Legal English refers to the specialised language used within the field of law. It encompasses a wide range of vocabulary, terminology, and syntax specific to legal documents, contracts, statutes, regulations, court proceedings, and other aspects of the legal system.
Formal and Precise Language
Legal English is characterised by its formality and precision. It often employs complex sentence structures, technical vocabulary, and precise terminology to accurately convey legal concepts and principles.
Latin Phrases and Maxims
Legal English frequently incorporates Latin phrases and maxims, many of which have been used for centuries in legal documents and proceedings. Examples include “pro bono”, “habeas corpus”, and “actus reus.”
Standardised Terminology
Legal English relies on standardised terminology to ensure consistency and clarity in legal documents and communications. Terms such as “plaintiff”, “defendant”, “contract”, and “tort” have specific meanings within the legal context.
Legalese
Legalese is the dense, convoluted language often found in legal documents and contracts. While legalese is intended to be precise and comprehensive, it can be difficult for non-lawyers to understand and may obscure the intended meaning.
Ambiguity and Interpretation
Despite its precision, legal English can sometimes be ambiguous or subject to interpretation. Specific terms or phrases may have multiple meanings or be interpreted differently depending on the context or jurisdiction.
Plain Language Movement
There has been a growing emphasis on using plain language in legal writing and communication in recent years. The plain language movement advocates for using clear, straightforward language accessible to non-lawyers and promotes transparency in the legal system.
International Variation
Legal English may vary between English-speaking jurisdictions, reflecting differences in legal systems, terminology, and conventions. For example, Indian legal English may differ from British, American or Australian legal English in terms of vocabulary, spelling, and citation format.
Legal English is crucial in facilitating communication and understanding within the legal profession and the broader community. While it can be complex and challenging to navigate, clear and effective communication in legal English is essential for ensuring justice, upholding the rule of law, and protecting the rights and interests of individuals and organisations.
Glossary of Legal Terms
Abandonment | giving up a legal right. |
Abatement |
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Abduction | taking someone away by force. |
Abet | to help or encourage someone to do something wrong or illegal. |
Ab initio | from the start of something. (This phrase is Latin.) |
Abovementioned | describing something which has been referred to before in the document. |
Abrogate | to end a law, agreement, or custom formally. |
Abscond | when a person fails to present themselves before the court when required, such as when they have been released on bail and not returned to court. |
Absolute | complete and unconditional. |
Absolute discharge | someone who has been convicted of an offence being released without any penalty. (They may still have to pay compensation though.) |
Absolute owner | the only owner of property such as equipment, buildings, land or vehicles. |
Absolute privilege | a defence which can be used in a case of defamation if the statement from which the defamation arose was:
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Abstract of title | a document, drawn up by the seller, summarising the title deeds to a property (such as a house). |
Abuse of process | when criminal proceedings are brought against a person without there being any good reason and with malice. |
Abuttals | the parts of the boundaries of a piece of land which touch pieces of land alongside. |
Acceptance | when an offer is accepted unconditionally and a legally binding agreement is created. |
Acceptance of service | when a solicitor accepts a writ on behalf of a client. |
Acceptor | the organisation (such as a bank) which will pay the cheque or bill of exchange it has accepted. |
Accessory | someone who encourages or helps another person to commit a crime. |
Accomplice | someone who helps another person to commit a crime. |
Accordingly | a word used in legal documents which means therefore or so. |
Accounts | the record of an organisation’s income, spending and financial situation. |
Accumulation | reinvesting income generated by a fund back into the fund. |
Accused | the person charged with a criminal offence. |
Acknowledgement | admitting that someone has a claim or admitting that a debt exists. |
Acknowledgement of Service | when a defendant agrees that a writ or originating summons has been received. The defendant fills in, signs and sends back the acknowledgement of service to confirm in writing that the documents were received. |
Acquiescence | consent which is expressed or implied from conduct. |
Acquit | when a court lets a person go without any penalty. If a court decides that a person is not guilty of a crime, or the case has not been proved, it will acquit the person. |
Acquittal | the court’s decision that a person is innocent of the crime they were charged with. |
Action | using the law to make a claim. |
Active trust | a trust where the trustees have other responsibilities rather than to just let the beneficiaries have the trust’s assets when they ask for them. |
Act of bankruptcy | an act which, if carried out by a person with debts, could have led to bankruptcy proceedings against that person. |
Act of God | an extreme naturally occurring event (such as an earthquake, avalanche or flood) that could not have been anticipated. |
Actual bodily harm | hurting another person but less severely than would amount to grievous bodily harm. |
Actual loss | an insurance term which means that the insured item no longer exists. |
Actuary | an expert on pension scheme assets and liabilities, life expectancy and probabilities (the likelihood of things happening) for insurance purposes. An actuary works out whether enough money is being paid into a pension scheme to pay the pensions when they are due. |
Actus reus | an act which is illegal, such as theft. (This term is Latin.) |
Additional voluntary contribution (AVC) | extra money people in occupational pension schemes can pay in to increase their pension benefits. |
Ademption | when a gift in a will cannot be made because the item no longer exists. |
Ad hoc | for a particular purpose. For example, a committee set up to deal with a particular situation is an ad hoc committee. (This term is Latin.) |
Ad idem | in agreement. (This term is Latin.) |
Ad infinitum | endlessly or forever. (This term is Latin.) |
Adjourned sine die | when a court case has no date fixed for it to continue. |
Adjournment | postponing a court hearing. |
Adjudge/adjudicate | to give an official judgement about something. For example, if someone cannot pay their debts a court may adjudge them bankrupt. |
Adjudication order | the former name for a court order which made someone bankrupt. It has now been replaced with the term bankruptcy order. |
Administration order | an order made by a county court when a person or a company cannot pay their debts. Normally the court orders that the debts are repaid by instalments and as long as the debtor keeps to the order the creditors cannot do anything else to recover their money. |
Administrator | someone who has been appointed: to manage the affairs of a bankrupt business; or to manage the estate of someone who has died without leaving a will. |
Admissibility of evidence | which evidence can be presented in court. Evidence must be relevant to the case but even some relevant evidence cannot be presented, such as hearsay or evidence of little value. The judge decides whether or not evidence can be used in the case. |
Admission | one side in a case agreeing that something the other side has alleged is true. |
Admonition | reprimanding of a defendant by a judge even though the case against the defendant has been discharged (dropped). |
Adoption | the system which people use to become parents, even though they are not the child’s natural parents. |
Adoptive child | a child who has been legally adopted. |
Adoptive parent | a person who has legally adopted a child. |
Ad valorem | in proportion to the value. An ad valorem duty goes up as the value of the goods, shares and so on that it is charged on rises. (This term is Latin.) |
Adverse possession | intentionally occupying land to prevent the rightful owner or tenant using it. |
Adverse witness | a witness who gives evidence which damages the case of the side which asked the witness to testify for them. |
Advocate | the lawyer who speaks in court for a client. |
Affidavit | a written statement which is sworn to be true by the person signing it. It is sworn before someone authorised by the court. |
Affirm | to:
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Affirmation | solemnly promising to tell the truth when giving evidence. It is an alternative to swearing an oath when the person giving evidence does not wish to. |
Affray | fighting unlawfully. It is a criminal offence. |
Aforementioned | describing something referred to previously in the document. |
Aforesaid | describing something which has been said or referred to before in the document. |
Agency | the relationship between a principal and an agent. |
Agent | someone appointed to act for a principal. |
Age of consent | the age when a person can consent to have sexual intercourse. |
Aggravated assault | a more serious type of assault such as one leading to actual bodily harm. |
Aggravated burglary | entering premises armed with a weapon, intending to steal goods. |
Aggravated damages | extra damages awarded because the defendant has caused the victim anguish, loss of self-respect or shame. |
Aggravated vehicle taking | stealing a vehicle, driving it dangerously and as a result injuring someone or damaging property. |
Aggrieved person | a person or group of people that has suffered harm such as injury, financial loss, or damage to property. |
Agnates | relatives whose relationship can be traced wholly through males. One’s father’s brother, or father’s brother’s son are agnates. |
Agricultural holding | a type of tenancy agreement for someone doing agricultural work. The tenant has special rights including, when the tenancy finishes, the right to compensation for improvements to the land. If the land has deteriorated the tenant must compensate the landlord. |
Aiding and abetting | helping someone to commit a crime. |
Airspace | the space in the atmosphere directly above a piece of land. If you own a piece of land you also own the airspace above the land. |
Alias | a false name. |
Alibi | a claim that a person was elsewhere when a crime was committed. If someone is accused of a crime their alibi is:
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Alien | a person who resides within the border of the country but is not subject to that country. |
Alienation | transferring the ownership of property from one person to another. |
Alimony | a court ordered allowance that one spouse pays to the other spouse for maintenance and support while they are separated. |
All and sundry | everybody. |
Allegation | an unproved statement declaring that something has happened. |
Alleviate | to lessen or reduce. |
Allocation rate | the proportion of money left to be invested after charges have been taken off when money is paid into a fund (such as a pension fund). For example, if the charges were 2%, the allocation rate would be 98%. |
Allotment | shares allocated to a buyer. An allotment of shares in a company gives the owner (of the allotment) an unconditional right to buy the shares at a fixed price. |
All that | words used in a conveyance to introduce the description of the property which is being conveyed. |
Alternate director | a person appointed by a director to take the director’s place. |
Alternative verdict | a person being found guilty of a less serious crime than the one they were charged with. If a more serious charge has not been proved and the defendant has been found not guilty, the defendant may be found guilty of a less serious crime instead. For example, there may not be enough evidence to convict someone of a murder but there may still be enough for a manslaughter conviction. This is known as an alternative verdict. |
Amalgamation | two or more companies combining. |
Ambiguity | capability of more than one meaning. When a statement’s meaning is not clear because it is capable of more than one meaning, it contains an ambiguity. |
Ambulatory will | a will which can be revoked or changed while the person who made it is still living. |
Amnesty | not punishing a person for an offence they have committed and removing details of the offence from the court’s records is giving the person an amnesty. |
Ancient lights | the right not to have the light you receive from a neighbour’s land blocked. |
Annual accounts | the summary of an organisation’s financial transactions during the year covered by their accounts, and a ‘snapshot’ of the assets and liabilities at the end of the year. |
Annual general meeting | the yearly meeting of the members of an organisation which must be held to meet legal conditions. The annual accounts are presented for approval at this meeting. |
Annual return | a return which must be sent by companies to the Registrar of Companies. Each year the officers of a company have to fill in an annual return with details of the members, officers, shares issued and other information about the company. The return is then sent to Companies House for filing and is available for inspection by members of the public. |
Annuitant | the person who gets paid an annuity. |
Annuity | an amount paid out every year to someone. The money usually comes from an insurance policy. It can be split up into smaller amounts and be paid out more frequently, such as monthly. It is usually paid for the rest of the beneficiary’s life. |
Annul | to cancel:
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Ante | before. (This is a Latin word.) |
Antecedents | details about the past of a defendant or a person found guilty of a crime. The information about previous crimes, background and bad behaviour is given to the court before the sentence is given. |
Antenuptial agreement | a legal agreement between two people who are about to get married. The agreement sets out how the couple’s assets will be divided between them if they later divorce. |
Anton Piller order | an order by the court which gives the applicant permission to search the defendant’s premises for evidence, inspect it and take it away. It is intended to prevent evidence being destroyed or hidden which would be relevant to the case, also known as a ‘search order’. |
Appeal | asking a court to overturn a lower court’s decision. If the decision of a court is disputed it may be possible to ask a higher court to consider the case again by lodging an appeal. |
Appellant | the person who is appealing to a court against a decision of a lower court. |
Appellate jurisdiction | the authority a court has to hear an appeal against a decision made by a lower court. |
Appertaining to applicant | the person asking a court to do something. |
Appointee | the person who gets the benefit of the use of a power of appointment. |
Appointor | the person who uses a power of appointment. |
Approver | an accomplice to a felony/crime, who confesses his or her guilt and gives evidence against their illegal acts. |
Appurtenances | minor rights in land such as a right to do something on the land. |
Arbitrage | is:
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Arbitration | settling a dispute by using a referee. If a dispute goes to arbitration it is settled by an independent referee. It avoids having to use the courts to settle the dispute. |
