Legal Glossary Fort Lauderdale
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Magistrate (See U.S. Magistrate Judge.)
- Judicial officer exercising some of the functions of a judge.
It also refers in a general way to a judge.
Malicious prosecution - An action
instituted with intention of injuring the defendant and without
probable cause, and which terminates in favor of the person prosecuted.
Malpractice - Any professional misconduct.
Manslaughter - The unlawful killing
of another without intent to kill; either voluntary (upon a sudden
impulse); or involuntary (during the commission of an unlawful act
not ordinarily expected to result in great bodily harm). (See also
murder.)
Marshal - The executive officer of
the federal court.
Martindale-Hubbell Law - A publication
of several volumes which contains names, addresses, Director specialties,
and rating of United States lawyers; also includes digests of state
and foreign statutory law.
Mediation - A form of alternative
dispute resolution in which the parties bring their dispute to a
neutral third party, who helps them agree on a settlement.
Memorandum - An informal note or
instrument embodying something the parties desire to have in written
evidence.
Memorialized - In writing.
Merger - The absorption of one thing
or right into another.
Minor - A person under the age of
legal competence.
Minute book - A book maintained by
the courtroom deputy (bailiff), which contains minute entries of
all hearings and trial conducted by the judge.
Minutes - Memorandum of a transaction
or proceeding.
Miranda warning - Requirement that
police tell a suspect in their custody of his or her constitutional
rights before they question him or her. So named as a result of
the Miranda v. Arizona ruling by the United States Supreme Court.
Misdemeanor - A criminal offense
lesser than a felony and generally punishable by fine or by imprisonment
other than in a penitentiary.
Misfeasance - Improper performance
of an act which a person might lawfully do.
Mistrial - An invalid trial, caused
by fundamental error. When a mistrial is declared, the trial must
start again from the selection of the jury.
Mitigating circumstances - Those
which do not constitute a justification or excuse for an offense
but which may be considered as reasons for reducing the degree of
blame.
Mittimus - The name of an order in
writing, issuing from a court and directing the sheriff or other
officer to convey a person to a prison, asylum, or reformatory,
and directing the jailer or other appropriate official to receive
and safely keep the person until his or her fate shall be determined
by due course of law.
Mitigation - A reduction, abatement,
or diminution of a penalty or punishment imposed by law.
Moot - A moot case or a moot point
is one not subject to a judicial determination because it involves
an abstract question or a pretended controversy that has not yet
actually arisen or has already passed. Mootness usually refers to
a court's refusal to consider a case because the issue involved
has been resolved prior to the court's decision, leaving nothing
that would be affected by the court's decision.
Motion - An application made to a
court or judge which requests a ruling or order in favor of the
applicant.
Motion in Limine - A motion made
by counsel requesting that information which might be prejudicial
not be allowed to be heard in a case.
Murder - The unlawful killing of
a human being with deliberate intent to kill: (1) murder in the
first degree is characterized by premeditation; (2) murder in the
second degree is characterized by a sudden and instantaneous intent
to kill or to cause injury without caring whether the injury kills
or not.
Mutual assent - A meeting of the
minds; agreement.
Sheldon J. Schlesinger, P.A. represents clients throughout
the state of Florida including the cities of Boca Raton, Boynton
Beach, Carol City, Cooper City, Coral Gables, Coral Springs, Davie,
Deerfield Beach, Delray Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Hialeah, Hollywood,
Jupiter, Lake Worth, Miramar, Miami, Oakland Park, Palm Beach, Palm
Beach Gardens, Palm Springs, Pompano Beach, and Rivera Beach
Broward County • Miami-Dade County • Palm Beach
County
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