Business Law Quiz #1 (Chapters 1-3)
Business and the Bill of Rights
Bill of rights is the first ten individual liberties protected from government interference. Bill of rights then only applied to federal government but are incorporated into the states. Many of these protections additionally apply to business.
Unintentional Torts
Negligence occurs when plaintiff is legally injured due to defendant's failure to live up to a reasonable standard of care causing foreseeable risk of injury. Did defendant owe plaintiff a legal duty of care? Did defendant breach that duty? Did defendant's breach of duty cause plaintiff's injury? What are Plaintiff's damages ?
Interrogetories
a formal set of written questions propounded by one litigant and required to be answered by an adversary in order to clarify matters of fact and help to determine in advance what facts will be presented at any trial in the case
Statute
a law passed by congress or a state legislature
Criminal Liability
a person's wrongful act that may hold him liable and/or guilty for both criminal or civil action
Statute of Limitation
a specific length of time to sue for damages from negligence (ex: suing for a car accident in PA is 2 years, Breach of contract is 3 years)
Rawlsian Justice
a theory of distributional justice that concludes that the social contract emerging from the "original position" would call for an income distribution that would maximize the well-being of the worst-off member of society
Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS)
a treaty on international intellectual property
Absolute privilege
a witness testifying in a court or legislature may never be sued for defamation, have judicial and legislative proceedings
tort
a wrongful act or an infringement of a right (other than under contract) leading to civil legal liability. Can occur in a private civil or legal capacity
Defamation Defenses
truth is an absolute defense, statement was privileged ,
Criticisms of adversarial system
very time consuming and costly, unfair in terms of superior ability of the wealthier side to afford the costs
Search and seizures in businesses
warrants are required in some cases, but not required for certain industries of high regulation
Bill collection activity
ways in which emotional distress is monetarily connected
Euphemisms and Reframing
when a phrase is curved to sound ethical when in reality it is not
Budgetary control
when agencies have less funding they have less regulation
Settlements
when an agreement is reached on a specific sum of damages to avoid the issue of a trial
bribery
when someone voluntarily offers payment to get an illegal advantage
Libel
written defamation
Intentional tort
wrongful act committed was knowingly and intended. Wrongdoer must intend the act or must have had knowledge of the consequences that would occur would interfere with the legal interests of the other party
fraud
wrongful or criminal deception intended to result in financial or personal gain
Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs)
treaties that integrate the economies of members through the reduction of trade barriers
The congressional review act
(1995) allows congress to kill a new regulation with a majority vote within 60 days it's proposal
Statutes of Limitations
The law that sets the length of time from when something happens to when a lawsuit must be filed before the right to bring it is lost.
General Agreement on trade in services (GATS)
A treaty on transnational services
Kuehn v. Pub Zone
-Defendant: Kerkoulas, pub zone owner, did not allow gangs in bar -Plaintiff: Kuehn, beaten to death by gang at pub zone -Judge: tavern owed nothing, overruled by jury's decision -Appealed: from past experience Kerkoulas known about gang violence, required "reasonable" safety precautions, the jury's verdict was reinstated
Conformity
Adjusting one's behavior or thinking to coincide with a group standard.
Agency Powers and the constitution
Administrative Agencies make legislative/substantive rules that are legally binding as laws that congress passed. This is why the bureaucracy is referred to usually as the "fourth branch"
Jury in Criminal case
Individual right for the defendant
Administrative Procedure Act
1.) Failed to Provide a rational explanation for it's decision 2.) Changed its prior policy without justification 3.) Considered Legally Inappropriate factors 4.) Entirely Failed to consider a relevant factor 5.) Rendered a decision plainly contrary to the evidence
United States Constitution
1787, Continental Congress made a constitution after Articles of Confederation failed; It included a central government divided into three branches (president, Senate, House of Representatives, and Supreme Court) and controlled by checks and balances. The Bill of Rights were ten amendments to the new constitution that guaranteed rights of freedom to citizens; made a national gov't that controlled taxes, army, trade, and currency.