Arbitrator | the independent referee who settles a dispute without the need to use the courts. |
Arraignment | a procedure at the start of a trial when details of the offences are read out and the defendants are asked whether they will plead guilty or not guilty. |
Arrest | to seize someone, usually because they are suspected of committing a crime, and take them into custody. |
Arrestable offence | a crime for which a person may be arrested without a warrant being needed. |
Arson | setting fire to something to cause damage to it. |
Articles | the clauses in a document. A company’s articles set out its rules. The articles form part of the memorandum and articles of association. |
Articles of association | documents which set out a company’s rules. |
Assault | when someone threatens another person with physical harm. Words on their own do not amount to assault but threatening gestures do, even if the person threatened is not touched. |
Assent | a document used by personal representatives to transfer property to a beneficiary. |
Asset | something owned such as a building, a vehicle or money in the bank. |
Assign | to formally transfer something, such as when ownership of property is transferred from one person to another. |
Assignment | the formal transfer of the rights to something. An example would be a bank customer assigning to the bank the right to receive the benefits from a life insurance policy to give the bank security for a loan. |
Assurance | insurance cover for an event which will definitely happen, such as death. |
Assure | to transfer the ownership of something. |
Assured | the person whose life is insured or who is entitled to receive the benefit from the assurance cover. |
Assured shorthold tenancy | a type of tenancy agreement under which the landlord has the right to take the property back at the end of the tenancy agreement. |
Asylum | an institution for the maintenance and care of the mentally ill, orphans, or other persons requiring specialized assistance or when a person who is afraid of being prosecuted in his home state runs away to another state for protection. |
Attachment of earnings | a court order that deductions be made from a person’s earnings. The employer pays the money collected to the court and the court pays the money to the people it is owed to. |
Attest | to sign to witness a signature on a document. |
Attorney | a person appointed to act for another person (such as when someone cannot look after their own affairs). A formal document called a power of attorney is used to appoint the attorney. It is also the name used for a US lawyer. |
Attorney General | the chief legal adviser to the Government. He or she must be a Member of Parliament (or have a seat in the House of Lords) and must be a barrister. |
Audit | an independent examination of an organisation’s records and financial statements (report and accounts) to make sure that:
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Auditor’s report | a report and opinion, by an independent person or firm, on an organisation’s financial records. |
Authorised share capital | the highest amount of share capital that a company can issue. The amount is set out in the company’s memorandum of association. |
Authorised investments | investments in which a trustee is permitted to invest trust money, under an Act of Parliament. |
Autopsy | an examination of a dead body to find the cause of death. |
Bail | to pay, or promise to pay, an amount of money so that an accused person is not put in prison before the trial. If the accused person does not appear at the trial, the court can keep the money put up for bail. |
Bailee | a person or organisation looking after valuable items to keep them safe for the owner. |
Bail hostel | accommodation found for people charged with offences and released on bail, but who do not have a permanent address so that the police know where to find them. |
Bailiff | an officer of the court who carries out the court’s orders, such as taking a debtor’s goods and selling them to get money to pay the debtor’s debts. A bailiff can also personally deliver (serve) documents on people. |
Bailiwick | the area over which a bailiff has jurisdiction. |
Bailment | transferring possession of goods from the owner to someone else. The ownership of the goods is not transferred. A practical example of bailment is that someone who hires a car has possession of it, but the rental company still owns the television. |
Bailor | the owner of valuable items which are in the possession of another person or organisation for safekeeping. |
Balance sheet | a summary of an organisation’s financial position. It lists the values, in the books of account on a particular date, of all the organisation’s assets and liabilities. The assets and liabilities are grouped in categories and paint a picture of the organisation’s strengths and weaknesses. |
Banker’s draft | a cheque drawn by a bank on itself. It is used when there must be certainty that a cheque will be paid. |
Bankrupt | someone who has had a bankruptcy order. |
Bankruptcy order | an order that a court may issue against someone if they cannot pay their debts when they are due to be paid. This order takes ownership of the debtor’s property away from the debtor and allows much of the property to be sold. The money raised is divided between the creditors following strict rules. |
Bankruptcy search | a document which says whether or not someone is bankrupt. |
Bar | the collective term for barristers. When a lawyer becomes a barrister, it is called ‘being called to the bar’. |
Bare trust | a trust which holds property on behalf of a person until they ask for it back. |
Bare trustee | someone who holds property on behalf of another person until asked to return the property. |
Bargain and sale | a contract to sell any property or investment in land that a person owns. |
Barrister | a lawyer who can speak in the higher courts, which a solicitor is not allowed to do. |
Barter | a way of paying for things by exchanging goods instead of using money. |
Battery | using physical force on someone either intentionally or carelessly and without their agreement. It would not be battery if two boxers took part in a boxing match, even though they hurt each other during the match, because they would have agreed to fight each other. |
Bearer | the person who has a document in their possession. |
Bench | the name for the judges or magistrates in a court. |
Bench warrant | a warrant issued by a court for the arrest of an accused person who has failed to attend the court. It is also issued when someone has committed contempt of court and can’t be traced. |
Beneficial interest | belonging to a person even though someone else is the legal owner. If something really belongs to someone, even if that person does not legally own it, they have a beneficial interest in it. If, for instance, parents hold an investment on behalf of their child they are the legal owners, but the child is the beneficial owner of the investment. |
Beneficial owner | the owner of a piece of land (and the buildings on it). Beneficial owners have the right:
It can also be a person who really owns something even though it is held in someone else’s name. |
Beneficiary | someone who benefits from a will, a trust or a life insurance policy. |
Bequeath | to leave something (such as possessions or money) to someone in your will. You cannot bequeath land or real property but you can devise them instead. |
Bequest | something given in a will, other than land or real property. |
Bicameral | having two branches, chambers, or houses, as a legislative body. India has bicameral legislature -Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha. |
Bigamy | the offence committed by someone who is already married but still goes through a marriage ceremony with someone else. |
Bill of costs | the invoice the solicitor sends to a client giving details of any disbursements the solicitor has paid on behalf of the client, the fee the solicitor is charging and any expenses. |
Bill of exchange | a signed written order, instructing the person it is addressed to to pay an amount of money to someone. A cheque is a type of bill of exchange. |
Bill of lading | a document recording the goods a ship carries and the terms the goods are carried under. |
Bill of sale | a document which transfers ownership of goods from one person to another. |
Binding effect | the fact that an agreement must be kept to by law. |
Binding over | an order by a court in a criminal case. If someone has misbehaved or broken the peace, magistrates can bind them over. The magistrates can order them to pay a bond. This will be forfeited (won’t be repaid) if the binding over terms are broken. |
Binding precedent | following the decisions made by higher courts. Lower courts must follow the precedents set by the decisions of higher courts and this is called binding precedent. |
Blackmail | demanding payment from a person in return for not revealing something shameful about them. |
Blasphemy | attacking religion or religious tenets. |
Bodily harm | physical injury or pain. |
Bona fide | genuine, sincere or in good faith. (This term is Latin.) |
Bona vacantia | goods or an estate belonging to nobody. (This term is Latin.) |
Bond | a written promise to repay a debt at an agreed time and to pay an agreed rate of interest on the debt. |
Bonded goods | goods for which a bond has been paid to Customs and Excise as security for the duty owed on the goods. |
Bonded warehouse | a warehouse approved by Customs and Excise for storing goods imported into India until the duty on them has been paid or the goods have been exported to another country. |
Bonus shares | free shares that a company offers to its shareholders, in proportion to their existing shareholdings. |
Book value | the value of a fixed asset, such as a building or machine, as recorded in an organisation’s books. It is usually the amount paid for the asset less an amount for depreciation. |
Bought note | a document showing details of a purchase by someone for a third party. Stockbrokers produce bought notes for their clients. The bought note shows details of the investments the broker has bought for the client, including the price paid and any commission and duty charged. |
Breach of contract | failing to carry out a duty under a contract. |
Breach of duty | failing to carry out something which is required by law, or doing something the law forbids. |
Breach of the peace (or breaking the peace) | when harm is done to someone, or harm is threatened. |
Breach of trust | when a trustee does something which is against the trust’s rules or fails to do something required by the trust’s rules. |
Break clause | a clause in a contract which allows it to be ended. |
Brief | a document prepared by a solicitor which contains the instructions for the barrister to follow when acting for the solicitor in court. |
Brother of full blood | a brother by birth. |
Building preservation notice | a notice that a building is listed. If a building is in danger of being altered or demolished, but the local planning authority thinks it should be preserved, the authority can issue a notice that the building is listed. |
Burden of proof | the task of proving that you are correct. |
Burglary | entering a building without permission with the intention of stealing or doing damage. |
Bye-law or bylaw | a law made by a local authority. It only applies within the local authority’s boundaries. |
Cabinet | a council advising a president, sovereign, etc., especially the group of ministers or executives responsible for the government of a nation. |
Call | asking people to pay for new shares they have applied for. A company makes a call when it asks buyers of its new shares to pay some, or all, of the share price. When this happens the shares are being called up. |
Called-up capital | all the shares called by a company when it issues shares. When calls have been made for the whole of the share price and the shareholders have paid, the shares become paid-up share capital. |
Canon law | the name for the rules used for running a Christian church. |
Capacity | someone’s ability to enter into a legal agreement. For example, a minor would not be able to buy something on credit. |
Capital allowances | allowances that you can sometimes claim when you buy long-term assets, such as machines, to use in your business. You claim part of the cost against your profits before your tax is worked out for the year. |
Capital gain | the profit you make if you sell or dispose of a longterm asset (such as a building) for more than it cost you. |
Capital gains tax | a tax charged on certain capital gains. |
Capital punishment | punishing someone for a crime by killing them. |
Capital redemption reserve | A company has to have this reserve in its financial records and in its accounts if any of the shares it has issued are cancelled. The reserve cannot be paid out to the members until the company is liquidated and so it prevents the company’s capital being reduced. |
Careless driving | driving a car without consideration for other people using the road. |
Care order | an order by a court instructing the local authority to care for a child. |
Cartel | an agreement between businesses to restrict competition and keep prices high. |
Case law | law that is based on the results of previous court cases. |
Case stated | the written statement setting out the facts of a case. It is produced by a magistrates’ court when asking the High Court for an opinion on the law. |
Causation | one thing being done causing something else to happen. |
Cause of action | the reason someone is entitled to sue someone else. |
Causing death by careless and inconsiderate driving | an offence committed by someone who is unfit to drive, but nevertheless drives a vehicle and kills another person. The punishment for careless and inconsiderate driving is less severe than for dangerous driving. |
Causing death by dangerous driving | a criminal offence committed by someone whose driving is dangerous and results in another person being killed. The courts consider dangerous driving to be a very serious offence. |
Caution | is:
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Caveat | a warning or proviso of specific stipulations, conditions, or limitations. (This is a Latin term.) |
Caveat emptor | ‘buyer beware’. It is used to warn people buying goods that they may not be able to get compensation if the goods they buy are faulty. (This is a Latin term.) |
Certificate of Incorporation | a certificate stating that a company has been incorporated (that is, it has a separate existence from its members). The Registrar of Companies issues the certificate of incorporation once a company has been formed. |
Certificate of origin | a certificate stating in which country the goods being imported were made. |
Certiorari | an order by the High Court that a case should be reviewed. If the High Court considers that a case heard in a lower court is flawed it may order that it be reviewed by the High Court. (This word is Latin.) |
Challenge for cause | when the defence objects to a juror and says why it objects. |
Challenge to a jury | when either side in a case objects to the people who have been selected to serve on the jury before they are sworn in. |
Challenge to the array | when the defence objects to all the jurors. |
Challenge without cause | happens when the defence objects to a juror but does not say why. |
Chambers | the offices used by barristers and the judge’s private office. |
Charge | means:
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Chargeable event | an event that may create a tax liability (tax bill). |
Chargeable gain | a gain on which capital gains tax is payable. If a capital asset such as a building is sold or disposed of at a profit, tax on the gain has to be worked out unless the capital asset is one exempted by law. |
