court reporters basic legal term

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CAT

computer-aided transcription. CAT systems are computer equipment and programs that perform three main functions. First, they translate the reporters notes into english. These notes are in electronic form. Secondly, they provide an editing system that is highly specialized for court reporting which allows the roughly translated text to be put into full, final transcript form. This step is also called "scoping." And finally, the CAT system prints the transcript in the format required by legal practice: numbered lines, double spacing, and a box. Early CAT systems were based on a mainframe or mini computer. CAT programs came into wise use in the 1980s with the rise of the personal computer. A new wrinkle on CAT systems is Realtime translation.

continuance

the adjournment or postponement of a legal proceeding to a subsequent day

taking attorney

the attorney who ordered the deponent to appear for questioning. the taking attorney notices others in the case of the time and place of the deposition, subpoenas the deponent if needed, orders the court reporter and asks the bulk of the questions

Commission

An authority or writing issued from a court directing and authorizing a person or persons named to do some act or exercise some special function, usually to take the depositions of witnesses

Litigation Support or Lit Support

Broadly, this refers to any of the tools that an attorney may use to help categorize and display information about the case, things that support the litigation. This often includes visual aids used in a courtroom, such as charts and computerized recreations of an accident scene. In court reporting, lit support refers more narrowly to the production of transcript text in computerized form, such as an ASCII copy of the testimony or graphic copies of the exhibits on CD-ROM

CIC

Computer Integrated Courtroom. CIC is the application of computer technology in a courtroom or deposition room such that all parties present have immediate access to the text of the proceedings as it happens, plus possible other resources such as past testimony and exhibit images.

calendar

a "calendar," in the field of law, is the schedule of upcoming appearances in court or legal proceedings. Attorneys keep a calendar of times when and where certain activities are to take place. An important section of Atkinson-Baker is the Calendar department, which handles the scheduling assignments of our court reporters along with any changes in those assignments. A job which is scheduled to be done is said to be "on calendar."

CSR

a certified shorthand reporter, a stenographer who has been specially trained to take shorthand by machine, primarily for legal proceedings, and has been certified by the state.

appearance

a coming into court or to a deposition as a party to a suit

ASCII

a computer term which stands for American Standard Code for Information Interchange. ASCII is a means of exchanging text among dissimilar computers and computer programs. The term ASCII in court reporting is usually used to mean a file in this format. ASCIIs are the most common form of litigation support offered by court reporters at this time. Having the ASCII of a transcript allows a law firm to load the text into a computer for fast searches and extractions of portions of the testimony. The programs used for this purpose range from common word processors to sophisticated text databases.

medical

a court reporting job in which the deponent is testifying as a medical expert witness. The court reporter needs to familiar with medical words and their spellings

appearance fee

a fee paid when the court reporter arrives at a scheduled deposition but the deposition does not occur

Interrogatory

a formal or written question, or series of questions, which must be answered under oath. In some cases, there is no taking attorney present at a deposition. Rather, the court reporter is given a written list of questions which she herself asks the deponent and then reports his answers. Such a court reporting job is referred to as an "interrogatory"

subpoena

a judicial order requiring a person to appear and give testimony

ex parte

a latin phrase, meaning on one side only; by or for one party; done for, in behalf of one party only.

condensed transcript

a miniaturized copy of the original transcript printed in such a way as to place eight or more pages of transcript on a single sheet of paper, front and back

O and 1 (O & 1)

a notation which means that the original transcript plus one copy is being made of a transcript. "O & 5" would mean the original plus five copies are being ordered.

Defendant

a person accused of wrongdoing or sued in a court of law

Scopist

a person who assists a court reporter by taking the first, rough, computer translation of the reporter's notes and editing them into full transcript format

party

a person who takes part in the performance of any act or who is directly interested in a any affair, contract, etc., or who is actively concerned in the prosecution and defense of any legal proceeding

Deponent

a person who testifies under oath. The person answers questions put to him, and these questions and his answers are recorded in shorthand by the court reporter. After the ext has been transcribed, the deponent is typically given the opportunity to read the written record of his statement, amend it or correct it as he sees fit, and then sign his name to it as being correct.

writer

a steno machine

Date of Loss (DOL)

a term used in insurance cases which refers to the date of an accident, injury, or other insured event that someone has filed a claim for

custodian of records

a type of court reporting job in which the person being deposed is there not so much to answer questions verbally but rather to convey records of some kind that he has control of. THe person subpoenaed to appear is to custodian (keeper) of records being sought by the taking attorney. The subpoena will have charges the deponent with the task of bringing with him all of the records identified in the subpoena. Custodian of Records depositions are usually short in terms of time and text but have a great many exhibits, which must be marked and indexed by the reporter and then copied and bound.