New York Times v. Sullivan
1964; established guidelines for determining whether public officials and public figures could win damage suits for libel. To do so, individuals must prove that the defamatory statements were made w/ "actual malice" and reckless disregard for the truth
protections when accused of a crime
4th, 5th, and 6th amendments
UN Security Council
A 15-member panel which bears the UN's major responsibility for keeping international peace. Five permanent Members in the US, UK, Russia, China, and France
Foreign Soverign Immunities Act
A US statute that provides that American courts generally cannot hear suits against foreign governments
Moral Universalism
A belief that some acts are always right or always wrong
Summary Judgement
A decision made by a court in a lawsuit in response to a motion that pleads there is no basis for a trial.
The slippery slope
A fallacy that assumes that taking a first step will lead to subsequent steps that cannot be prevented. this can also produce an unethical snowball.
treaty
A formal agreement between two or more sovereign states governed by international law
Criminal Law
A law that defines crimes that are threatening to society
Civil Law
A law that governs relationships between individuals and defines their legal rights, duties, and obligations
Mediation
A method of settling disputes outside of court by using the services of a neutral third party, called a mediator. The mediator acts as a communicating agent between the parties and suggests ways in which the parties can resolve their dispute.
Public Accountability
A number of statutes that make agencies more accountable through public scrutiny. This provide a business or entity the power to request and obtain agency records on themselves.
Discovery
A phase in the litigation process during which the opposing parties may obtain information from each other and from third parties prior to trial. (consists of interrogatories, subpoenas, medical examinations, and/or depositions)
Plaintiff's Case
A plaintiff bears the burden of proof to persuade the trier of fact of the merits of his or her case.
Incoterms Rules
A series of three-letter codes used in international contracts for the sale of goods
opening statement
A statement made to the jury at the beginning of a trial by a party's attorney, prior to the presentation of evidence. The attorney briefly outlines the evidence that will be offered and the legal theory that will be pursued.
Federalism
A system in which power is divided between the national and state governments
Checks and Balances
A system that allows each branch of government to limit the powers of the other branches in order to prevent abuse of power
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
A treaty among the US, Mexico, and Canada implemented on January 1, 1994, that largely eliminates trade barriers among the three nations and establishes procedures to resolve trade disputes. NAFTA serves as a model for an eventual Free Trade Area of the Americas zone that could include most Western Hemisphere nations.
Moral Licensing
After doing something ethical, many people then have a tendency to act unethically
Independent Regulatory Agencies
Agencies outside the major executive departments such as the Federal Aviation Administration or the Federal Communications Commission.
John Marshall
American jurist and politician who served as the chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1801-1835) and helped establish the practice of judicial review. Said "It is emphatically the province and the duty of the judiciary to say what the law is"
Mail Fraud
An act of fraud using the Postal Service, as in making false representations through the mail to exploit another party.
World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)
An international organization for the protection of intellectual property. WIPO administers 23 international treaties and is one of 16 specialized agencies of the Untied Nations. 183 nations are part of the WIPO and its headquarters is in Geneva, Switzerland.
Supremacy Clause
Article VI of the Constitution, which makes the Constitution, national laws, and treaties supreme over state laws when the national government is acting within its constitutional limits.
Executive Agencies
Cabinet-level departments of the Executive Branch and their sub-departments.
Exclusive State Jurisdiction
Cases involving all matters not subject to federal jurisdiction (ex. divorce and adoption cases )
Fundamental right
Compelling state interest in which the court focuses on legislation
Process of Formal Administrative Adjudication
Complaint Answer Hearing before administrative law judge Order of Administrative law judge (fine, cease-and-desist letter) Appeal to governing board of agency Final Agency order Appellate Court review of agency decision Court order
following orders
Concerned with getting the job down regardless of cost to humanity or one's self. Could result in following unethical actions
Legislative controls
Congress creates/dissolves/advance/limit government agencies and their statutory authority.