Charge certificate | a certificate which the Land Registry issues to the legal mortgagee (the lender) who has lent money on the security of registered land. It is proof of the legal mortgagee’s right to the security. |
Charges clause | a clause which appears in some contracts and sets out who should pay for certain items. |
Charge sheet | the document on which a police officer records details of the accusation against a suspect. |
Charges register | part of the certificate which is evidence of someone’s title. The register shows details of any mortgages, restrictions on the use of the land or rights someone else may have over the land such as a right of way. |
Charging clause | trustees can charge the trust for their services if there is a charging clause. |
Charging order | a court judgement which a creditor may get against the person or organisation which owes the money, giving the creditor security over the debtor’s property for repayment of the debt. |
Charity | an organisation set up to do good for the community, such as help poor people, educate people and protect animals. Most charities are registered with the Charity Commission. |
Charity Commission | an organisation responsible for checking that charities are run properly. It also decides whether proposed charities can be placed on the register of charities. |
Chattel | any property except freehold land. |
Chattels personal | the name for tangible goods (goods which can be touched) such as watches, clothes, furniture and so on. |
Chattels real | another name for leasehold land. |
Cheat | a person who fails to send tax returns to the tax authorities or fails to pay the tax owing, such as income tax or value added tax. |
Cheque | a written order, addressed to a bank, instructing the bank to pay an amount of money to the person or organisation named on the cheque. The bank takes the money out of the relevant customer’s account. |
Cheque card | a card issued by a bank to a customer. It guarantees that a cheque used with the card will be paid if the person issuing the cheque has kept to all the conditions. |
Chief rent | money charged regularly on freehold land. Despite its name it is not rent. |
Child abuse | molestation or ill-treatment suffered by a child. |
Child assessment order | an order which a local authority may apply to a court for to assess a child’s situation if there are concerns about the child’s welfare. |
Children in care | children looked after by a local authority. The local authority takes on the responsibility for the children as if it was a parent. |
Child Support Maintenance | the amount of maintenance the parent not living with their child must pay. |
Chose | an item of property (anything which can be owned). |
Chose in action | a right such as a patent, or a right to recover a debt. A chose in action does not physically exist. For example, you cannot touch patents or rights because they have no physical existence. |
Chose in possession | an object which physically exists, such as furniture. |
Circumstantial evidence | evidence which suggests a fact but does not prove the fact is true. |
Citation | is:
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Citizen’s arrest | an arrest by someone who is not a police officer. The offence must be being committed or have already been committed when the arrest is done. |
Civil court | a court which does not hear criminal cases. It deals with people’s rights such as collection of debts. |
Claim | means:
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Claimant | the person making a claim. |
Clause | a section in a contract. |
Clearing bank | one of several major banks which work together to exchange and pay for cheques which their customers have written. |
Clerk to the Justices | a solicitor or barrister who helps in court by advising the magistrates. |
Client | a person or group that uses the professional advice or services of a lawyer, accountant, advertising agency, architect, etc. |
Close company | a company controlled by five people or fewer, or by its directors. |
Closing order | an order prohibiting the use of a house because the house is not fit for humans to live in. |
Code | code is a collection of laws, rules or regulations that are systematically arranged. |
Codicil | extra pages to change a valid will which needs a minor alteration. The codicil must be signed and witnessed and then be attached to the will. |
Codifying statute | a statute used to bring together all the strands of the law on a particular subject. |
Coercion | a defence that a crime was committed because the person accused was forced to do it. |
Collateral | extra security for a debt. If there is a main security for a debt, such as a house being security for a mortgage, any extra security supplied is called collateral. |
Collusion | secret agreement, especially in order to do something dishonest. |
Committal order | an order used to send someone to prison for contempt of court. |
Committal proceedings | a hearing where magistrates work out if there is enough evidence of a serious crime to justify a trial by jury. |
Committee of Inspection | a committee appointed from the creditors of a company in liquidation to oversee the liquidator’s work. |
Common assault | when someone threatens another person with physical harm, even if they are not touched. This is a less serious type of assault (compare with aggravated assault). Threatening someone with a weapon such as a knife or gun is common assault. |
Common duty of care | the duty of the occupier of premises or land to take reasonable care of visitors to make sure that they are kept safe. |
Common seal | the seal companies use to authenticate (validate) important company documents. The company’s name is engraved on the seal. |
Commorientes | closely related people who die at the same time, and it is unclear which of them died first. (This term is Latin.) |
Community service order | an order to do work in the community without pay. If someone has been convicted of a crime they may be given a community service order as an alternative to being sent to prison. |
Companies House | the office which stores company information such as annual accounts, directors’ names and addresses and the registered office address. People who are interested in a company can inspect some of the information stored. |
Company secretary | a person appointed by the directors of a company who is responsible for making sure that the company complies with the Companies Acts. |
Compensation | money paid to make up for damage or loss caused. |
Compensation for loss of office | lump-sum compensation a company pays to an employee whose contract has been ended. |
Compensation order | an order by a court to a criminal to compensate the victim of the crime. |
Completion | transferring property in exchange for payment. When there is a contract to sell land, there will be an initial payment to confirm the contract. Completion happens when the ownership of the land is transferred to the person buying it, in return for the seller receiving the rest of the purchase price. |
Composition with creditors | an arrangement between a debtor and the creditors. The creditors agree to accept a proportion of what is owed to them in full settlement. |
Compulsory purchase | taking land and giving compensation for it. When land is needed for a project, such as a road, local authorities and other public bodies can take the land off the landowner. Compensation has to be paid to the landowner. |
Compulsory winding up | the liquidation of a company by order of the court. It usually happens because the company has not been able to pay its bills on time and a creditor has presented to the court a petition for winding up the company. |
Concealment | failure by one side negotiating a contract to disclose (reveal) information which the other side would need to consider when deciding whether or not to go ahead. |
Concealment of securities | hiding or destroying a document such as a will to gain benefit for yourself or cause other people loss of benefit. |
Conclusive evidence | evidence which by law cannot be disputed. |
Concurrent sentence | when someone is sentenced for different crimes and the sentences are to be served at the same time. |
Condition | a fundamental part of an agreement. The agreement or contract may collapse if a condition is broken. |
Conditional agreement | an agreement which depends on a certain thing happening in the future. If the event does not happen the agreement will not start to operate. |
Conditional discharge | A court may decide not to punish a criminal immediately for an offence and may conditionally discharge the criminal instead. If the criminal reoffends the court may impose a punishment for the original offence as well as the later ones. |
Conditional sale agreement | an agreement by which the seller remains the owner of the goods until all the instalments have been paid and all other conditions have been met. |
Condition precedent | something which must happen before a contract starts. |
Condition subsequent | something which may happen in the future and, if it does, will affect a contract. |
Confiscation order | If someone has been convicted of a crime the court may order the person convicted to pay the court a sum of money. This is called a confiscation order. |
Conjugal rights | the rights of partners. |
Consecutive sentence | when someone is sentenced for different crimes and the sentences have to be served one after another. |
Consent | to agree to something. A contract would not be valid unless all the parties consented to it. |
Consideration | the price you pay for something. |
Consignee | the person goods have been sent to. |
Consignor | the person who sent the goods. |
Conspiracy | is:
|
Constructive | describing something which may not be set out in the law but will nevertheless be considered to exist. |
Constructive dismissal | because the employer has broken fundamental terms of the contract of employment the employee has been forced to resign. The employee can apply for a hearing before an industrial tribunal. |
Constructive notice | presuming something is known. The law sometimes presumes that a person knows something even though they do not. |
Consumer | a person or thing that consumes or enjoys services and products. |
Consumer credit agreement | an agreement by a creditor, such as a bank, to provide credit to a consumer. |
Contempt of court | the offence of:
|
Contemptuous damages | tiny damages. Sometimes, even though a case has been won, the court may consider that it should not have been brought to court and will only award tiny damages. |
Contingency fee | the claimant’s lawyer gets paid the fee only if the case is won by the claimant. The fee is often a proportion of the damages won. |
Contingent legacy | a gift in a will which will only be made if certain conditions are met. |
Contract | an agreement between two or more people (or groups) to do (or not to do) something. The agreement can be enforced by law. |
Contract for services | a contract under which materials and services are provided by a contractor. |
Contract of exchange | a contract to exchange goods without money being involved (barter). |
Contract of service | the contract between employer and employee. |
Contributory negligence | your own carelessness contributing to the damage done to you or your property. When someone suffers damage or injury their claim for damages may be limited if they have contributed to the harm done through their own carelessness. |
Conversion | is:
|
Convey | to transfer the ownership of something. |
Conveyance | the name of the document which transfers the ownership of land. |
Conveyancing | the name for carrying out all the actions needed to transfer the ownership of a piece of land. |
Conviction | being found guilty of a criminal offence. |
Copyright | a legal right which stops things being copied without permission. If you have the copyright over something (such as a book or music), nobody can copy it or reproduce it without your permission. |
Coroner | a person who investigates the cause of death when a person has suffered a sudden, violent or suspicious death. |
Corporate body (or corporation) | a group of people acting together, such as a club. The group has a separate legal identity from the individual members’ identities. A company is another example of a corporate body. |
Corporation tax | a tax which companies pay on their profits. |
Corpus | the name for a body (usually dead). (This word is Latin.) |
Corpus delicti | is:
|
Counsel | a barrister or group of barristers. |
Counterclaim | making a claim in court against someone who has already made a claim in court against you. |
Counterfeit | something that is forged or copied with the intention of deceiving. |
Counterpart | an exact copy of a document. |
Coupon | a dated piece of paper attached to a bond. The coupon has to be surrendered (given back) to get the interest or dividend on the bond. |
Court of Appeal | a court which hears appeals against the decisions of other courts. |
Covenant | a contract or legally binding promise. |
Creditor | a person you owe money to. |
Creditors’ voluntary winding up | If a company is insolvent (cannot pay its debts when they are due for payment) the members can pass a special resolution to have the company wound up (liquidated). This is called a creditors’ voluntary winding up. |
Criminal | of or relating to crime or its punishment. |
Criminal damage | the criminal offence of causing damage to someone else’s property either recklessly or intentionally. |
Criminal negligence | a conduct in which a person ignores a known or obvious risk, or disregards the life and safety of others. |
Criminal responsibility | When someone reaches the age when the law says they are able to commit a criminal offence they have reached the age of criminal responsibility. |
Cross-examine | to question a witness for the other side in a case. |
Cruelty | conduct by a person (spouse) that causes grievous bodily harm or mental suffering. It is considered to be one of the following grounds of divorce. |
Culpa | blameworthiness or a fault. (This word is Latin.) |
Culpable | liable or responsible. It also means to be at fault. |
Cum dividend | with dividend. If a share is sold cum dividend, the buyer will receive the dividend that was declared just before the share was bought. |
Cumulative preference shares | shares which carry forward unpaid dividends. If dividends on these shares have not been paid in previous years the arrears must be paid before a dividend can be paid on the ordinary shares. |
Curfew | a court ordering someone to stay at a named place at stated times of the day. |
Custody | is:
|
Customs duties | duties which are charged on imports of goods into the UK and on some exports. |
Damages | the name for money awarded by a court as compensation. |
Dangerous driving | a standard of driving which falls far below that of a careful, competent driver and it would be obvious to such a driver that it was dangerous to drive that way. |
Debenture | a document issued by a company which acknowledges that some or all of the company’s assets are security for a debt (usually to a bank). It is also the name for certain long-term loans to companies. |
Debt | money owed. |
Debtor | someone who owes you money. |
Debt securities | debts which can be bought and sold, such as debentures. |
Deceit | when one person deliberately misleads a second person with a statement which causes the second person to do something that causes them damage. |
Decree | an order by a court. |
Decree absolute | the final court order which ends a marriage. |
Decree nisi | a provisional court order which orders that a marriage should be dissolved. |
Deed | a legal document which commits the person signing it to something. |
