be jury for the more serious

crimes. In other cases, the accused may elect to

have a jury trial while minor cases can only be tried

summarily, that is, by a magistrate.



Laches Negligence or unreasonable delay in asserting or

enforcing a right.



Larceny Theft



Law report A published account of a court case, giving a

statement of facts and the reasons the court have

for its judgement.



Law Society An organisation which is entrusted with the control

and regulation of the solicitors’ profession.

Lease The grant of possession of property to a person for

a specified period of time.



Liability A legal obligation.



Lien The right to hold the property of another as security

for the performance of an obligation.



Limitation period The period during which a person can take court

action to enforce a right. For example, action to

recover a debt must be taken within six years.



Limited company A company in which the liability of the members is

limited to the amount, if any, unpaid on the shares

held by them or to the amount which they have

agreed to pay if the company is wound up.



Liquidated Fixed or ascertained. A debt is liquidated when

paid. A company when wound up.



Liquidated damages If court action is taken for a fixed sum, such as a

debt owing or specific financial loss, they are

liquidated damages. If the amount being sued for is

not fixed, for example if you are suing for pain and

suffering or loss of reputation, it is not liquidated.



Liquidator A person appointed to carry out the winding up of a

company.



Litigation Names given to all forms of court action.



Locus stand (standing) The right to be heard in court. To have locus

standi, you must be personally affected by a

dispute.



Lodger A person who occupies rooms in a house of which

general possession remains in the landlord.

Lodgers don’t have the right of tenants.



Magistrate A judicial officer with summary jurisdiction (power

to hear cases alone, without a jury) in minor

criminal and civil matters.



Maintenance The supply of basic necessities to a person.

Parents have a duty to maintain their children.

Spouses have a duty to maintain each other

according to their needs and ability to pay.



Memorandum A note of the details of some agreement of

transaction.



Mens rea (guilty mind) An evil intention or a knowledge of the

wrongfulness of an act. Mens rea must be present

for a person to be found guilty of most (but not all)

types of crime.



Mention If a date is set for mention, the case will not be

heard that day. The judge or magistrate will simply

check that both parties are ready to go ahead and

will set a further date for hearing.



Misdemeanour A less serious type of crime usually punished by a

fine or imprisonment.



Misprision of a felony Failing to tell the police what you know about a

crime which a reasonable person would think

should be reported.



Misrepresentation A statement, or action, which gives a false or

misleading impression.



Mitigation When a person is undoubtedly guilty of a crime, his

or her legal representative will put forward

mitigating facts which could lessen the punishment.

For example, if a person has been found guilty of

drink driving, evidence that there will be loss of job

if he/she can’t drive, that there are three children to

support, and that might persuade the magistrate

that there should be no cancellation of the driver’s

licence.



Moratorium A postponement of payment of debts.



Mortgage A devise whereby a loan is secured by giving the

lender the right (which is noted on the title deeds)

to force the sale of a property to recover any

money which is not repaid.



Mortgagee The person to whom property is mortgaged. The

lender.

Mortgagor The person who mortgages a property. The

borrower.



Natural justice Rules for any person or body responsible for

deciding disputes affecting the rights of others, for

example a government department. The rules are

to act fairly, in good faith, and without bias and give

each side an opportunity to present its case and to

hear the argument for the other side. A judge must

declare any interest held in the subject matter of

the dispute. A person must have notice of what

he/she is accused. Any relevant documents must

be seen by both parties.



Negligence You must take reasonable care to avoid acts and

omissions which you can reasonably foresee would

be likely to injure others. If you fail to take what an

ordinary person would regard as reasonable care,

you would be liable to compensate anyone whose

person or property is injured as a result.



Negotiable instrument A transferable document. An uncrossed cheque is

negotiable because if you give it to another person,

you transfer the right to the money to them. A

contract is not negotiable. It is only enforceable

between the parties.



Next friend A person, usually a relative, who takes court action

on behalf of a child or psychiatric patient.



Notice Knowledge of awareness. Notice is either actual

(express) or constructive (implied). Constructive

notice is where a person is deemed to have

knowledge of a fact because he/she would have

known had he/she made proper inquiries.



Nuisance An inconvenience substantially and unreasonably

interfering with either an occupier’s enjoyment of

his/her property or the public’s enjoyment of a

communal right, for example, to fresh air, to use of

a road, etc.



Nullity of marriage A marriage is annulled when the court decides that

it never was a valid marriage. A marriage can be

annulled if, for example, there is not a proper,

informed consent by one party. Non-consummation

is not a ground for annulling a marriage.