Practical Consideration
Congressmen Can assist businesses in particular matters with agencies
Responsible Officer Doctrine
Corporate officers can be held criminally liable under some federal and state statutes. Responsibility sometimes attaches when the "responsible officer" fails to follow appropriate regulations. The officer doesn't have to know about, participate in, or direct the criminal act to be prosecuted about it
Corporate Political Speech
Corporations have protected speech but not to the rights of an individual person. The supreme court struck down campaign-reform finance laws as an unconstitutional burden on corporate speech
Reasonable doubt
The level of certainty a juror must have to find a defendant guilty of a crime.
14th Amendment
Declares that all persons born in the U.S. are citizens and are guaranteed equal protection of the laws
Wrongful Interference
Defendant maliciously interferes and prevents relationship from forming, "predatory behavior" the idea in which a third party intentionally causes either party to breach their own contract
Duty of care and breach (negligence)
Duty is based on reasonable person standard. How would a reasonable person have acted under the circumstances? Duty of Professionals to clients (attorneys, CPA's, doctors).
money laundering
Engaging in financial transactions to conceal the identity, source, or destination of illegally gained funds.
1st amendment
Freedom of Religion, Speech, Press, Assembly, and Petition
First Amendment
Freedom of speech, religion, press, assembly, and petition. Applies to symbolic speech. Must be a balance between governments duty to protect community vs. Individual rights to speech
Commercial Speech
Given substantial protection. Government restrictions must directly advance their intended interest in the necessary means to do so. Receives less protection than political or religious speech.
Judicial Review (Marbury v. Madison)
Most important case in Supreme Court history - first U.S. Supreme Court case to apply the principle of judicial review (the power of federal courts to void acts of Congress in conflict with the Constitution.) Written in 1803 by Chief Justice John Marshall, the decision played a key role in making the Supreme Court a separate branch of government on par with Congress and the executive. Determines the constitutionality of the acts of other branches of the government
Wrongful Act (civil/criminal)
In civil law the wrongful act harm caused to a person or to a person's property and in criminal law the wrongful act is violating a statute that prohibits some form of activity
World Trade Organization (WTO)
International organization derived from the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) that promotes it free trade around the world.
private international law
International rules and standards applying to cross-border commerce
voir dire
Jury selection process of questioning prospective jurors, to ascertain their qualifications and determine any basis for challenge.
Alternative Dispute Resolution
Less costly, time consuming, and avoid publicity. Parties use a mediator/arbitrator/expert who knows more about a specific area of law then a judge. Problems are there are no precedents or publicity for issues of decision
stare decisis
Let the decision stand; decisions are based on precedents from previous cases
Strict liability
Liability without fault.Courts apply strict liability based on abnormally dangerous activities involving extreme risk of injury. Applications include: Blasting. Dangerous Animals.
foreign recognition
Means that a foreign judgment has legal validity in another country
Foreign enforcement
Means that the court system of a country will assist in enforcing or collecting on the verdict awarded by a foreign court
Subpoenas
Minor court orders to obtain testimonies or records
International Court of Justice
a court established to settle disputes between members of the United Nations (Judicial Branch) however, court has no enforcement power.
100
Number of members in the Senate
Plaintiff
One who begins a lawsuit
Parts of a trial
Opening Statements, Plaintiff's Case, Defendants Case, direct testimony & cross examination, closing statements, and verdict
Diversity Cases
Parties are not from the same state, and the amount in controversy is greater than $75,000, the law in question could emerge under state law
Contributory Negligence
Plaintiff contributed to his/her injury by any % of negligence, plaintiff gets nothing.
Executive Controls
President appoints heads of administrative agencies with consent of senate. Can change the political directions of rulemaking and it's enforcement.
subpoena
a court order requiring the appearance and/or testimony
the adversarial system
a court system in which both sides to a dispute present evidence through testimony of witness and experts and questioning or indicating the weakness of the other sides evidence to convince an impartial finder of fact to make a decision in their favor based upon the facts and relevant law
Difference Principle
Rawls' suggestion that society should reward behavior that provides the most benefit to the community as a whole
Tenth Amendment
Reserves all powers to the states not defined by federal powers under the constitution
Public International Law
Rules and norms governing relationships among states and international organizations
Pleadings
Statements by the plaintiff and the defendant that detail the facts, charges, and defenses of a case.