Deed of arrangement | a written agreement which can be made, when a debtor is in financial trouble, between the debtor and the creditors. It is intended to benefit the creditors and avoid the bankruptcy of the debtor. The creditors get a proportion of the money owing to them. |
De facto | in fact or in reality. (This term is Latin.) |
Defamation | making a statement, either orally or in writing, which damages someone’s reputation. |
Default | failing to do something which had been agreed to. |
Defence | the name for the team of people (lawyers and so on) against proceedings brought against someone. It is also in a civil case a written statement (pleading) by the defendant setting out the facts that the defence will rely on. |
Defendant | a person defending a court action which has been taken against them. |
De jure | rightfully. (This term is Latin.) |
De minimis non curat lex | the law will not take account of trifling matters. (This phrase is Latin.) |
Dependant | someone who depends on someone else for financial support. |
Deponent | a person who swears on oath that a statement is correct. |
Deportation | the lawful expulsion of an alien or other person from a country. It also means banishment or transportation. |
Depose | to give evidence on oath in the Court of law. |
Deposition | a statement, by a witness, made under oath. |
Depreciation | the drop in value of an asset due to wear and tear, age and obsolescence (going out of date), as recorded in an organisation’s financial records. |
Derogation | damaging someone’s rights or entitlements. |
Determination | ending an agreement. |
Devise | to leave land in a will. |
Devisee | the person who is left freehold property or land in a will. |
Diminished responsibility | a defence sometimes used for someone charged with murder, that they suffered lowered powers of reasoning and judgement because of their unusual state of mind. If their defence succeeds they will be convicted of manslaughter. |
Diocese | the area covered by a bishop’s authority. |
Diplomatic immunity | immunity given to certain members of foreign embassies, such as ambassadors, for crimes they may have committed. |
Direction/directing | judges must give juries instructions on points of law. This is called directing the jury. |
Director | a person appointed to help manage a company’s affairs. |
Disbursement | a payment made by a professional person, such as a solicitor or accountant, on behalf of a client. The money is claimed back by including it on the bill for professional services which is sent to the client. |
Discharge | release from:
|
Disclaim/disclaimer | to give up a claim or a right or refuse to take over an onerous (having more obligations than advantages) contract. A disclaimer can also be a notice to limit responsibility. |
Discovery | one party in a civil case revealing to the other party the documents relevant to the case under the first party’s control and allowing them to be inspected. |
Discretionary trust | a trust in which the trustees can decide who will benefit from the trust and how much they will get. |
Disfranchise | to deprive (a person) of a right of citizenship, as of the right to vote or to deprive of a franchise, privilege or right. |
Dishonour of bill | when the acceptor of the bill is unable to pay the amount of the bill on the date of maturity. It can be either non payment or non acceptance and is equivalent to a bounced cheque. |
Disposal (dispose of) | selling, transferring or giving away something. |
Distrain/distress | to seize goods as security for an unpaid debt. |
Dividend | a type of distribution of profits made by a company to its members. |
Divorce | the legal end to a marriage. |
Divorce petition | an application for the legal ending of a marriage. |
Domicile | the country where your permanent home is, even if you are living somewhere else for now. |
Domiciled | permanently based in a country. |
Domicile of choice | the country in which you make your home, intending it to be permanent. |
Domicile of origin | the domicile a newborn child has. This is usually its father’s domicile or, if the father is dead, its mother’s. |
Dominium | complete power to use, to enjoy, and to dispose of property at will. |
Doom | a judge ment, decision, or sentence, especially an unfavourable one. |
Dower | the portion of a deceased husband’s real property allowed to his widow for her lifetime. |
Drawee | the organisation which will pay a bill of exchange (such as a cheque). In the case of a cheque, this is the bank that the cheque is drawn on. |
Drawer | the person or organisation that has written a bill of exchange, such as a person who has written a cheque. |
Duress | threatening or pressurising someone to do something. |
Duty | a levy charged by the Government, usually when things are bought, such as shares or buildings. |
Dying declaration | a statement made by a declarant as to the cause of his death or who died explaining the cause of his death. |
Easement | a right to use someone else’s land, such as a right of way. |
Ejectment | a civil action to recover the possession of or title of land against a defaulting tenant or a trespasser. |
Embezzlement | an act of fraudulently obtaining another’s property by some kind of false pretense. (This word is from Anglo Norman French.) |
Emoluments | a salary, fee, or profit from employment or office. |
Enabling legislation | legislation which authorises government ministers or bodies to create detailed rules to accomplish general principles set out in the legislation. For example it may allow a minister to create rules or laws for a particular body, such as the police, to follow. |
Enactment | the process of passing legislation. |
Encroacher | someone who enters by force in order to conquer/ trespasser. It can also be termed as invader, outsider, intruder etc. |
Endorsement | a change to the original terms of a contract, such as an insurance policy. |
Endowment | a voluntary transfer generally as a gift of money or property to an institution for a particular purpose. |
Endowment policy | a type of insurance policy which will pay out a lump sum on a fixed date in the future, or when you die if this happens earlier. |
Engrossment | preparing the final version of a legal document ready for it to be executed (made valid such as with a signature). |
Equitable mortgage | the type of mortgage where the purchaser owns the property which is security for the mortgage. |
Escape | break free from confinement or control. |
Escheat | when an individual dies intestate(without making will) and does not leave behind an heir who is qualified to succeed to the property, the property devolves on the Government because government/state is the lord paramount of the whole soil of the country. |
Escrow | a deed which has been supplied but cannot become effective until a future date, or until a particular event happens. |
Estate | is:
|
Estimate | an offer to do stated work for a set price. |
Estoppel | a rule of law that a person cannot deny something they previously said, if someone else acted on what was said and their position was changed, possibly for the worse, as a result. |
Et seq | ‘and in the following pages’. It is sometimes written in books and documents. (This phrase is abbreviated from the Latin ‘et sequeus’.) |
Euthanasia | killing someone to end their suffering. |
Eviction | the act of forcing someone to leave; expulsion. |
Excess of jurisdiction | someone such as a judge acting without authority. |
Exchange of contract | swapping identical contracts. When land is sold, the person selling and the person buying both sign identical copies of the contract and exchange them. The contract is then binding on both of them. |
Exchequer | a royal or national treasury. A government department that collects and manages revenue. It is also known as treasury. |
Excise duty | a type of tax levied on the production, sale, or license of certain goods. |
Exclusions | the things an insurance policy does not provide cover for. They will be listed in the insurance policy. |
Exclusive licence | a licence under which only the licence holder has any rights. |
Ex dividend | without dividend. If a share is sold ex dividend, the seller will receive the dividend declared just before it was sold. |
Execute | to carry out a contract. |
Executed | describing a document which is made valid (in the eyes of the law) such as by being signed or sealed. |
Executive director | a director who usually works full time as a director of the company. |
Executor | a man appointed in a will to deal with the estate, according to the wishes set out in the will. Today it is often used to refer to a woman as well. |
Executory | describing something, such as a contract, which has not been started yet. |
Executrix | a woman appointed in a will to deal with the estate, according to the wishes set out in the will. |
Exemplary damages | damages given as a punishment for the defendant. |
Ex gratia | describing something done or given as a favour rather than a legal obligation. (This term is Latin.) |
Ex parte | done by one side only in a case. (This term is Latin.) |
Expert witness | an expert in a particular field who is called to give an opinion in a court case. |
Ex post facto | describing a law which is retrospective. It affects past acts as well as future ones. (This term is Latin.) |
Extradition | the handing over of a criminal to the country the crime was committed in. |
Extraordinary general meeting | a general meeting of the members of a company which is not the annual general meeting. |
Extraordinary resolution | a resolution for consideration by the members of a company at a general meeting of the members. |
Ex works | available from the factory. When something is sold ex works the buyer can collect it from the place it was manufactured or from some other place agreed by the buyer and seller. |
Factor | is:
|
False imprisonment | wrongfully keeping someone in custody (for example in prison). |
False pretence | misleading someone by deliberately making a false statement. |
False representation | lying in a statement to persuade someone to enter a contract. |
Family court | the court dealing with marriage breakdowns and probate. |
Felony | the former term used for serious crimes such as rape or murder. It is still in use in the USA. |
Feme covert | a woman who is married. |
Feme sole | a woman who is not married or no longer married. |
Fiduciary | in a position of trust. This includes people such as trustees looking after trust assets for the beneficiaries and company directors running a company for the shareholders’ benefit. |
Final judgement | the court’s final decision in a civil case. |
Firm | a company or other business concern which provides legal services to its clients. |
Fitness to plead | whether or not the person charged is capable of making an informed decision. If, because of mental illness, a person charged with an offence is unable to understand what is going on the person may not be fit to plead guilty or not guilty. |
Fixed charge | a charge which provides security for money lent. The charge is over a specific property. |
Floating charge | a charge used to provide security for money lent to a company. The charge is over the company’s liquid assets (such as stocks and debtors) but it is only triggered by an event such as liquidation. |
Forbearance | when one party to an agreement does not pursue rights under the agreement even though the other party has not kept to its terms. An example would be someone not suing to recover an overdue debt. |
Force majeure | an event which cannot be controlled and which stops duties under an agreement from being carried out. (This phrase is French.) |
Foreclosure | repossessing property. If a mortgagor (the borrower) has failed to keep up the repayments on a mortgage, the mortgagee (the lender) may apply to the court for an order that the debt be repaid by a particular date. If the debt is not repaid the property will be repossessed. This procedure is called foreclosure. |
Forfeiture | the loss of possession of a property because the tenancy conditions have not been met by the tenant. |
Forgery | the crime of falsely making or altering a writing by which the legal rights or obligations of another person are apparently affected. |
Fostering | looking after other people’s children. Sometimes children are looked after by people who are not their parents (natural or adopted). It usually happens because the parents cannot look after the children properly because of changed circumstances such as illness. |
Franchise | the right or license granted by a company to an individual or group to market its products or services in a specific territory. |
Fraud | lying or deceiving to make a profit or gain an advantage, or to cause someone else to make a loss or suffer a disadvantage. |
Fraudulent conveyance | ownership of land being transferred without consideration and with the intention of defrauding someone. |
Fraudulent preference | someone who is insolvent paying one of their creditors while knowing there is not enough money to pay the others. |
Fraudulent trading | running a business with the intention of defrauding its creditors or other people. |
Freehold | describing land that only the owner has any rights over. |
Free of encumbrances | no one else having any rights over something. When property is owned by someone and nobody else has any rights over it, it is owned free of encumbrances. |
Frustration | stopping a contract. Sometimes a contract cannot be carried out because something has happened which makes it impossible. This is called frustration of contract. |
Futures contract | a binding contract to buy or sell something on a date in the future at a fixed price. |
Garnishee order | a court order to a third party who owes money to a judgement debtor to pay the money to the judgement creditor. |
General damages | damages a court will give to compensate for a wrong done without needing specific proof that damage has been done to the claimant (‘plaintiff’ before April 1999). The court presumes that losses or damage exist such as in a libel case. |
General meeting | a meeting of the members of a company to make decisions about the company. |
Genocide | the deliberate killing of a large number of people from a particular nation or ethnic group with the aim of destroying that nation or group. |
Grant | proof that you are entitled to deal with a dead person’s estate. The grant is issued by the Probate Registry. |
Grant of probate | a certificate proving that the executors of a will are entitled to deal with the estate. When a person dies the executors fill in various forms for the Probate Registry. The forms are then sent to the registry together with the will and the death certificate. A registrar examines all the documents and, once satisfied with everything, issues the grant of probate. |
Gratuities | the amount of money earned by an employee as a means of appreciation for his service to the company, reward etc. |
Grievous bodily harm | intentionally causing serious physical harm to someone. This is more serious than actual bodily harm. |
Guarantee | a promise by a person (the guarantor) to repay a debt owed by a second person if the second person fails to repay it. For example, a guarantee is sometimes required by a bank before it will lend money to a customer. |
Guarantee company | a company whose members only have to pay the amount they have agreed to contribute, if the company has to be wound up. They do not have to pay in extra money if there is not enough to pay all the company’s debts. |
Guarantor | a person or organisation that promises to pay a debt owed by a second person, if the second person fails to repay it. |
Guardian | a person appointed formally to look after the interests of a child, or of someone who is not capable of looking after their own affairs. |
Guilty | a court’s verdict that the person charged with a crime committed it. |
Habeas corpus | a writ which can be applied for to order a person’s release if they have been imprisoned unlawfully. (This phrase is Latin.) |