Oaths An oath is a statement whereby the person calls on

his God to witness that what he/she says is true.

An affirmation may be made instead of an oath.



Paye Pay as you earn. The system of collection of

income tax by deduction made by the employer

from the employee’s assessable income.

Parol Verbal or oral



Parties Persons suing or being sued or who take part in a

transaction.



Party-wall A wall between property belonging to different

owners. Usually each owner owns half of the wall

closest to his or her property but has a right to use

and support over the whole wall.



Passing off The pretence that one person’s goods are those of

another – for example, if a trader does anything

which makes customers believe that they are

buying a certain brand, when in fact they are not.



Patent The right to exclusive use and benefit of a new

invention.

Per se By itself. Taken alone.



Plaintiff One who brings an action in court.



Plea A reply to a plaint. In a criminal case, if an accused

person enters a plea, he or she is giving notice of

intention to plead not guilty.



Pleadings Written statements which the parties to an action

deliver to one another setting out the facts as they

see them. As an example, the plaintiff delivers a

Statement of Claim. The defendant then delivers a

Defence. The point on which they disagree then

become the issues in the case.



Power of appointment The power to create or change estates or interests

in property.



Power of attorney A formal instrument by which one person

empowers another to represent him/her to act on

his/her behalf, for certain purposes.



Preference clause A clause in an industrial award which gives union

members the right to be employed in prefernece to

non-union members.



Prejudice Injury. A statement made ‘without prejudice’ for the

purpose of settling a dispute cannot be used

against the person making it in court.



Presumption A conclusion that some fact is true. In law there are

two types of presumptions. A rebuttable

presumption is one that can be disproved by the

evidence – for example, the presumption that an

accused person is innocent is rebuttable. An

irrebuttable presumption cannot be disproved by

evidence – for example it is an irrebuttable

presumption that a child under ten years cannot

commit a crime.



Prima facie If one person starts a court action, and therefore

has the burden of proving the claim he or she is

making, he or she must have a prima facie case.

This means having evidence which would prove

the case if the other party said nothing to disprove

it.



Principal The perpetrator of a crime; the person who

authorise an agent to act on his/her behalf; a sum

of money which is loaned at interest principal or

plea.



Privilege An exceptional or extraordinary right or exemption

which a person has because of his/her office or

status.

Privity Necessary before a person can sue another in

relation to a contract, that is, the parties must be

the parties who actually made the contract. You

can’t sue someone for breaking a promise in a

contract unless the promise was to you personally.



Pro rata In proportion.



Probate A certificate that a will is valid and can now be put

into effect by the executor.



Prothonotary A chief clerk in a court.



Provocation Acts which prevents the exercise of reason and

self-control. Provocation may reduce murder to

manslaughter.



Proxy A person authorised to act in place of another, for

example, to vote for another.



QC – Queen’s counsel A status conferred on senior barristers in

recognition of their competence. Sometimes called

silks, because they wear silk gowns.



Quash To discharge or set aside – for example, a wrongful

conviction.



Quasi As if it were. Something which is similar to, but not,

the real thing.



Quid pro quo Something for something. Payment.



Ratio decidendi The reason (or ground) of a judge’s decision.



Re In the matter of.



Real property Immovable property. Land and interests in land.



Rebut To repel, defeat or take away the effect of

something.



Recognisance An obligation or bond acknowledged before a court

or court officer. Sometimes the recognisance is

secured by a surety. This means that the person

who acts as surety will lose a certain sum of money

if the recognisance is broken.



Registrar An officer responsible for keeping a register. Court

registrars keep the court records. In some courts,

the registrar has power to make certain orders

which are not opposed, so that the matter doesn’t

have to go to court.

Remedy The means by which the violation of a right is

prevented, redressed or compensated.



Rescission Revocation or taking back – for example, in a

contract, if one party rescinds he/she is treating the

contract as never having existed.



Right of way The right to pass over another’s land.



Sanction The penalty or punishment provided as a means of

enforcing obedience.



Semble It appears.



Sequestration A legal other depriving a person. Service may be

personal or substituted. In which case it may be

delivered by post or to some other person likely to

bring it to the notice of the person served, or it may

be advertised.



Several Separate; as opposed to joint.



Severance When a transaction is made up of several parts so

that it is possible to disregard one or more of those

parts while keeping the rest. For example, if one

part of a contract is invalid but it is only a subsidiary

part, it can be severed by a court without altering

the main part of the contract.