Direct Testimony
Statements made by a party or party's witness under oath
Whole Woman's Health v. Hellerstedt (2016)
Supreme Court abortion ruling that struck down state law provisions in Texas as presenting an undue burden on women seeking abortions. This decision invalidated numerous state and local laws that imposed similar limitations on clinics.
U.S. v. Lopez (1995)
Supreme Court declared Gun Free School Zones Act exceeded Congress's Interstate Commerce Clause power and was therefore unconstitutional. First federal law declared to exceed commerce clause since the 1930s
Appellate Court Judges
Tasked to determine whether the trial judge correctly applied the law
Wickard v. Filburn (1942)
The Court maintained that Congress' power extends even to intrastate commerce if interstate commerce could be affected by it. Also stated that individual non-activity in the marketplace is actionable if that activity could have a substantial effect on interstate commerce. Specifically in this case it applied to the production sale and consumption of wheat.
Miranda v. Arizona (1966)
The court ruled that those subjected to in-custody interrogation be advised of their constitutional right to an attorney and their right to remain silent.
5th Amendment
The Right to Remain Silent/Double Jeopardy, right to due process. any government decision to take life, liberty or property must be fair. Requires: Notice and Fair Hearing.
Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)
The Supreme Court upheld broad congressional power to regulate interstate commerce. The Court's broad interpretation of the Constitution's commerce clause paved the way for later rulings upholding expansive federal powers. This applies today to interstate e-commerce transactions.
UN Secretariat
The UN's executive branch, led by the Secretary General
Administrative Law
The body of law created by administrative agencies (in the form of rules, regulations, orders, and decisions) in order to carry out their duties and responsibilities.
Life prospects
The circumstances into which we are born
the commerce clause
The clause in the Constitution (Article I, Section 8, Clause 1) that gives Congress the power to regulate all business activities that cross state lines or affect more than one state or other nations. This is the greatest constitution impact on all US business both interstate and foreign
Limited Jurisdiction
The count is limited to a particular type of case or to an amount in dispute (eg. Small claims court)
ljtihad
The process of Islamic legal/religious reasoning
preponderance of evidence
The standard of proof in a civil case in which a judge or jury must believe the plaintiff's story and evidence is stronger than the defendant's version.
Federal Court System
The three-tiered structure of federal courts, comprising U.S. district courts (94 total in 12 districts), U.S. courts of appeal (13), and the U.S. Supreme Court (1)
Moral relativism
The view that a decision may be right even if it is not in line with one's ethical standards
reverse
To annul or make void a court ruling on account of some error or irregularity. This takes place at the appellate level
Sliding Scale Standard
To determine when they can exercise personal jurisdiction over an out-of-state defendant based on the defendant's Web activities. Jurisdiction can be enforced if there is substantial business interaction within a given jurisdiction, however not if it is just a passive website
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
U.S. law regulating behavior regarding the conduct of international business in the taking of bribes and other unethical actions.
Practical Limits
US v Lopez and (1995) US v Morrison (2000) curbed federal regulatory powers. The "Obamacare" Ruling (National Federation v. Sebelius) upheld the health care law under the taxing power not the Commerce power.
Complaint
a formal notice that a lawsuit is being brought. Defendant will have a certain amount of time to answer
Corporate Contacts
Usually jurisdiction in the state it was incorporated, principal place of business, places goods in stream of commerce or actively advertises
US v. Morrison (2000)
Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) unconstitutional because it exceeded Congress' commerce clause power. With Lopez v. United States, two recent cases checking commerce clause growth of federal power (unchecked since New Deal). Next up: Obamacare.