Half blood | the relation between persons having only one common parent. Two persons are said to be related to each other by half blood when they are descended from a common ancestor but by different wives. |
Harassment of debtors | the illegal act of attempting to collect a debt by threatening, or habitually acting in a way that humiliates or distresses, a debtor. |
Harassment of occupiers | the illegal act by a landlord of using, or threatening to use, violence, or interfering with the tenant’s enjoyment of the property, in an attempt to repossess the property. |
Hearsay evidence | evidence given in court of something said to the witness by another person. |
Heir | a person who inherits all the property of a deceased person, as by descent, relationship, will, or legal process. |
Heir apparent | a person who is first in an order of succession and cannot be displaced from inheriting by the birth of another person. |
Hereditament | any property which is capable of being inherited. |
High treason | the crime of making war against the government of your country or attempting to help an enemy take control of your country. |
Hire | to pay to borrow something for a period. |
Hire purchase | a form of credit which allows the purchaser to have possession of the goods shown in the hire purchase agreement. Ownership passes to the purchaser when the fee and all the instalments have been paid. |
Holding company | a company which controls another company, usually by owning more than half of its shares. |
Homicide | a person who kills another, murderer. |
Honorarium | a voluntary payment that is a matter of honor given to a person for services for which fees are not legally or traditionally required. |
Hostile witness | a witness who:
|
Hypothecation | a person giving a bank authority to sell goods which have been pledged to the bank as security for a loan. |
Identification parade | a group of persons including one suspected of having committed a crime assembled for the purpose of discovering whether a witness can identify the suspect. It must include at least 5 other persons including the suspect or accused person. |
Illegitimate child | born of parents not lawfully married to each other. |
Inalienable | not subject to sale or transfer i.e, inseparable. That which is inalienable cannot be bought, sold, or transferred from one individual to another. The inalienable rights can be transferred with the consent of the person possessing those rights such as right to own property etc. |
Indemnity | security or protection against a financial liability. It typically occurs in the form of a contractual agreement made between parties in which one party agrees to pay for losses or damages suffered by the other party. |
Indict | using legal means, to officially accuse someone of committing an offence. |
Indictable offence | an offence which can be tried by jury in the Crown Court. |
Indictment | a document setting out the details of the offence a defendant is accused of. |
Infant | a child of 0-1 year of age. |
Infringement | a violation, a breach of one’s legal rights or an unauthorized act, such as an encroachment on a right, a person, a territory, or a property. It may be related to copyright, patents, trademarks etc. |
Injunction | an official order given by a law court, usually to stop someone from doing something. It is a preventive remedy which may be prohibitory or mandatory. |
Innuendo | an indirect hint and can be used in defamation lawsuits (libel or slander) to establish that the plaintiff is the person about whom defamatory statements have been made in a blind item. |
Insanity | such unsoundness of mind frees one from legal responsibility, as for committing a crime, or as signals one’s lack of legal capacity, as for entering into a contractual agreement. |
Intangible property | property which does not physically exist, such as a right or a patent. |
Interest | a legal right to use property. |
Interlocutory judgement | a provisional judgement. |
Interlocutory proceedings | the first things to be done before a civil case comes to trial. They include pleading (preparing the formal written statement) and discovery (stating the documents, under one party’s control, which are relevant to the case and making them available to the other party) so that there are no surprises when the trial starts. |
Interrogation | the process of questions propounded by police in criminal law, to a person arrested or suspected to seek a solution to crime. |
Interrogatories | in a civil case, formal questions from one side which the other side must answer under oath. |
Intestacy/intestate | when someone dies without leaving a will. Their estate is divided up between their relatives following the rules set by law. |
Intimidation | threatening or frightening someone into doing something. |
Intoxication | a state in which a person’s normal capacity to act or reason is inhibited by alcohol or drugs. |
Involuntary manslaughter | Death caused by a person who thought they might cause physical but not fatal harm and there was no lawful excuse. |
Issue | the legal word for:
|
Issued share capital | share capital which has been allocated to shareholders who have subscribed for (asked for) shares. |
Jeopardy | the risk of conviction and punishment. |
Joint and several liability | two or more people responsible for repaying a debt. They are each responsible individually to repay all the debt as well as being responsible as a group. |
Joint tenancy | two or more people having identical shares in land. |
Joint will | a single will which two or more people make to cover all their estates. Probate has to be obtained on each death. |
Joyriding | taking a vehicle without permission and using or allowing it to be used without authority. |
Judge | a person whose job is to adjudicate in court cases. |
Judge in chambers | describes a hearing in front of a judge which is not held in court. |
Judgement | a decision by a court. |
Judgement creditor | a person who is owed money and who has been to court and obtained a judgement for the money owed. |
Judgement debtor | a person who owes the money a court judgement says is owed. |
Judgement in default | getting a judgement against you because you failed to do something. If a civil case has gone to court but the defendant does not do something required by the court (such as turn up), judgement for the plaintiff may be given. |
Judgement summons | a summons to appear in court to disclose (reveal) income and assets under oath because a judgement debtor has failed to pay the judgement debt. |
Judicial discretion | a degree of flexibility about the way courts do things. |
Judicial immunity | immunity that a judge normally has from being sued for damages when acting as a judge. |
Judicial precedent | Lower courts have to follow the decisions of higher courts. This is called judicial precedent, binding precedent or precedent. |
Judicial separation | a court order that two married people should live apart. |
Judiciary | the system of courts of justice in a country. |
Jurisdiction | is:
It is also the power the court has to issue orders (give instructions or commends). |
Juror | one of the people who are acting as a jury. |
Jury | a group of people who are sworn to provide a verdict on a case, including a judgement or penalty. |
Jury service | when a group of people, called jurors, are sworn in to serve on a legal panel in court. |
Just and equitable winding up | a winding up ordered because fairness cannot be achieved for all the members of a company. |
Justification | claiming that a defamatory statement is true. In a defamation case a defendant may admit that the plaintiff’s allegations are true but plead that the statement which defamed was true. |
Justifying bail | proving to the court that the person giving the surety has the assets to pay the bail. |
Juvenile courts | a court which deals with crimes committed by young people who are not yet old enough to be considered as adults (below 18 years of age). |
Juvenile offender | a person aged under 18 who has committed a criminal offence. |
Kerb crawling | the offence committed in a street or public place by a man in a motor vehicle (or near a vehicle he has just got out of) who approaches a woman for sexual services in return for money. |
Kidnap | to take someone away against their will by force, threat or deceit. |
Kill | to deprive of life in any manner. |
Knock for knock | an agreement between insurance companies that they will pay for their own policyholders’ losses regardless of who was to blame. |
Know-how | the expertise in an organisation which may be protected by a patent. |
Laches | a party is said to be guilty of laches when they come to the Court to assert their rights after a considerable delay in that respect. The reasons for delay if valid and reasonable are generally accepted because the Court doesn’t dismiss petitions only due to delay but only if it is accompanied by other reasons. |
Lapse | the termination of an offer as a result of the passage of time, death, or the nonfulfillment of a condition. |
Land | includes:
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Law | the system of rules which a particular country or community recognizes as regulating the actions of its members and which it may enforce by the imposition of penalties. |
Lawful | some act which is justified by law and opposite to unlawful or illegal. |
Lawsuit | a claim made in a court of law. |
Lawyer | a person whose profession is to advise clients in legal matters. |
Leading question | a question which:
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Lease | a contract between the owner of a property and a tenant, giving the tenant sole use of the property for an agreed time. |
Leasehold | property held by a tenant with a lease. |
Legacy | a gift left to someone in a will, but not including land. |
Legal aid scheme | a scheme for paying legal costs out of public funds for people who cannot afford to pay for them. |
Legatee | the person who receives a legacy. |
Legislation | the act of making or enacting laws. The enactments of a legislator or a legislative body. |
Legitimacy | conformity to the law or to rules. |
Lessee | the person a property has been leased to. |
Lessor | the person who lets a property by lease. |
Letter of credit | a letter one bank sends to a second bank asking them to pay money to a named person. |
Letters of administration | an authority the courts give to a person to deal with a dead person’s estate. It is given when someone dies intestate. |
Liabilities | the debts that a person or organisation owes. |
Liability | a debt or obligation. |
Libel | a false statement made in writing or in some other permanent record (such as a film). |
Liberty | a right or privilege, especially a statutory one. Enjoyment of rights which belong to us as individuals. |
Licence | an authority to do something. |
Licensed conveyancer | a licensed professional who provides advice and information with regards to the transfer of property ownership (but not including solicitors). |
Licensee | the holder of a licence to do something. |
Lien | the right to keep possession of something owned by someone who owes a debt, until the debt has been settled. |
Life assurance policy (or life insurance policy) | a contract between the policyholder and the insurance company. The insurance company pays out if the policyholder dies. |
Life assured | the person whose life is assured by a life assurance policy. |
Life imprisonment | a sentence given to a criminal to be imprisoned for the rest of their life. |
Life interest | an interest which will pass to someone else when the present owner dies. |
Life tenant | someone entitled to use property for the rest of their life. |
Limited company | a company which limits how much its members will have to pay if the company is wound up. The members of most limited companies will only have to pay any money unpaid on their shares. If a company limited by guarantee is wound up, the money its members have to pay is limited to the amount shown in the memorandum of association. |
Liquidated damages | damages agreed beforehand by the parties to a contract in case one of them should later break the terms of the contract. |
Liquidation | the process of winding up a company by disposing of its assets, paying its creditors in a strict order of priority and distributing any money left among the members. |
Liquidator | the person appointed to wind up a company. |
Litigant | a person involved in a lawsuit. |
Litigation | taking legal action through the courts. |
Loan capital | money borrowed by an organisation. |
Loan creditor | a person or organisation which has lent money to an organisation. |
Lunatic | an insane person. |
Magistrate | a civil or minor judicial officer who presides over (is in charge of) minor cases heard in the magistrates’ court. |
Magistrates’ court | a court that has limited jurisdiction over minor civil and criminal matters. It deals with crimes that are not serious. |
Maintenance | money paid (and things paid for) to support a partner (husband or wife) and children when a marriage has failed. |
Majority | the age when a person gains full legal rights and responsibilities. In the India it is when a person becomes 18 years old. |
Male issue | male descendants (sons only) of men. |
Malfeasance | an unlawful act. |
Malice | intending to do something which is against the law. |
Malice aforethought | planning to kill someone or intending to do something which is likely to kill. |
Malicious falsehood | a written or spoken lie told to harm somebody and which does do harm. |
Malicious prosecution | a prosecution which is brought unreasonably. |
Mandate | an authority to act given by one party to another. An example is when a bank’s customer writes instructions on the mandate for the bank to follow when operating the customer’s account. |
Manslaughter | killing someone illegally but by accident. |
Market overt | a lawful market in which, as long as someone buying goods is not aware that they do not belong to the seller, the buyer will get a good title to the goods. |
Marriage | the legally or formally recognised union of two people as partners in a personal relationship. It is a civil and religious contract whereby a man is joined and united to a woman for the purposes of a civilised society. |
Martial law | government of a country by the military. |
Material facts | facts which are a key part of a defence or a claim. |
Matricide | the killing of a mother by her son or daughter. |
Matrimonial causes | the court proceedings:
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Matrimonial home | the house that a husband and wife live in as a married couple. |
Mediation | help from an independent person (a mediator) to solve differences between a husband and wife whose marriage has broken down. The mediator helps them to agree what should be done about their children, money and so on. |
Memorandum and articles of association | The memorandum gives details of a company’s name, objects (purposes) and share capital. It also sets out the limits of the shareholders’ liability if the company has to be wound up. The articles set out the members’ rights and the directors’ powers. |
Mens rea | the intent to commit a crime and also the knowledge that an act is wrong. (This term is Latin.) |
Mercantile law | the branch of the law dealing with commerce. |
Merchantable quality | the assumption in the law that goods sold by a business will be fit for their purpose. |
Mesne profits | income lost by a landlord because the property is occupied without the landlord’s permission. An example would be a tenant failing to leave the property when the tenancy finished. It is also the profits lost by a landowner when wrongly deprived of the use of his or her land. |
Messuage | a house together with its land and outbuildings. |
