Legal Glossary Fort Lauderdale
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Paralegal - Also, legal assistant.
A person with legal skills who works under the supervision of a
lawyer.
Pardon - An act of grace from governing
power which mitigates punishment and restores rights and privileges
forfeited on account of the offense.
Parol evidence - Oral or verbal evidence;
evidence given by word of mouth in court.
Parole - Supervised release of a
prisoner from imprisonment on certain prescribed conditions which
entitle him to termination of his sentence.
Party - A person, business, or government
agency actively involved in the prosecution of defense of a legal
proceeding.
Patent - A grant to an inventor of
the right to exclude others for a limited time from make, using,
or selling his invention in the United States.
Patent and Trademark Office - The
federal agency which examines and issues patents and registers trademarks.
Peremptory challenge - Request by
a party that a judge not allow a certain prospective juror as a
member of the jury. No reason or cause need be stated. (See challenge
for cause.)
Periodical - A publication which
appears regularly but less often than daily.
Perjury - The criminal offense of
making a false statement under oath.
Permanent injunction - A court order
requiring that some action be taken, or that some party refrain
from taking action. It differs from forms of temporary relief, such
as a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction.
Per se doctrine - Under this doctrine
an activity such as price fixing can be declared as a violation
of the antitrust laws without necessity of a court inquiring into
the reasonableness of the activity.
Personal property - Anything a person
owns other than real estate.
Personal recognizance - In criminal
proceedings, the pretrial release of a defendant without bail upon
his or her promise to return to court. (See also recognizance.)
Personal representative - The person
who administers an estate. If named in a will, that person's title
is an executor. If there is no valid will, that person's title is
an administrator.
Person in need of supervision - Juvenile
found to have committed a "status offense" rather than
a crime that would provide a basis for a finding of delinquency.
(See status offense.)
Petitioner - The person filing an
action in a court of original jurisdiction. Also, the person who
appeals the judgment of a lower court. (See respondent.)
Plaintiff - A person who brings an
action; the party who complains or sues in a civil action. (See
complainant.)
Plea - The first pleading by a criminal
defendant, the defendant's declaration in open court that he or
she is guilty or not guilty. The defendant's answer to the charges
made in the indictment or information.
Plea bargaining - Process where the
accused and the prosecutor in a criminal case work out a satisfactory
disposition of the case, usually by the accused agreeing to plead
guilty to a lesser offense. Such bargains are not binding on the
court. Also referred to as plea negotiating.
Pleadings - The written statements
of fact and law filed by the parties to a lawsuit.
Pocket parts - Supplements to law
books in pamphlet form which are inserted in a pocket inside the
back cover of the books to keep them current.
Polling the jury - The act, after
a jury verdict has been announced, of asking jurors individually
whether they agree with the verdict.
Post-trial - Refers to items happening
after the trial, i.e., post-trial motions or post-trial discovery.
Pour-Over will - A will that leaves
some or all estate assets to a trust established before the will-maker's
death.
Power - Authority to do. One has
the power to do something if he is of legal age. Also, used as "powers,"
the term refers to authority granted by one person to another, i.e.,
powers given an executor in a will or an agent in a power of attorney.
Power of attorney - An formal instrument
authorizing another to act as one's agent or attorney.
Precedent - Laws established by previous
cases which must be followed in cases involving identical circumstances.
(See stare decisis in Foreign Words Glossary.)
Preinjunction - Court order requiring
action or forbidding action until a decision can be made whether
to issue a permanent injunction. It differs from a temporary restraining
order.
Preliminary hearing - Also, preliminary
examination. A hearing by a judge to determine whether a person
charged with a crime should be held for trial. (See arraignment.)
Preponderance of the proof - Greater
weight of the evidence, the common standard of evidence in civil
cases.
Presentence report - A report to
the sentencing judge containing background information about the
crime and the defendant to assist the judge in making his or her
sentencing decision.
Presentment - Declaration or document
issued by a grand jury that either makes a neutral report or notes
misdeeds by officials charged with specified public duties. It ordinarily
does not include a formal charge of crime. A presentment differs
from an indictment.
Pretermitted child - A child born
after a will is executed, who is not provided for by the will. Most
states have laws that provide for a share of estate property to
go to such children.
Pretrial conference - Conference
among the opposing attorneys and the judge called at the discretion
of the court to narrow the issues to be tried and to make a final
effort to settle the case without a trial.
Prima facie case - A case that is
sufficient and has the minimum amount of evidence necessary to allow
it to continue in the judicial process. (See prima facie in the
Foreign Words Glossary.)
Primary authority - Constitutions,
codes, statutes, ordinances, and case law sources.
Private law - That law, such as a
contract between two persons or a real estate transaction, which
applies only to the persons who subject themselves to it.
Privilege - A benefit or advantage
to certain persons beyond the advantages of other persons, i.e.,
an exemption, immunity, power, etc.
Probable cause - A reasonable belief
that a crime has or is being committed; the basis for all lawful
searches, seizures, and arrests.
Probate - Court proceeding by which
a will is proved valid or invalid. Term used to mean all proceedings
pertaining to the administration of estates such as the process
by which assets are gathered; applied to pay debts, taxes, and expenses
of administration; and distributed to those designated as beneficiaries
in the will. Conducted in states courts.
Probate court - The court with authority
to supervise estate administration.
Probate estate - Estate property
that may be disposed of by a will. (See estate.)
Probation - An alternative to imprisonment
allowing a person found guilty of an offense to stay in the community,
usually under conditions and under the supervision of a probation
officer. A violation of probation can lead to its revocation and
to imprisonment.
Product liability - Legal responsibility
of manufacturers and sellers to buyers, users, and bystanders for
damages or injuries suffered because of defects in goods.
Promisee - An individual to whom
a promise is made.
Promisor - An individual who makes
a promise.
Promissory estoppel - A promise which
estops the promisee from asserting or taking certain action.
Property tax - A tax levied on land
and buildings (real estate) and on personal property.
Proprietor - Owner; person who has
legal right or title to anything.
Prosecutor - A trial lawyer representing
the government in a criminal case and the interests of the state
in civil matters. In criminal cases, the prosecutor has the responsibility
of deciding who and when to prosecute.
Proximate cause - The last negligent
act which contributes to an injury. A person generally is liable
only if an injury was proximately caused by his or her action or
by his or her failure to act when he or she had a duty to act.
Proxy - The instrument authorizing
one person to represent, act, and vote for another at a shareholders'
meeting of a corporation.
Public law - That law such as traffic
ordinances or zoning ordinances which applies to the public.
Public defender - Government lawyer
who provides free legal defense services to a poor person accused
of a crime.
Public Service Commission - Also,
Public Utilities Commission. A state agency which regulates utilities.
Punitive damages - Money award given
to punish the defendant or wrongdoer.
Purchase agreement or purchase offer -
Also, sales agreement and earnest money contract. Agreement between
buyer and seller of property which sets forth in general the price
and terms of a proposed sale.
Putative - Alleged; supposed; reputed.
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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