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Click
on the first letter of the word from the list
above to go to the appropriate section of the
glossary.
- C -
Calendar:
List of cases scheduled for hearing in court.
Capacity Defense: Broadly, describes a
defendant's lack of some fundamental ability to be
held accountable. For example, in Pennsylvania,
persons under 7 years of age are presumed
incapable of negligence.
Capital crime: A crime punishable by
death.
Caption: The heading on a legal document
listing the parties, the court, the case number,
and related information.
Case Law: Law established by previous
decisions of appellate courts, particularly the
Supreme Court.
Casualty: A loss of property due to
fire, storm shipwreck or other casualty, which is
allowable as a deduction in computing taxable
income.
Cause: A lawsuit, litigation, or action.
Any question, civil or criminal, litigated or
contested before a court of justice.
Causation: The act by which an effect is
produced. See also "legal cause" and
"proximate cause."
Cause of Action: Fact or facts that give
someone the right to seek a remedy through the
court because the facts of the case apply to a
certain law sought to be enforced.
Caveat: A warning; a note of caution.
Certification: 1. Written attestation.
2. Authorized declaration verifying that an
instrument is a true and correct copy of the
original.
Certiorari: (Latin: "To be informed
of.") Writ issued by a superior or higher
court to a lower court requiring the lower court
to produce a certified record of a case tried
there so that the superior court can examine the
lower court proceedings for errors. See record.
Challenge: An objection, such as when an
attorney objects at a hearing to the seating of a
particular person on a civil or criminal jury.
Challenge for Cause: Objection to the
seating of a particular juror for a stated reason
(usually bias or prejudice for or against one of
the parties in the lawsuit). The judge has the
discretion to deny the challenge. This differs
from peremptory challenge.
Chambers: A judge's private office. A
hearing in chambers takes place in the judge's
office outside of the presence of the jury and the
public.
Change of Venue: Moving a lawsuit or
criminal trial to another place for trial.
Charge to the Jury: The judge's
instructions to the jury concerning the law that
applies to the facts of the case on trial.
Chief Judge: Presiding or Administrative
Judge in a court.
Circumstantial Evidence: Evidence not
based on actual personal knowledge or observation
of the fact in dispute, but, rather, evidence of
other personal knowledge or observation which
allows a jury to infer the existence or
nonexistence of the fact in dispute. An example of
direct evidence of who was at fault for a car
accident would be a witness who actually saw the
accident. An example of circumstantial evidence in
this case, would be a witness who drove by after
the impact and saw the defendant's car in the
wrong lane.
Citation: 1. A reference to a source of
legal authority. 2. A direction to appear in
court, as when a defendant is cited into court,
rather than arrested.
Civil Actions: Noncriminal cases in
which one private individual or business sues
another to protect, enforce, or redress private or
civil rights.
Civil Action: Action brought to enforce
private rights. Generally, all actions except
criminal actions.
Civil Law: Body of law concerned with
private rights and remedies, as contrasted with
criminal law. Compare with criminal law.
Civil Procedure: The rules and process
by which a civil case is tried and appealed,
including the preparations for trial, the rules of
evidence and trial conduct, and the procedure for
pursuing appeals.
Claim Petition: In cases where a worker
is injured on the job, the injured employee files
a claim petition to seek initial compensation.
This occurs when there has been a Notice of Denial
- no workers' compensation payments have been made
or medical benefits have not been paid.
Class Action: A means by which one or
more individuals are able to sue for themselves
and as representatives of other people. A class
action requires: an identifiable group of people
with a well-defined interest in the facts and law
of the suit; too many people in the group for it
to be practical to bring them all before the
court; and the individuals bringing suit are able
to adequately represent the entire group.
Clear and Convincing Evidence: Standard
of proof commonly used in civil lawsuits and in
regulatory agency cases. It governs the amount of
proof that must be offered in order for the
plaintiff to win the case.
Clemency or Executive Clemency: Act of
grace or mercy by the president or governor to
ease the consequences of a criminal act,
accusation, or conviction. It may take the form of
commutation or pardon.
Closing Argument: The closing statement,
by counsel, to the trier of facts after all
parties have concluded their presentation of
evidence.
Codicil (kod'i-sil): An amendment to a
will.
Co- Defendant: A defendant joined
together with one or more other defendants in the
same case.
Collateral Source Rule: The rule ensures
that compensation awarded to a plaintiff in a
lawsuit will not be reduced if the plaintiff
receives compensation for the same injury from
another source, such as insurance. Under the rule,
a defendant tort-feasor is unable to benefit from
the fact that the plaintiff received money from
another source, such as insurance, because of the
defendant's tort.