Minor | someone who has not yet reached the age when they get full legal rights and responsibilities. In India this is a person under 18 years old. |
Minority | being under the age of full legal rights and responsibilities. |
Minutes | notes taken at a meeting and often distributed to participants. |
Misadventure | an unexpected accident which happens while lawfully doing something. |
Miscarriage of justice | the court system failing to give justice to someone. |
Mischief | an act which is likely to cause wrongful loss or damage to any individual or property, cause destruction or diminish its value or utility. |
Misconduct | deliberately doing something which is against the law or which is wrong. |
Misdirection | a judge instructing a jury wrongly. |
Misfeasance | the act of engaging in an action or duty but failing to perform the duty correctly i.e., the wrongful performance of a normally lawful act i.e, the wrongful and injurious exercise of lawful authority. |
Misrepresentation | a lie told to persuade someone to enter into a contract. |
Mistrial | a trial that has been made invalid. |
Mitigation | putting facts to a judge, after someone has been found guilty, to justify a lower sentence. |
Molest/Molestation | touching or attacking someone in a sexual way against their will. |
Money Bill | that deals with the issues related to taxes, borrowing and expenditure of money, audits and accounting, consolidated and contingency funds etc. |
Money laundering | making money from crime and then passing it through a business to make it appear legitimate. |
Moratorium | an agreement not to take action to recover a debt for an agreed period of time. |
Mortgage | using property as security for a debt. It is also the name for the contract which is signed by the borrower and lender when money is lent using property as security for a loan. |
Mortgagee | the lender of the money which is secured by a mortgage. |
Mortgagor | the person who borrows the money to buy a property. The lending is secured with a mortgage of the property. |
Motive | a reason for a person doing something. |
Muniments | documents which are evidence of a right to something. |
Murder | when one person is killed by another person or a group of persons who have a pre-determined intention to end life of the former. |
Naked trust | a trust which holds property for a person until they ask the trustee to return it. |
Nationalisation | the process in which a country or a state takes control of a specific company or industry. It is limited to property actually taken over by the state. |
Naturalisation | giving a citizen of one country citizenship of another. |
Negligence | lack of proper care to do a duty properly. |
Negligent | lacking proper care to do a duty properly. |
Negotiable instrument | a document which:
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Next of kin | a person’s closest blood relatives. |
Nexus | a means of connection i.e, tie/link. |
Non-disclosure | the failure by one side to a contract to disclose (reveal) a fact to the other side that would influence their decision to go ahead with the contract. |
Non-disclosure Agreement | a legal contract between two or more parties. It defines information that the parties want to keep private and outlines restrictions on how it can be used. |
Non-exclusive licence | an agreement giving someone the right to use something but which does not prevent other people being given similar agreements. |
Notary public | a government-authorized person (usually a solicitor) who is responsible for verifying the identity of a document signer, witnessing the signing of a legal document, and checking the mental capacity of the signer. |
Not guilty | a court’s verdict that the person charged with a crime did not commit it. When criminal court cases start the defendants are asked for their pleas. If they want to deny they committed the offence they plead not guilty. If a court’s verdict is that the prosecution has not proved the defendant committed a crime, the defendant has been found not guilty. |
Notice | a warning of something which is about to happen. |
Notice to quit | a notice to end a tenancy on a stated date. It is usually sent by the landlord to the tenant although the tenant can also send one to the landlord. |
Not negotiable | cannot be transferred. If a bill of exchange is marked not negotiable it cannot be transferred to someone else. |
Novation | replacing an existing agreement with a new one. |
Nuisance | doing something that harms other people’s rights. |
Null and void | something that binds no one or is incapable of giving rise to any rights or duties under any circumstances. |
Oath | swearing the truth of a statement. |
Objects clause | a clause which forms part of a company’s memorandum of association It sets out the purposes the company was formed for. |
Obligation | a legal duty to do something. |
Obligee | someone who, under a contract, receives money or has something done. |
Obligor | someone who is bound by a contract to pay money or do something. |
Obstruction | whoever voluntarily obstructs any person so as to prevent that person from proceeding in any direction in which that person has a right to proceed. |
Occupation | taking control of a piece of land which belongs to someone else. |
Occupational pension scheme | a pension scheme organised by an employer for its employees. |
Occupier | the person who is in control of a piece of land, such as a tenant. |
Offence | a breach of a law or rule; another name for crime. |
Offensive weapon | an object that is intended to physically injure someone. |
Offer | a promise to do something, or not to do something. If the promise is accepted it becomes legally binding. |
Offeree | the person who receives the legally binding offer. |
Offeror | the person who makes the legally binding offer. |
Official receiver | a civil servant who acts as an officer of the court and part of the insolvency service. They are responsible for a variety of functions in corporate and personal insolvency. |
Official secret | information which the Government classifies as confidential. It is a criminal offence to disclose an official secret without permission. |
Ombudsman | a government official who hears and investigates complaints by private citizens against other officials or government agencies. |
Omission | a failure to do something. |
Opinion | an evaluation or judgement given by an expert. |
Oppression | the offence of public officials using their official positions to harm or injure people. |
Option | a type of contract under which money is paid for a right to buy or sell goods at a fixed price by a particular date in the future. |
Order | an instruction by or command of a court. |
Originating summons | a summons that sets out the questions the court is being asked to settle. When the facts in a case are not disputed, but the interpretation of the law or of the documents needs to be resolved, an originating summons is prepared. |
Outlaw | formerly, a person who was not protected by the law. |
Overt act | an act done openly and from which the criminal intention of the act is clear. |
Panel | the list of people who have been summoned for jury service. |
Pardon | a legal release from guilt or a remission of punishment. |
Pari passu | equally. (This term is Latin.) |
Parole | release from prison early. If someone is given parole they may be returned to prison if they offend again. |
Party | the claimant (‘plaintiff’ before April 1999) or defendant in a lawsuit. It is also someone who has taken out a contract or agreement. |
Passing off | pretending that the goods and services offered are those supplied by another business. |
Patent | an official right for a specified period of time to be the only person (or organisation) to make or sell something. |
Patricide | the killing of a father by his own son or daughter. |
Pawn | to pledge goods as security for a loan. |
Payee | the person money is being paid to. |
Payment into court | money paid to the court by the defendant for payment to the plaintiff. |
Pedigree | a table or chart recording a line of ancestors, either of persons or (more especially) of animals, i.e., a history of family succession. |
Penalty | is:
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Per | through or by. (This word is Latin.) |
Percept | an order issued by legally constituted authority to a subordinate official. |
Performance | doing what is required under a contract. |
Perjury | lying to a court after you have been sworn in. |
Perpetuity | forever. The law prevents property being tied up in perpetuity because it could stop owners disposing of it. |
Per pro | on behalf of. (This term is Latin.) |
Per quod | in accordance with or whereby. (This term is Latin.) |
Per se | in itself or by itself. (This term is Latin.) |
Personal guarantee | a pledge, by a person to a bank, to repay a debt owed to the bank if the bank’s customer fails to pay it. |
Personal injury | an injury caused to a person. |
Personal property | all property except land. |
Personal representative | a person who is appointed to deal with a dead person’s estate. If there is a will, the executors appointed will be the personal representatives. If there is no will, the courts will appoint someone called the administrator. |
Personalty | another word for personal property. |
Personation | pretending to be someone you are not. |
Per stirpes | describes property divided equally between the offspring. If a parent who is a beneficiary under a will dies and the legacy goes to the children in equal shares, the legacy has been divided per stirpes. (This term is Latin.) |
Perverting the course of justice | doing something to interfere with the justice system (such as misleading the court or intimidating witnesses). |
Petition | a written request made in the form of an appeal, generally before a court. |
Plaintiff | the party who initiates a lawsuit against another party, company, or entity in a court of law. |
Plea | the defendant’s answer to the accusations. |
Plea bargain | when the defendant pleads guilty instead of not guilty in return for a concession by the prosecution (such as dropping another charge). |
Plead | to declare to the court whether you are guilty or not guilty. |
Pleadings | statements of the facts prepared by both sides in a civil case. Each side gives the other its pleadings so that they are both aware of what arguments will be used during the trial. |
Pledge | letting someone take possession of goods but the ownership does not change. It is often done to give security for money owed or to make sure that something is done as promised. |
Plenipotentiary | someone who has been given complete authority to act. |
Poaching | taking game from someone else’s land without permission. |
Polygamy | being married to more than one person at once. |
Possess | to have property under your control. |
Possession | having something under your control even though you may not own it. |
Possessory title | gaining title through possession. If you have possession of something for a long time you may gain title to it even though you do not have documents to prove that it is yours. |
Post-mortem | the examination of a dead body to establish the cause of death. |
Power of appointment | a person giving a second person the power to dispose of the first person’s property. |
Power of attorney | a document which gives power to the person appointed by it to act for the person who signed the document. |
Preamble | an explanation of a proposed law. At the beginning of each Act of Parliament there is an explanation of what the Act is intended to achieve. |
Precedent | Lower courts have to follow the decisions of the higher courts. This is called precedent, binding precedent or judicial precedent. |
Precept | a command or order issued by a court to a subordinate official or to another court. It can also be described as a writ or warrant. |
Pre-emption | the right to buy property before others are given the chance to buy. |
Preference | when insolvent, paying one creditor while leaving other creditors unpaid. |
Preference shares | a share entitled to a fixed dividend. Holders of preference shares are treated more favourably than ordinary shareholders. The preference dividend is at a fixed rate and must be paid in full before a dividend can be paid on the ordinary shares. When the company is wound up the preference shares must be fully paid out before the ordinary shareholders can be paid. |
Preferential creditor | a creditor who has to be paid in full before unsecured creditors can be paid anything. |
Prejudice | a preconceived judgement, opinion or attitude directed toward certain people based on their membership in a particular group. It is a set of attitudes, which supports, causes, or justifies discrimination. |
Prima facie | on the face of it, i.e., based on the first impression which is accepted as correct until proved otherwise. (This term is Latin.) |
Principal | is:
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Prison | a building for the confinement of persons held while awaiting trial, persons sentenced after conviction etc. |
Privilege | special rights which some people have because of the job they do or their special status. For example, diplomats of foreign countries are immune from arrest in India. |
Privity of contract | only the parties to a contract can sue each other over breaches of contract. |
Probate | authority to deal with a dead person’s estate. When someone has died and left a will, the executors of the estate apply to the court for this authority. |
Probate Registry | a registry which deals with the forms which are needed when someone applies for probate. |
Probation | If a court convicts someone of an offence, the court may order that the offender is supervised by a probation officer for a period of at least six months but for no more than three years. This is known as probation and it is an alternative to sending the person to prison. |
Pro bono | for the public good. In the legal profession, it refers to professional work that is undertaken voluntarily and without payment. (This word is Latin.) |
Process | In law a process is:
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Procurator | a person who has been given authority to manage another person’s affairs, such as under a power of attorney. |
Product liability | the liability of manufacturers and sellers to compensate people for unsafe goods which have caused injury to people or property. |
Profession | a paid occupation, especially one that involves prolonged training and a formal qualification. |
Promise | a firm agreement to perform an act, refrain from performance of any act, or make a payment or delivery. |
Promisee | a person who has been promised something. |
Promisor | a person who has promised something. |
Promissory note | a written promise to pay an amount of money to someone at a given time. |
Proof | evidence sufficient to establish a thing as true, or to produce belief in its truth. |
Property | the name for anything which can be owned. |
Pro rata | in proportion. For example, if 10 items cost Rs.100 you would expect three items to cost Rs.30 if they were priced pro rata. (This term is Latin.) |
Prosecution | the name for the team of people (lawyers and so on) bringing proceedings against someone else. Also when legal proceedings are taken against someone it is called a prosecution. |
Prosecutor | the person who brings legal proceedings, on behalf of the State, against the accused. |
Prospectus | a formal document giving details of a company’s past performance and of its plans for the future. If a public company wants people to invest in it, it prepares a prospectus. |
Prostitution | selling sexual services for money. |
Protected tenancy | a tenancy agreement for a house. It gives the tenant the right to a fair rent and protection from eviction as long as the terms and conditions of the tenancy agreement are kept to. |