Expert Witness

a type of witness who gives testimony in relation to some scientific, technical, or professional matter.

affidavit

a written declaration made under oath before a notary public or other authorized officer

writ

a written order issued by a court, commanding the person to whom it is addressed to perform or cease performing some specified act

PI (or P.I.)

abbreviation for "personal injury," a category of litigation which involves individuals who are victims of personal injury

dictionary

an essential part of a CAT system used in translating the reporter's notes into English. The dictionary contains correlations between stenographic notes and English text. Since stenographers develop their own writing style and system of abbreviations, dictionaries are specific to each individual reporter and are compiled through repeated use and correction by the reporter

exedite

an expedite job that has been explicitly ordered by one of the attorneys at a deposition to be delivered sooner than normal in exchange for an increased fee

setting

an order placed for a court reporter. the act of scheduling a court reporting event

litigation

contest in a court of justice for the purpose of enforcing a contract or right

Exhibit

document, object, etc., shown in court as evidence. Exhibits are marked with an identifying number by the court reporter and then indexed and described in the transcript of the proceedings

Notice

in a legal sense, a notice is information, an advice, or written warning, in more or less formal shape, intended to inform a person of some proceeding in which his interests are involved , or informing him of some fact which is his right to know, and which it is the duty of the informing party to communicate. when a lawyer schedules a witness, he gives notice to other counsel in the case of where and when the testimony of whom will be taken

realtime

realtime as a computer term means "happening right now, in present time." It is used loosely to refer to two different techniques and types of software used by attorneys and reporters during a deposition.

Realtime cat system translation

the earliest use of the term "realtime" in court reporting referred to the concurrent translation of the reporter's notes into English. up until recently, translation was done after the deposition was taken, typically on a computer back at the court reporter's office. The reporter's notes were fed to a desktop computer. with the advent of powerful notebook computers, it is now possible for a CAT system to translate the notes as they are stroked in by the reporter. The reporter's steno machine is connected to her notebook computer by a cable or wire and the data is transferred as it occurs instead of later. The notebook computer translates the notes as they are received.

Deposition (depo)

the giving of testimony under oath. The actual testimony of an individual or individuals, especially a sworn testimony. Depositions are usually distinguished from courtroom testimony. Depositions are taken before a case goes to trial, during the "discovery" phase of the case.

Machine Steno

the kinds of marks made by a steno machine, as differentiated from the marks used in handwritten stenography

stipulation

the name given to any agreement made between attorneys respecting business before the court. it is not binding unless agreed to by all counsel present, and most stipulations are required to be in writing. In a deposition, a stipulation is often spoken into the record by the taking attorney and agreed to verbally and on the record by the other counsel present

Notes

the original stenographic marks made by a court reporter during the proceedings being reporter. Notes can be made by hand with pen and paper or with a steno machine. A steno machine prints the notes on a folded paper tape and may also record them in electronic form such as a computer file on a diskette. "Notes" usually refers to the entire stenographic record of one session.

plaintiff

the person who begins a lawsuit. the plaintiff accuses another of wrongdoing.

Scoping

the process of editing the first, rough translation of the court reporter's notes into final form. A court reporter may do this step herself or may hire a scopist. the scoped transcript is then proofread by the reporter

testimony

the statement of declaration of a witness under oath

court reporter

the stenographer who witnesses and reports on what is said at a trial, deposition, or hearing. A court reporter writes verbatim notes during the proceeding, then produces a full, written transcript of what was said from these notes.

translate

the stenographic notes taken by the reporter must be translated into English text before they can be used by anyone else. It used to be that reporters read their notes from the paper pad and typed the English directly. Nowadays most reporters use a computer program known as a CAT system to make a first pass at the translation. after the CAT system has translated the job, it still needs to be scoped and proofread

Realtime Text Capture for CIC

the term "realtime" is also used to refer to the simultaneous broadcast of the text of a deposition, in realtime, from the reporter's realtime CAT system to one or more attorneys' computers. This text is captured by a program running on the attorneys' computers that is designed for this purpose. Very simple means are provided that allow the text to be marked, annotated, searched, reviewed, or printed during the proceeding or immediately afterwards without distracting the attorney

transcript

the verbatim writing of what occurred at a legal proceeding, produced by the court reporter from stenographic notes taken at the time

stroke

to "play" the keys on a steno machine so as to produce stenographic marks. the keys are often pressed in combinations using both hands, somewhat like playing a chord on a piano. each downward motion of the hands is a stroke, and the mark so produces is also referred to as a stroke.

litigate

to carry out a dispute or contest with someone before the law. To sue someone

untranslates

untranslates are instances of untranslated stenographic markings appearing ina work which has been translated from stenographic notes. Untranslates will be present in a transcript which has been translated bu not yet scoped, and some will appear in realtime text during a depostion


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