Most favored nation
WTO/GATT requires that favors offered to one country must be given to all member nations
Strict Scrutiny
When a fundamental right (ie marriage, travel) is involved or when different treatment is based on race, ethnicity, religion or gender -government must meet "overriding state interest" test (ie Japanese-American internment during WWII or Affirmative Action programs today)
Administrative court
Where the specific members of an industry are identified of their violation and brought in for civil proceedings
New York convention
Widely accepted treaty on the court enforcement of arbitral awards
GATT (general agreement on tariffs and trade)
a United Nations agency created by a multinational treaty to promote trade by the reduction of tariffs and import quotas
Organized crime
a business operation that supplies illegal goods and services for profit
Verdict (criminal/civil)
a civil law verdict is a 3/4th's majority, and a criminal law verdict is unanimous
Strict Liability Tort
a civil wrong that involves taking action that is so inherently dangerous under the circumstances of its performance that no amount of due care can make it safe
Non-fundamental right
rational relationship to state interest to focus on legislation
wire fraud
the use of radio, television, telephone, internet, or other wired forms of communication to conduct fraudulent activities with the intent to deprive an owner of property
Compensatory damages
actual losses that put plaintiff in the situation he/she would've been in prior to the occurrence of the tort, quantifiable as loss wages and medical bills, can also include nonmonetary damages such as pain and suffering
Plea bargaining
agreement between prosecution and defendant, 90% of criminal cases do not go to trial
UN commission on international trade
aims to harmonize international business law by proposing international legislation and reform.
Categorical Imperative
an act is only ethical if it would be acceptable for everyone to do the same thing
injunction
an authoritative command or order
Defendant
an individual or group being sued or charged with a crime
International Monetary Fund (IMF)
an international organization that acts as a lender of last resort, providing loans to troubled nations, and also works to promote trade through financial cooperation. Aims to foster worldwide economic growth and financial stability.
Ethics decision
any choice about how a person should behave that is based on a sense of right and wrong. Laws sometimes laws may criminalize those who feel ethical about there decisions, and respect those who act unethical
Defense to negligence
assumption of risk, contributory negligence, comparative negligence
jurisdiction
based on the case or who is prosecuting, the court will either be handled by a state or federal capacity (or either in some cases)
General (unlimited) jurisdiction
both federal and state court systems - can decide cases involving a broad array of issues
Federal question
cases in which the rights or obligations of a party are created or defined by some federal law or a constitutional issue under the US constitution
Exclusive Federal Jurisdiction
cases that involve federal crimes, federal antitrust law, bankruptcy patents, copyrights, trademarks, suits against the US, some areas of admiralty law, and certain other matters specified in federal statutes
I did it for someone else
common practice in which unethical deeds are rationalization if they are done to benefit someone else
Battery
completion and contact of the assault, unconsented harmful or torching action
False Imprisonment
confinement or restraint of another person's activities without justification. Merchants can detain a suspected shoplifter as long as there is any probable cause but any restraint must be reasonable
Conflicts of interest
conflicts that occur when employees or managers engage in activities on behalf of the company and have a personal interest in the outcome of those activities
Agencies/Administrations Authorized by Legislation
congress passes legislation to specify the name, purposes, functions, and powers of administrative agency, e.g., the Federal Trade Commission. Federal administrative agencies may exercise only those powers that Congress has delegated to them in legislation.
Defense of assault and battery
consent, self-defense, defense of others, defense of property
Liability of the corporate entity
crimes must occur within the scope of employment and corporations can be held criminally liable when they fail to fulfill statutory duties
Trial Court Judges
decide questions of law and preside over jury trials
Unprotected speech
defamatory speech, threatening speech violating criminal laws, fighting words. Also obscene speech which has no merit, offends people, and violates community standards
Roe v. Wade (1973)
determined that abortion rights fall within the privacy implied in the 14th amendment
State court systems
each state has a separate court system which contains 3 levels of courts: 1.limited and general jurisdiction trial courts. 2. Intermediate appellate courts. 3. Supreme court (highest court in system).
Jury in Civil suit
either party may demand for the sake of trial
White collar crimes
embezzlement, bribery, foreign corrupt practices act, fraud, mail and wire fraud, Money laundering
14th Amendment
equal protection under the law. The government must treat similarly situated individuals (or businesses) all in the same manner
Deontological
ethical theory based on duty and obligation. Duty to do the right thing regardless of the result that it may reap. Made by Immanuel Kant
Exclusionary Rule
evidence obtained in violation of constitutional procedures must be excluded from evidence. "fruit of the poisonous tree" which deters police from misconduct
Puffery
exaggerated sales talk which is not considered misrepresentation
Infliction of Emotional Distress
extreme and outrageous conduct intentionally or recklessly causing severe emotional distress. Some courts require physical distress
Negligence-unintentional tort
failure to exercise due care
Inspection
form of rule enforcement in which a warrant is usually required unless the business is in a highly regulated industry (firearms, alcohol)
51
how many court systems in the united states?