Protocol | the official procedure or system of rules governing affairs of state or diplomatic occasions. |
Proviso | a clause in a legal document which qualifies another section of the agreement. |
Provocation | causing someone to lose their self-control by doing or saying something (such as threatening to harm a baby) which would cause a reasonable person to temporarily lose their self-control. |
Proxy | a person appointed by a shareholder to go to a meeting of shareholders. The proxy can vote at the meeting for the shareholder. |
Proxy form | a form for shareholders by which, if it is delivered to a company at least 48 hours before the shareholders’ meeting, the person who is the proxy will be able to vote at that meeting. |
Public mischief | something that someone does which damages the general community. |
Public nuisance | a crime by which the general public is put in danger or suffers damage to its health, property and so on. |
Public Policy | whatever a government chooses to do or even not to do. |
Putative father | the man found by a court to be the father of an illegitimate child. |
Quango | an organisation set up by the Government to do a particular activity. It is partly independent and does not form part of the Government. |
Quasi | apparently but not really, seemingly. |
Quasi-Judicial | a proceeding conducted by an administrative or executive official that is similar to a court proceeding, and a court may review a decision arising from a quasi-judicial proceeding. |
Quiet enjoyment | allowing a tenant to use land without interference. When a tenancy is created the landlord is expected to allow the tenant to use the land without any interference, unless the tenancy agreement allows it. |
Quiet possession | using property without interference. When property is sold the buyer should be able to use the property free from interference by the seller. |
Quorum | the lowest number of qualifying people needed for a meeting to be able to make a decision. |
Racial discrimination | treating someone less favourably because of their race, colour, nationality or culture. |
Rack rent | the full market value rent of a property. |
Rape | having sex with a person without their permission (such as if they were asleep or unconscious) or forcing them to have sex against their will. |
Real | relating to immovable property such as buildings or land. |
Real estate | anything in relation to land, buildings which can either be residential or commercial or may include any housing units, commercial office spaces, schools, shopping complexes etc. |
Real property | land and buildings, minerals in the land and rights over the land. |
Realty | another word for real property. |
Reasonable force | necessary force. Reasonable force is a complex issue but essentially use of some force must be necessary to defend your property or yourself and the force used must be in proportion to the threat. |
Rebellion | open, organized, and armed resistance to one’s government or ruler. |
Receiver | someone appointed to:
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Receiving | gaining control of stolen property. |
Recognisance | an undertaking, given by someone to a court, to make sure that they do what the court requires. If they do not do as the court wishes they may have to pay a sum of money. |
Reconciliation | renewal of friendly relations between two persons, have been in conflict. |
Record | the documents in a court case from beginning to end. |
Recovery | regaining possession of land by taking court proceedings. |
Rectification | removal of defects or imperfections. It implies prior existence of error, mistake or defect, which after rectification is made right and corrected by removal with the flaws. |
Redemption | act of taking back the property after paying back the amount which was due to the creditor. |
Redundancy | being dismissed from a job because it no longer exists. |
Registered land | any land recorded at the Land Registry. There is a system of recording and registering, at the Land Registry offices, details of land ownership and interests in land. |
Registered office | the official address where documents can be served on a company. Also, the company’s registers can be inspected at the registered office. |
Registrar of Companies | an official in charge of the office which keeps records of registered companies. |
Reinstatement | to restore to a previous effective state. |
Reinsurance | an insurance company insuring part of a risk it is covering. If an insurance company has taken on a large insurance contract it may decide to spread the risk of loss by insuring part of the risk with another insurance company. |
Release | means:
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Remainder | an interest which starts when a previous interest finishes. When more than one person has been left an interest in land the first person to possess an interest will have to die before the next person can possess an interest in the land, and so on. |
Remand | being kept in prison or paying bail. If an accused person is placed on remand they are either kept in prison for a short period or have to pay bail or get someone to pay it for them. It is used for short periods before a trial starts. |
Remedy | using the law to get compensation for damage done or for rights infringed. Also, a remedy can be using the law to prevent something from happening. |
Renouncing probate | a proposed executor refusing to act. Sometimes when a testator dies an executor will not wish to accept appointment. The executor has to tell the Probate Registry about it in writing. |
Rent | a regular payment to the landlord by a tenant in return for being allowed to possess and use the landlord’s property. |
Repeal | abrogation of any law. If the government repeals a law, it officially ends it, so that it is no longer valid. |
Repeat offender | a person who continues to commit the same offence. |
Reply | a plaintiff’s answer to a claim. In a civil case the defendant may offer a defence to the claim, or even make a counterclaim. |
Repossession or repossess | a mortgagee recovering vacant possession of the property mortgaged. |
Representation | Is:
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Representative action | one or more people, in a group of people with the same grievance, taking legal action representing the group. |
Reprieve | a judge suspending or cancelling punishment for an offence. |
Repudiation | to decide that an agreement is no longer effective and that you will not do what it says you must do. |
Rescission | the cancellation of a contract. |
Reservation of title | a contract which leaves ownership of the goods with the seller until the goods have been paid for. |
Reserves | money set aside in accounts which can be spent in later years. Some types of reserve can only be spent if certain conditions are met. |
Residence order | an order which a court issues when it has decided where a child should live, setting out details of the court’s decision. |
Residuary legacy | what remains to be given out from an estate after all debts, taxes and specific legacies have been paid. |
Residue | what is left of an estate after all debts, taxes, expenses and specific legacies have been dealt with. |
Res ipsa loquitur | proof is not needed because the facts speak for themselves. If the defendant was in charge of events and an accident was caused on the face of it by negligence, then it may be presumed that the defendant was negligent unless there is evidence to the contrary. (This term is Latin.) |
Resisting arrest | a person trying to prevent the police arresting him or her. A charge could be made of obstructing a police officer in the course of duty. |
Resolution | a decision taken by the members of a company in a meeting. |
Respondent | the person an action is being taken against. |
Restitution | is:
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Restraining order | an order which a court may issue to prevent a person from doing a particular thing. For example, if someone has been harassing another person, the court may order that the harassment must stop. |
Restriction | when placed on a piece of land the owner cannot sell or mortgage the land. |
Restrictive covenant | a deed which restricts how a piece of land can be used. |
Retainer | a payment to a barrister to act in a case. |
Retention of title | another term for reservation of title. |
Reversion | cancellation. |
Revocation | cancellation. |
Revoke | to cancel or withdraw. |
Revolving credit agreement | a loan agreement under which a person can borrow again to top up the loan, as long as they do not go over their credit limit. |
Right of way | a legal right obliging the owner of land to allow authorised people to cross it. |
Rights issue | an issue of extra shares by a company. Existing shareholders can buy extra new shares in proportion to the shares they already hold. The shares are usually on sale at a lower price than the stock market price to encourage shareholders to buy. The shareholders can sell the rights if they do not wish to use them. |
Riot | an unlawful assembly that uses force or violence to achieve a common purpose. |
Robbery | using or threatening to use force while carrying out a theft. |
Sale or return | an arrangement under which goods can be kept by the potential buyer for a period while their resale is attempted. Unsold goods can be returned if the conditions of the contract have been kept to and the buyer pays for the goods used. |
Salvage | compensation paid by the owners for saving ships, aircraft and property from the sea. |
Sanction | a provision of a law enacting a penalty for disobedience or a reward for obedience. |
Satisfaction | is:
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Scheme of arrangement | an agreement between a person with debts, who cannot pay them when they are due, and the creditors. The creditors share the money the debtor manages to pay in proportion to what they are each owed. |
Scrip | a certificate showing the extra shares and fractions of shares the owner is entitled to. |
Scrip dividend | a dividend paid in shares instead of cash. |
Scrip issue | free shares offered to the members of a company in proportion to their shareholdings. |
Search | a legal process where authorized agents examine a person, place, or premises for evidence related to a crime. |
Search warrant | a legal document authorising a police officer or other official to search a person, vehicle, or location for evidence of a crime. |
Securities | stocks, shares, debentures and so on where there is a right to receive interest or dividends from the investment. |
Security | something of value pledged to a bank by a borrower. If the borrower fails to repay the debt, the bank can sell the security and repay the debt out of the proceeds of the sale. |
Security of tenure | protection from a landlord attempting to obtain possession of the property the tenant is renting. |
Sedition | an offence that occurs when someone attempts to incite hatred or contempt against the government or the state or which causes discontent. |
Seizure | taking possession of an item, property, or person legally or by force. |
Sentence | the penalty the court imposes on someone found guilty of an offence. |
Separation order | a court order that a husband and wife can live separately if they wish. |
Sequestration | a court order for the seizure of someone’s property. |
Servitudes | a right possessed by one person to use another’s property. |
Settle | means:
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Settlement | when property is bestowed, usually by a will or a deed, on a trust for the benefit of people decided by the settlor. It also means voluntarily agreeing to settle a civil case. |
Settlor | the person who gives property to a settlement. |
Several | separate (not joint). |
Shadow director | a person who has not been appointed a director of a company but nevertheless gives instructions to the directors, which they comply with. |
Share capital | the money invested directly in a company by its members. When the shares are first made available by the company, people can apply to buy them. The company states the price it wants for the shares. |
Share certificate | a document which certifies who owns shares in a Company. It gives the type and number of shares owned by the shareholder and lists the serial numbers of the shares. |
Share premium account | an account in a set of books recording the extra amount over face value that shares have been issued for. If shares are issued for more than their face value, the extra amount over face value is called a share premium. |
Shoplifting | stealing goods from a shop. |
Shorthold tenancy | a tenancy under which the law allows the landlord to repossess the house. |
Sine die | indefinitely. If a case has been adjourned sine die no date has been set for it to be continued. (This term is Latin.) |
Slander | saying something untrue about a person or doing something, such as making a gesture, which damages their reputation. |
Smuggling | importing or exporting goods illegally to avoid a ban on them or to avoid the duties on them. |
Sold note | a note that shows details of investments which have been sold, including the sale price and any charges taken. Stockbrokers produce sold notes for their clients. |
Soliciting | a prostitute attempting to get clients in a street or other public place. |
Solicitor | someone who provides legal support, advice, and representation in a variety of matters such as criminal law, business law, family law, and property law to the client. |
Solicitor General | The Solicitor General of India (SGI) is the second-highest law officer in the country, after the Attorney General of India (AGI). |
Solitary confinement | confinement of a prisoner which secludes him from the sight and communication of other prisoners, i.e., isolated from any form of human conduct. |
Solus agreement | a contract under which a party is bound to buy his supplies from a single source. |
Solvent | one who has sufficient to pay his debts, and all obligations. |
Special resolution | a resolution which must be approved by holders of at least 75% of the shares with voting rights. (Some types of share give their owners the right to vote at shareholder meetings, but there are other types which do not.) |
Specific performance | a court order to complete a contract. The courts may order a person who has failed to fulfil an obligation under a contract to complete it. |
Spent conviction | a conviction which, after the passage of a stated time period, does not have to be disclosed (revealed) to a court. |
Squatter | a person who occupies land illegally. |
Stakeholder | a person holding money or property to which two or more persons make rival claims. |
Stalking | a man following or contacting a woman, despite clear indication of disinterest by the woman, or monitoring her use of the Internet or electronic communication. |
Stamp duty | a tax on the transfer documents for certain types of transaction. Examples are buying shares, patent rights and properties. |
Statement of claim | the claimant’s written statement setting out the claim in a civil case. |
Statement of defence | a defendant’s written answer or reply to a statement of claim, admitting or denying each and every fact contained in the statement of claim at trial in opposition to the plaintiff’s case. |
Status | how the law regards a person, such as whether the person is a minor or a bankrupt and so on. |
Statute | an act of a legislative body. |
Statute book | all the existing statutes in a country. |
Statute law | the law created by acts of a legislative body. |
Statute of limitation | a statute which sets out the time limits within which a court action must take place. |
Statutory accounts | company accounts which have been filed with the Registrar of Companies. The accounts have to disclose (show) the information required by the Companies Acts. |
