n. an event which occurs between the original improper or dangerous action and the damage itself. Thus, the "causal connection" between the wrong and damages is broken by the ____________ cause.
n. items such as stock in a company or an approved patent which represent value but are not actual physical objects. (__________ Property)
n. short for Juris Doctor, identifying the holder as having received that law degree.
n. the voluntary transfer of property (including money) to another person completely free of payment or strings while both the giver and the recipient are still alive.
v. to make a demand for money, for property, or for enforcement of a right provided by law.
adj. Latin meaning "for one party," referring to motions, hearings or orders granted on the request of and for the benefit of one party only.
n. Latin for the substantial fact that a crime has been committed, and in popular crime jargon, the body of the murder victim.
n. the change in the border of two properties due to a sudden change in the natural course of a stream or river, when the border is defined by the channel of the waterway.
n. a person testifying (stating answers in response to questions) at a deposition.
v. to trade or barter property, goods and/or services for other property, goods and/or services, unlike a sale or employment in which money is paid for the property, goods or services.
n. putting one person in place of another, in particular replacement of the attorney of record in a lawsuit with another attorney (or the party acting in propria persona).
n. the cancellation or destruction of a right, quite often because the time for enforcement has passed.
n. a provision in a contract which allows one of the parties to be relieved from (get out of) any obligation if a certain event occurs. (_________ Clause)
n. common lawyer lingo for a question to be answered.