Beyond reasonable doubt
in a criminal case the state be able to show that the defendant performed the prohibited act and had the specific state in mind to do so (if not then there is no conviction)
lost in the crowd
in a group - people are less likely to take responsibility, assuming that someone else will in a business - tempting to go with the flow rather than protest the wrongdoing
closing statement
in a trial, each attorney's summary of the case, which attempts to persuade the judge (and the jury if there is one) to favor his or her side
Burden of proof (Criminal/Civil)
in civil law it is the preponderance of proof and in criminal law it is reasonable doubt
Parties who bring suit (civil/criminal)
in civil law suit is brought by the person who has suffered harm, and in criminal law the state brings suit
lying in a special case
intentional deception is tolerated; consequences can be severe. Lying to make others feel better
Fraudulent Misrepresentation
intentional deception of another that causes belief in a condition that is different from a condition that already exists (misrepresentation of facts, intent to induce innocent party to rely, justifiable reliance by innocent party, causation of damages)
Customary International Law
international law that usually develops slowly, over time, as states recognize practices as appropriate and correct
Court orders
judges can place binding obligations on people or companies
World Bank's
large economic business aimed at the goal to end poverty and maximize development
Miranda v Arizona
law enforcement must inform suspect of his or her rights to reman silent, anything said can be used to obtain a conviction in court, right to an attorney, right to have attorney provided if one cannot be afforded
Shari'a Law (Islamic Law)
laws based on the teachings of Muhammad and the Quran, the holy book of Islam
Comparative Negligence
long as Plaintiff is less than 50% at fault he can recover a pro-rata share of the verdict.
Reacting to unethical behavior
loyalty, exit, voice
Minimum Scrutiny
mere reasonableness; government action to restrict freedoms is valid if it involves any legitimate government interest that is not overboard.
Bail (criminal trial)
money or property posted with the court to ensure defendant is present at future proceedings
Ethics Traps
money, competition, rationalization
Concurrent Jurisdiction
most cases involving federal questions, diversity of citizenship cases
Publication Requirement
third party must hear or see statement. An individual who re-publishes the statement may be liable.
Jury for civil suit seeking an injunction
this type of case has no right to a jury
Trespass to land
occurs when a person, without permission, enters onto someone's land or remains on the land or permits anything to remain on the land, actual damages or harm to the property is not required to prove trespass. Actual damages or harm to the property is not required to prove trespass. can be defended if trespasser had a license
We Can't Be Objective About Ourselves
one cannot think that they are better than anyone else
Exceptions of Public Accountability
ongoing criminal and/or civil investigations/court actions, National Security. The court decides whether or not these are exceptions, not the administrative agency.
Businesses and due process of law
opportunity to be heard by a neutral magistrate
Slander
oral defamation
Judicial Controls
party seeking review must demonstrate standing to sue, there must be actual controversy at issue, and have exhausted all possible administrative remedies. Judicial review of agency action will frequently address whether the agency has acted beyond its authority or failed to discharge its responsibility.
double jeopardy
person cannot be retried for same event in same court, but civil action is permitted, federal and state does not apply to this because they are separate courts
Public figures
plaintiff must show statements made with actual malice. These people are specific officials, candidates for office, political activists, celebrities, etc.