Statutory audit | an audit required by law. Certain companies have to have their accounts audited by suitably qualified accountants. |
Statutory books | books of account which companies must keep by law to show and explain all their transactions. |
Statutory demand | a formal written request from a creditor to a debtor to pay a debt within a statutory period. |
Statutory instrument | a rule, order, regulation, ordinance, direction, form, tariff of costs or fees, letters patent, commission, warrant, proclamation, by-law, resolution, or other instrument issued, made, or established. |
Stay of execution | the suspension of the carrying out of a court order. |
Stipulation | a condition, demand, or promise in an agreement or contract. |
Stockbroker | a person who buys and sells stocks and shares for clients. |
Street offence | refers to crimes such as vandalism, car theft and mugging that are usually committed outdoors. |
Subduct | to withdraw. |
Subject to contract | an agreement which is not binding until a contract has been signed. |
Sub judice | describes something being dealt with by a court which cannot be discussed outside the court. (This term is Latin.) |
Sub-lease | a lease of a property by a tenant to a subtenant, a sublet. |
Sub-letting | to rent to somebody else all or part of a property that you rent from the owner |
Subpoena | a writ requiring the person it is addressed to to attend at a specific place (such as a court) on a specific date and at a stated time. |
Subrogation | substituting one person for another including all rights and responsibilities. |
Subscribers | the people who set up a limited company. |
Subsidiary | a company controlled by another company. The control is normally a result of having more than 50% of the voting rights. |
Succession | the right, act, or process, by which one person succeeds to the office, rank, estate, or the like, of another. |
Surrogate | a person or thing that takes the place of somebody/something else. |
Sue | to start legal proceedings in the civil court against someone. |
Suffrage | the right to vote, especially in a political election. |
Suicide | the act of killing oneself intentionally. |
Sui generis | describes something that belongs in a particular category or is the only one of its class. (This term is Latin.) |
Sui juris | describes someone who can enter into a contract without any restriction. (This term is Latin.) |
Suit | proceedings brought by one person against another in a civil court. |
Summary judgement | an outcome of a case decided summarily, based on the documentary evidence produced before the court by the parties, without going for a recording of the oral evidence. |
Summary offence | an offence that can only be tried by magistrates. Most minor offences are summary offences. |
Summary proceedings | a trial by magistrates, where the defendant has the right to choose which court should hear the case, but has agreed to be tried in the magistrates’ court. |
Summary trial | a trial by magistrates. |
Summing up | at the end of a trial by jury the judge explains points of law in the case to the jury, explains the jury’s role and summarises the evidence. |
Summons | an order by a court that a person attend at a particular court at a stated time on a particular date. |
Supervision order | a court order that a child should be supervised by a probation officer or a local authority. |
Supra | above -see above or before in the document. (This word is Latin.) |
Supreme Court | the highest court in the Republic of India. It is the final court of appeal for all civil and criminal cases in India and has the power of judicial review. |
Surcharge | a penalty charged if tax is paid late. It is also an extra charge banks make if customers do not keep to the agreements they made with the bank. |
Surety | someone who takes responsibility for someone else’s debts or promises, and guarantees that they will be paid or undertaken (done). It is also the name for the money put up as security that someone will appear in court. If they do not appear in court the money will be forfeited. |
Suspended sentence | a sentence that is postponed until the offender is convicted of another offence. |
SWIFT payment | a payment from one bank account to another using the SWIFT system. SWIFT stands for Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications and it is an international system for paying by credit transfer. |
Tangible asset | an asset which can be physically touched. |
Tangible property | property that physically exists. |
Tax | money raised by the Government to pay for the services it provides and is levied on all legal entities and individuals. Legal tax entities like corporations, development bodies, an association of individuals, and non-profit organisations are required to pay their share of direct and indirect taxes. Some taxes are called indirect because they are part of the price we pay for goods and services. Other tax is called direct because the individual taxpayer pays it. Income tax and corporation tax are examples of direct taxes. |
Taxable supply | a term for supplying goods and services on which value added tax can be charged. This applies even if the tax rate is 0% at present, because it can be increased if the Government chooses to. |
Taxation | the levying of taxes. |
Taxation of costs | the process whereby the court assesses the reasonable amount of costs payable under the costs order. |
Tax avoidance | reducing tax bills by using legal means. |
Tax evasion | breaking the law to reduce tax bills, such as by concealing income. |
Tax point | the point in time when goods have been deemed to be supplied or services have been deemed to be provided. The tax point enables us to determine the rate of tax, value, and due dates for payment of taxes. |
Teeming and lading | a term used to describe attempts to hide the loss of cash received from one customer by using cash from other customers to replace it. This fraud can carry on by using cash from other customers in the same |
Tenant | a person or organisation granted a lease. |
Tender | supplying a price for a job. If an organisation asks firms to send in tenders for supplying something, they are asking for firm written offers to do the work to an agreed standard and at a stated price. |
Tenure | how a piece of land is held by the owner (for instance freehold or leasehold). |
Term | any of the clauses which form part of a contract. |
Terra | land. (This word is Latin.) |
Terrorism | an act that threatens the unity, integrity, security, or sovereignty of India. |
Testament | a will dealing with personal property. |
Testamentum | another name for a will. |
Testator | a person who makes a will. |
Testify | to give evidence. |
Testimony | the statement or declaration of a witness under oath or affirmation, usually in court. |
Theft | taking someone else’s property dishonestly, with the intention of never returning it. |
Threatening behaviour | using threats, abuse or insults against another person. |
Timeshare | an arrangement where people can buy a share in part of a property for a period of time in each year. They can use their part of the accommodation each year for the period that is theirs. |
Title | the right to own something. |
Title deeds | the documents which prove who owns a property and under what terms. |
Toll | a payment in return for being allowed to travel over a road, bridge and so on. |
Tort | doing something which harms someone else. It may result in a claim for damages. (This word is Old French.) |
Tortfeasor | someone who commits a tort. |
Trademark | a mark which is registered at trademark registries and which is used on products produced by the owner. It is illegal for anyone else to display the mark. |
Transcript | the official record of a court case. |
Transferable securities | securities, such as debentures, which can have their ownership changed. |
Transferee | the person something is transferred to. |
Transferor | the person who transfers something to someone else. |
Treason | the crime of betraying your country such as helping your country’s enemies in wartime. |
Treasure trove | anything of any value hidden in the soil. It belongs to the State, but the finder and the landowner may get a reward. |
Treasury | the government department which administers (manages) the country’s finances. |
Treasury bill | an unconditional promise by the Treasury to repay money it has borrowed for the short term (up to one year), to pay for government spending. |
Treasury Solicitor | the person who gives legal advice to the Treasury. |
Trespassing | going on land without the owner’s permission. |
Trial | an examination of the evidence in a case and the law which applies. |
Tribunal | is:
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Trust | a financial arrangement under which property is held by named people for someone else. |
Trust corporation | a company which acts as a trustee and holds a trust’s assets. |
Trust deed | a legal document which is used to:
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Trustee | a person who holds property and looks after it on behalf of someone else. |
Trustee in bankruptcy | a person who administers (manages) a bankrupt person’s estate and pays any available money to the creditors. |
Uberrimae fidei | of the utmost good faith. In certain contracts (such as insurance policies) one party must disclose (reveal) any material facts to the other party. If they are not disclosed the contract can be cancelled or become unenforceable. (This term is Latin.) |
Ultra vires | beyond one’s powers. If an organisation does something ultra vires, what it has done is invalid. |
Underlease | the lease of a property by a tenant of the property to someone else. |
Undertaking | a promise which can be enforced by law such as a promise made by one of the parties or by their counsel during legal proceedings. |
Unfair contract terms | a contract or the term thereof is in itself harsh, oppressive or unconscionable to one of the parties. |
Unfair dismissal | sacking an employee unfairly. When an employee has been dismissed it is the employer’s responsibility to prove that the dismissal was fair. If an industrial tribunal finds that the dismissal was unfair it can insist on compensation or reinstatement. |
Unit trust | a trust which manages investments. People can invest in unit trusts by buying units. The managers of the trust use the money people invest to buy investments. The fund manager values the fund’s assets from time to time and puts a new price on the fund’s units. |
Unlawful | contrary to law laid down in the statute. |
Unlawful at Large | arises when someone who is in lawful custody escapes or attempts to escape, or when individuals don’t comply with the conditions of their parole. |
Unlawful wounding | wounding someone without the justification of self defence or without power given by the law. |
Unliquidated damages | the amount of damages decided by a court because the parties to a contract had not agreed in advance how much the damages would be for breaking the terms of the contract. |
Unreasonable behaviour | behaviour by a married person that justifies the other partner in the marriage living apart. |
Unregistered company | a business entity that has not completed the formal registration process and does not have legal recognition from the government. |
Regent | usually applied to one who governs a regency, or rules in the place of another, i.e., ruler, a governor. |
Unregistered land | the legal ownership of a property is not recorded in the Registry Office of the place where the property is situated. |
Unsecured creditor | someone who has lent money without getting any security for the loan. |
Uterine | describes people who have the same mother but different fathers. |
Vendee | a person who buys something. |
Vendor | a person who sells something. |
Venue | is:
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Verdict | the jury’s decision about whether someone is guilty or not guilty of the charge; such as a finding, conclusion or judgement upon some matter or subject. |
Versus | against. |
Vesting order | an order of a court, an administrative agency, or public officer passing the legal title in lieu of a legal conveyance. |
Veto | the power or right vested in one branch of a government to cancel or postpone the decisions, enactments, etc., of another branch, especially the right of a president, governor, or other chief executive to reject bills passed by the legislature. |
Vexatious litigant | a person who regularly brings court cases which have little chance of succeeding. |
Vicarious liability | a legal principle that holds a person or entity responsible for the actions of another person or entity. |
Violent disorder | an offense that occurs when three or more people are present together and use or threaten unlawful violence. |
Vocation | a strong impulse or inclination to follow a particular activity or career. |
Void | unable to be enforced by the law. |
Voidable | able to be cancelled in certain circumstances. |
Voluntary arrangement | an agreement between a debtor and the creditors. If a person or a company cannot pay their debts when they are due they can come to a voluntary arrangement with the creditors to pay the debts over a period. If the creditors agree with the proposals it avoids bankruptcy of the individual or liquidation of the company. |
Voluntary manslaughter | Murder and voluntary manslaughter have the same meaning in law. But there are four defences that can reduce the crime in seriousness to manslaugher:
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Voucher | a piece of paper that gives evidence of payment which can be a receipt, acquaintance or release, which may serve as evidence of payment or discharge of debt. |
Ward of court | a person who is protected by the High Court, such as a minor. |
Warrant | is:
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Warranty | a statement in a legal agreement that requires something to be done or exist in the contract. If the term is not complied with damages can be claimed by the injured party. |
Wayleave | a right of way through or over a piece of land often for a particular purpose, such as for a pipeline to go through a piece of land or for goods to be carried over it. |
Will | a legal document which people use to bequeath (leave as a gift) money and property when they die. |
Winding up | disposing of all a company’s assets and paying all its debts. Any money left is then divided among the members. |
Without prejudice | when written on a document, the document cannot be used as evidence that a contract or agreement exists. |
Witness | someone who:
To witness a document is to watch it being signed and then add your own signature and name, address and occupation. |
Words of art | words which have a fixed meaning in law so that their use in a legal document can have only one interpretation. |
Writ | an order issued by a court telling someone to do something or not to do something. |
Writ of execution | a type of writ used when a court judgement needs enforcing. |
Writ of summons | a legal document that requires a person to appear in court to answer a complaint. It is one of two ways to start a civil action against someone. |
Wrongful dismissal | ending an employee’s contract without following the contract’s terms. |
Wrongful trading | continuing to trade while knowing that there is little prospect of the company being able to pay its debts. |
Young offender | any boy who has been convicted of any offence punishable with imprisonment, and, who at the time of such conviction, was under the age of 15 years. |
Zap | in critical legal studies, a so-called spontaneous moment of shared intuition. |
Zealous witness | a witness who displays undue favoritism towards one party in a case. |
Zero hour | the time when an important action, attack, operation, etc. is planned to begin. |