Specific performance A court order that a person must perform his or her

part of the contract.



Spouse Husband or wife.



Stakeholder An independent person to whom money is paid

until a certain event happens. In a sale of property

the real estate agent holds the deposit as

stakeholder during the period between exchange of

contracts and settlement.



Stamp duties Money raised by means of stamps affixed to

documents such as receipts, transfers of land,

leases, etc. Documents which must be stamped

cannot be registered or used as evidence in court

hearings unless they have been stamped. The

amount of stamp duty depends on the value of the

property with which the document deals.



Statement of claim A written statement by a person making a claim in

a higher court, setting out the facts on which the



Statute An act of Parliament. A law made by parliament as

opposed to the common law which is developed by

judges.

Statutory declaration Written statement of facts which the person making

it declares to be true in front of a justice of peace. It

is used instead of an affidavit in matters which are

not going to court. Making a false declaration is an

offence.



Stay of execution The suspension of the operation of a court order.



Stay of proceedings Suspension of a court action which may be

temporary or permanent.



Strict liability Liability without fault. Usually, to commit a crime, a

person must know that what he/she is doing is

wrong. With strict liability offences, you are guilty if

you did it, regardless of intention or knowledge.



Subpoena A court document requiring a person to be

represented at a certain time and place for a

certain purpose.



Subrogation The substitution of one person or thing for another,

so that the same rights and duties which attached

to the original person or thing attach to the

substituted one.



Sue To bring a court action against a person.



Summary proceedings A court action in which a magistrate, sitting alone,

decides the case, as opposed to a judge and jury.



Summons A document issued from a court office requiring a

person to come to court.



Surety A person who binds her/himself to satisfy the

obligation of another person, if the latter fails to do

so; a guarantor. If a surety satisfies the other

obligation, such as by paying a debt, he or she can

sue the other for the money.



Taxation of costs The process of examining and, if necessary,

reducing the bill of costs of a solicitor.



Tenancy in common A method of enabling two or more people to own

land so that they have possession in common, that

is, they all have the right to occupy the whole of the

property, but each can pass on his or her shares in

a will. This is in contrast to a joint tenancy under

which the survivor automatically becomes the sole

owner when the joint tenant dies.



Tenant One who holds land, as opposed to owning it.



Tender An offer.

Tenure The method of holding land, or occupying land, or

an office.



Test case A court case, the result of which applies to similar

cases which then do not go to court.



Testament A will of personal property.



Testate Having made a will.



Testator Person who makes a will.



Testimony The evidence of a witness in court.



Title The right of ownership of property.



Title deeds Documents which provide the evidence of

ownership.



Tort An act which causes harm to another person but

which is not a crime, or against the law, or a breach

of contract – for example, negligence or nuisance.



Tortfeasor One who commits a tort.



Tortious Wrongful.



Transcript An official copy of proceedings in court.



Traverse To deny an allegation of fact in a court hearing.



Trust A relationship whereby one person (the trustee)

holds property on behalf of or for the benefit of,

another (the beneficiary). No special words are

needed to create a trust if the intention is shown or

can be inferred. Trusts can be expressed (created

by words), or implied by law.

Uberrimae fidei Of the fullest confidence. A contract is uberrimae

fidei when one party is bound to tell the other every

fact which might influence a decision on whether or

not to enter into the contract – for example,

insurance contracts.



Ultra vires Beyond the power. In excess of authority and

therefore invalid.



Undertaking A promise which can be enforced in court.



Undue influence If a person does something in circumstances which

show that he/she did not exercise free judgement

on the matter, the court will set it aside.



Unenforceable An agreement which a court will not uphold.

Unliquidated Unspecified. The jury decides on the amount of

damages.



Usury Illegal or excessive interest.



Variation Alternation or change.



Void Of no legal effect.



Voidable An agreement which has full legal effect until one

party succeeds in putting an end to it.



Voir dire A preliminary examination of a witness or some

other evidence by a judge, to decide whether or not

it ought to be heard in court.



Voluntary something given without suitable payment.



Volunteer A person who gives services without payments. A

person who receives a gift.



Wager A promise of money or something else if an

uncertain event happens.



Waive To renounce or disclaim a benefit.



Ward A child who is under the care of a guardian. A state

ward is under the care of the state.



Warranty A guarantee of assurance.



Will A declaration by which a person provides for the

distribution or administration of his/her property

after his/her death.


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