Dormant Commerce Clause
power of states to negate and regulate interstate commerce. Comes into play when the interests of the states meet with the interests of the national government (ex: internet transactions)
Discovery (criminal trial)
prosecutor gives defense everything they have defense only needs to notify on an alibi defense or insanity defense
Defamation
publication of a false statement to a 3rd party or to a person's business reputation
Punitive damages
punish wrongdoer for shocking or outrageous conduct or exemplary damages
435
representatives in the house
Attorney-Client Privilege
right of individual to have discussions with his/her attorney kept private and confidential (both discussion and work product)
Six and eighth amendments
right to a speedy trial, right to a jury trial, right to a public trial, right to confront witnesses, right to counsel, and prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment
self-incrimination
right to remain silent or right to not testify against yourself
Adjudication
series of steps that determine whether a claim should be paid/process determining whether or not defendant is guilty. Process revolves around the negotiation of settlements, formal complaints, hearing procedures, and agency orders
Arbitration
settling a dispute by agreeing to accept the decision of an impartial outsider
Arbitration
settling a dispute by agreeing to accept the decision of an impartial outsider (third-party)
how to avoid ethics traps
slow down, do not trust your first instinct, remember your life principles
Depositions (Discovery)
sworn testimony of a witness or expert of a party recorded and transcribed by a court reporter
embezzlement
taking for one's own use in violation of trust; stealing (of money placed in one's care)
Remand
to send a case back to a lower court to be tried again
Affirm
to uphold the ruling of a lower court
UN General Assembly
the UN's law making body composed of all member nations to propose and vote on resolutions
Remedy (criminal/civil)
the civil law remedy is damages to compensate for the harm or decree to achieve an equitable result and the criminal law remedy is punishment by fine imprisonment of death
Long-Arm Statutes
the court can exercise jurisdiction over out-of-state defendants if they had sufficient minimum contacts to warrant it
subpoena duces tecum
the court command to a witness to produce at trial a certain pertinent document he or she holds
holding
the court's determination of a matter of law based on the issue presented in the particular case
Racketeering in corrupt organizations act (RICO)
the criminal provisions consist of 26 different felonies the transfer to fines in excess of 25,000 dollars or 20 years per felony, also gives an affected party the right to bring civil tort for the same
verdict
the decision a jury makes in a trial; the decision said by the jury
Commerce power today
the federal government has unlimited control over all business transactions since any enterprise (in the aggregate) can have a "substantial effect" on interstate commerce.
Rulemaking
the formulation of new regulation, involves three steps: -Notice of Proposed Rulemaking -Comment Period -The final rule
sovereignty
the idea that each government has the absolute authority to rule its people and its territory
The fudge factor
the idea that everyone is willing to cheat on a small scale
optimisim bias
the idea that the outcome of an event will be more positive than the evidence warrants
Standing
the legal right to sue for an actual injury or an actual controversy. Having a material stake in the matter (standing of public citizen interest groups)
Utilitarian Ethics
the moral worth of actions or practices is determined by their consequences. Created by John Stuart Mill
National Treatment
the nondiscrimination between both foreigners and locals
Defendant's Case
the part of a trial that occurs after the plaintiff has put on his case, when the defendant calls and examines witnesses and introduces evidence supporting his or her case
Extraterritoriality
the power of one country's laws to reach activities outside of the borders
executive power
the power to execute, enforce, and administer law (Article II)
Judicial Power
the power to interpret laws, to determine their meaning, and to settle disputes that arise within the society (Article III)
legislative power
the power to make a law and to frame public policies and laws (Article I of the constitution)
ethics
the principles of right and wrong that guide an individual in making decisions
Assault
the reasonable apprehension of fear of immediate contact
Life Principles
the rules by which you live your life. people who think about the right rules for living are less likely to do wrong
Veil of Ignorance
the rules for society that we would propose if we did not know how lucky we would be in life's lottery
Police powers
the states powers to regulate health, safety, morals and the general welfare. Includes licensing, building codes, parking regulations and zoning restrictions
blind spots
the tendency to ignore issues that we would rather not choose to entertain
Diversity of Citizenship Jurisdiction
the type of jurisdiction allowing a federal court to hear a case based on a state law claim when the parties to the lawsuit are residents of different states (think Meisels of Lone Star case)
Appropriation
the use of another person's name, likeness, or other identifying characteristic, without permission and for the benefit of the user, right of publicity as a property right focuses on the commercial exploitation of likeness