Legal Glossary Fort Lauderdale
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Search warrant - A written order
issued by a judge that directs a law enforcement officer to search
a specific area for a particular piece of evidence.
Seal - To mark a document with a
seal; to authenticate or make binding by affixing a seal. Court
seal, corporate seal.
Secondary authority - Legal encyclopedias,
treatises, legal texts, law review articles, and citators. Writings
which set forth the opinion of the writer as to the law.
Secured debts - In bankruptcy, a
debt is secured if the debtor gave the creditor a right to repossess
the property or goods used as collateral.
Securities an Exchange Commission (SEC)
- A federal agency which monitors the securities industry.
Self-defense - The claim that an
act otherwise criminal was legally justifiable because it was necessary
to protect a person or property from the threat or action of another.
Self-incrimination, privilege against:
- The constitutional right of people to refuse to give testimony
against themselves that could subject them to criminal prosecution.
The right is guaranteed in the Fifth Amendment to the United States
Constitution . Asserting the right is often referred to as "taking
the Fifth."
Self-proving will - A will whose
validity does not have to be testified to in court by the witnesses
to it, since the witnesses executed an affidavit reflecting proper
execution of the will prior to the maker's death.
Sentence - The punishment ordered
by a court for a defendant convicted of a crime. (See concurrent
and consecutive sentences.)
Sentence Report - (See Presentence
Report.)
Sequester - To separate. Sometimes
juries are separated from outside influences during their deliberations.
For example, this may occur during a highly publicized trial.
Sequestration of witnesses - Keeping
all witnesses (except plaintiff and defendant) out of the courtroom
except for their time on the stand, and cautioning them not to discuss
their testimony with other witnesses. Also referred to as "separation
of witnesses."
Service of process - The delivering
of writs, summonses, and subpoenas by delivering them to the party
named in the document. Also referred to as "service."
Settlement - An agreement between
the parties disposing of a lawsuit.
Settlor - The person who sets up
a trust. Also referred to as "grantor."
Shepardizing - Method for finding
subsequent development of a legal theory by tracing status of a
case as legal authority.
Sheriff - The executive officer of
local court in some areas. In other jurisdictions the sheriff is
the chief law enforcement officer of a county.
Sherman Act - The basic antitrust
statute prohibiting any unreasonable interference, conspiracy, restraint
of trade, or monopolies with respect to interstate commerce.
Sidebar - A conference between the
judge and lawyers, usually in the courtroom, out of earshot of the
jury and spectators.
Slander - Spoken defamation which
tends to injure a person's reputation. (See libel.)
Small Business (SBA) - A federal
agency which provides assistance of all kinds, Administration including
loans, to small businesses.
Small Claims Court - A state court
that handles civil claims for small amounts of money. People often
represent themselves rather than hire an attorney.
Social Security - A system of federal
old-age pensions for employed persons begun in 1935. A portion of
the payment is deducted from the employee's salary and an equal
portion is contributed by the employer.
Social Security Administration -
The federal agency which administers the national social security
program.
Social Security Tax - A payroll deduction
based on gross wages paid; this amount is matched by the employer
as required by the Federal Insurance Contribution Act (FICA).
Sovereign Immunity - The doctrine
that the government, state or federal, is immune to lawsuit unless
it give its consent.
Specific performance - A remedy requiring
a person who has breached a contract to perform specifically what
he or she has agreed to do. Specific performance is ordered when
damages would be inadequate compensation.
Speedy Trial Act - Federal law establishing
time limits for carrying out major events, i.e. indictment, arraignment,
etc., in a criminal prosecution.
Spendthrift trust - A trust set up
for the benefit of someone who the grantor believes would be incapable
of managing his or her own financial affairs.
Standard of proof - Indicates the
degree to which the point must be proven. In a civil case, the burden
of proof rests with the plaintiff, who must establish his or her
case by such standards of proof as a "preponderance of evidence"
or "clear and convincing evidence." (See burden of proof.)
Standing - The legal right to bring
a lawsuit. Only a person with something at stake has standing to
bring a lawsuit.
Status offenders - Youths charged
with the status of being beyond the control of their legal guardian
or are habitually disobedient, truant from school, or having committed
other acts that would not be a crime if committed by an adult, i.e.,
smoking. Also referred to as minors or children in need of supervision.
Statute - Legislative enactment;
it may be a single act of a legislature or a body of acts which
are collected and arranged for a session of a legislature. (See
statutory law.)
Statute of frauds - A statutory requirement
that certain contracts must be in writing.
Statute of limitations - A statute
which limits the right of a plaintiff to file an action unless it
is done within a specified time period after the occurrence which
gives rise to the right to sue.
Statutory - Relating to a statute;
created or defined by a law.
Statutory construction - Process
by which a court seeks to interpret the meaning and scope of legislation.
Statutory law - Laws promulgated
by Congress and state legislatures. (See case law and common law.)
Statutory research - Research of
legislation enacted by a state or the United States.
Stipulation - An agreement between
the parties involved in a suit regulating matters incidental to
trial.
Strict liability - Concept applied
by the courts in product liability cases that when a manufacturer
presents his goods for public sale, he is representing that they
are suitable for their intended use.
Strike - Highlighting in the record
of a case, evidence that has been improperly offered and will not
be relied upon.
Subject research - Research of matter
by determining all law related to that matter by finding everything
on the subject.
Subpoena - A command to appear at
a certain time and place to give testimony upon a certain matter.
Subpoena Duces Tecum - A court order
commanding a witness to bring certain documents or records to court.
Substantive criminal law - Law with
the purpose of prevention of harm to society which prescribed punishment
for specific offenses. The basic law of rights and duties as opposed
to "remedial law" which provides methods of enforcement.
Substantive law - The statutory or
written law that governs rights and obligations of those who are
subject to it.
Summary judgment - A judgment given
on the basis of pleadings, affidavits, and exhibits presented for
the record without any need for a trial. It is used when there is
no dispute as to the facts of the case and one party is entitled
to a judgment as a matter of law.
Summons - Instrument used to commence
a civil action or special proceeding; the means of acquiring jurisdiction
over a party.
Support trust - A trust that instructs
the trustee to spend only as much income and principal (the assets
held in the trust) as needed for the beneficiary's support.
Suppress - To forbid the use of evidence
at a trial because t is improper or was improperly obtained. (See
also exclusionary rule.)
Surety Bond - A bond purchased at
the expense of the estate to insure the executor's proper performance.
Also referred to as "fidelity bond."
Survivorship - (See joint tenancy.)
Suspension - A temporary loss of
the right to practice law by an attorney. (See disbarment or censure.)
Sustain - A court ruling upholding
an objection or a motion.
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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