Commit: To send a person to prison,
asylum, or reformatory by a court order.
Common Law: Law deriving its authority from
usage and customs or judgments of courts
recognizing and enforcing such usages and customs.
Generally, law made by judges rather than by
legislatures.
Commutation: The reduction of a
sentence, as from death to life imprisonment.
Comparative Negligence: Comparing the
plaintiff's contributory negligence to the
defendant's negligence. Pennsylvania's Comparative
Negligence statute states that when a plaintiff is
guilty of contributory negligence and that
negligence was not greater than the defendant's
negligence, the plaintiff's damages will be
diminished in proportion to his negligence in
causing the accident.
Compensation: Something that makes up
for a loss. In workers' compensation cases, it
refers to payment to unemployed or injured workers
or their dependents.
Complaint: In the legal sense, the
document a plaintiff files with the court which
contains allegations and damages sought. A
complaint generally starts a lawsuit.
Complainant: The party who complains or
sues; one who applies to the court for legal
redress. Also called the plaintiff.
Compromise and Release: In workers'
compensation cases, this occurs when a lump sum
payment of money is paid by the insurance carrier
to an injured worker to resolve the case. This
lump sum is in lieu of the weekly compensation
benefits the injured worker is receiving and may
or may not include future medical benefits.
Conciliation: A form of alternative
dispute resolution in which the parties bring
their dispute to a neutral third party, who helps
lower tensions, improve communications, and
explore possible solutions. Conciliation is
similar to mediation, but it may be less formal.
Concurrent Sentences: Sentences for more
than one crime that are to be served at the same
time, rather than one after the other. See also
cumulative sentences.
Condemnation: The legal process by which
the government takes private land for public use,
paying the owners a fair price.
Consecutive Sentences: Successive
sentences, one beginning at the expiration of
another, imposed against a person convicted of two
or more violations.
Conservatorship: Legal right given to a
person to manage the property and financial
affairs of a person deemed incapable of doing that
for himself or herself. (See also guardianship.
Conservators have somewhat less responsibility
than guardians.)
Contempt of Court: Willful disobedience
of a judge's command or of an official court
order.
Continuance: Postponement of a legal
proceeding to a later date.
Contract: A legally enforceable
agreement between two or more competent parties
made either orally or in writing.
Contingent Fee Agreement: An agreement
between an attorney and his or her client whereby
the attorney agrees to represent the client for a
percentage of the amount recovered. This fee
agreement is frequently used in personal injury
actions.
Contributory Negligence: Broadly,
carelessness on the plaintiff's part. More
precisely, conduct which falls below the standard
of care established by law for the protection of
one's self against unreasonable risk of harm.
Conviction: A judgment of guilt against
a criminal defendant.
Corpus Delicti: Body of the crime. The
objective proof that a crime has been committed.
It sometimes refers to the body of the victim of a
homicide or to the charred shell of a burned
house, but the term has a broader meaning. For the
state to introduce a confession or to convict the
accused, it must prove a corpus delicti, that is,
the occurrence of a specific injury or loss and a
criminal act as the source of that particular
injury or loss.
Corroborating Evidence: Supplementary
evidence that tends to strengthen or confirm the
initial evidence.
Counsel: Legal adviser; a term used to
refer to lawyers in a case.
Counterclaim: Claim brought by a
defendant in a lawsuit against the plaintiff.
Court Administrator/Clerk of court: An
officer appointed by the Court or elected to
oversee the administrative, non-judicial
activities of the court.
Court: Refers to a specific court, such
as The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, or may also
refer to a judge.
Court Costs: The expenses of prosecuting
or defending a lawsuit, other than the attorneys'
fees. An amount of money may be awarded to the
successful party (and may be recoverable from the
losing party) as reimbursement for court costs.
Court Reporter: The person who
stenographically records and transcribes testimony
during court proceedings or related proceedings
such as depositions.
Criminal Law: Criminal law declares what
conduct is criminal and prescribes punishment to
be imposed for criminal conduct. The purpose of
criminal law is to prevent harm to society.
Cross-Claim: Claim brought by a
defendant in a lawsuit against a co-defendant in
the lawsuit.
Cross-Examination: The questioning of a
witness produced by the other side.
Cumulative Sentences: Sentences for two
or more crimes to run consecutively, rather than
concurrently.
Custody: Detaining of a person by lawful
process or authority to assure his or her
appearance to any hearing; the jailing or
imprisonment of a person convicted of a crime.
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