BLAW Test 1 and 2
Personal jurisdiction generally exists if-
1. The defendant is a resident of the state in which a lawsuit is filed, for companies; the defendant is doing buisness in that state. 2. The defendant takes a formal step to defend a lawsuit. 3. A summons is served on a defendant 4. a Long arm statute applies.
Moral relativism
A belief that a decision may be right even if it is not in keeping with one's own ethics standards; your own truth
Moral universalism
A belief that some acts are always right or always wrong; Religious.
Federal Question case
A case in which the claim is based on the U.S. Constitution, a federal statute, or a federal treaty
Personal Jurisdiction
A courts authority to bind the defendant to its decisions
Statutes
A law created by a legislature
Common law
A legal system based on custom and court rulings- precedent
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.
Writ of Certiorari
A petition asking the Supreme Court to hear a case.
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.
Summary Judgement
A ruling by the court that no trial is necessary because some essential facts are not in dispute
counterclaim
A second lawsuit by the defendant against the plaintiff
complaint
A short, plain statement of the facts alleged and the legal claims made
"Scarcely any political question arises in the United States that is not resolved, sooner or later, into a judicial question."
Alexis de Tocqueville
Appeals courts
Higher courts that review the trial record to see if the court made errors of law
Deontological
Immanual Kant- From the Greek word for obligation; the duty to do the right thing, regardless of the result; Proponents of deontological ethics believe that utilitarians have it all wrong and that the results of a decision are not as important as the reason for making it;
categorical imperative
Immanuel Kant- action is right or wrong, or desirable or undesirable, if everybody else in the same situation, or category, acted the same way.
Utilitarianism
John Stuart Mill- To Mill, a correct decision is one that maximizes overall happiness and minimizes overall pain, thereby producing the greatest net benefit; Greatest good for most people.
Pleadings
The documents that begin a lawsuit, consisting of the complaint, the answer, and sometimes a reply
beyond a reasonable doubt
The government's burden of proof in a criminal prosecution.
Deponent
The person being questioned in a despositon
Jurisprudence
The philosophy/theory of law.
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;
preponderance of the 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.
Front page test
When faced with a difficult decision, think about how you would feel if your actions went viral.
Challenges for cause
a claim that a juror has demonstrated probable bias
Jurisdiction
a courts power to hear a cas
default judgment
a decision that the plaintiff wins without trial because the defendant failed to answer in time
motion
a formal request to the court that it take some step or issue some order
motion after verdict/judgment non obstant veredicto
a judgment notwithstanding the jurys verdict
Natural law
a law should not be followed if it is unjust. A unjust law is no law at all.
Error of Law
a mistake made by a judge in legal procedures or rulings during a trial that may allow the case to be appealed
motion to dismiss
a request that the court terminate a case because the law does not offer a legal remedy for the plaintiffs problem
directed verdict
a ruling that the plaintiff has entirely failed to prove some aspect of her case
Long arm statute
a statute that gives a court jursidiction over someone who commits a tort, signs a contract, or conducts "regular business activities" in the state.
ethics traps; conformity and following orders
conforming to something unethical because everyone else is and following unethical orders.
Judicial branch state courts
create state common law interpret statutes
Executive power
is the authority to enforce laws. president as commander in chief of the armed forces and the head of the executive branch of the federal government.
Rawlsian
john Rawls- In thinking about ethics decisions, it is worth remembering that many of us have been winners in life's lottery and that the unlucky also deserve opportunities;
English roots
jury of 12 persons. De Bracton was teaching judges to rule based on previous cases-precedent.
Legal positivism
law is what sovereign says it is, leaves little room for morals/ethics.
civil law
law that regulates the rights and duties between parties
ethics traps: euphemisms and reframing and lost in a crowd
making a situation sound better for your benifit, and when your in a group you are less likely to take responsibility
Ethical traps; moral licensing and conflicts of interest
moral licensing- people tend to do something unethical after doing it once. conflicts of interest; doing something for your own benifit or basing your decisions on what someone did for you.
ethics traps: short term perspective and blind spots
only thinking of right now and not the future and ignoring obvious problems
Slander
oral defamation
appellant
party filing the appeal
State legislature
passes statutes on state law creates state agencies
Ethical traps- objective about ourselves
people are not objective when comparing themselves to others, we all tend to think of ourselves as better than the other fellow
individual relativism
people must develop their own ethics rules
ethical traps rationalization and the fudge factor
rationalizing bad decisions by using the fudge fact which is a small amount of bad will not effect the big picture.
Sovereign
recognized political power, whom citizens obey.
Precedent
requires that judges decide current cases based on previous rulings.
Dobbs v. Jackson womans helath organization reversed
roe v. wade
arbitration
settling a dispute by agreeing to accept the decision of an impartial outsider, arbitrator has the power to impose an award.
Milton Fridman argued
that a corporate manager's primary responsibility is to the owners of the organization, that is, to shareholders. Others have argued that corporations should instead consider all company stakeholders, not just shareholders.
Summons
the courts written notice that a lawsuit has been filed against the defendant
verdict
the decision a jury makes in a trial; the decision said by the jury
courts generally enforce arbitration clauses if
the parties must freely and knowingly agree, the parties must mutually promise to submit disputs to arbitration, the arbitration clause must provide a neutral forum to resolve disputs and adopt fair rules for the proceeding.
appellee
the party opposing the appeal
burden of proof
the plaintiff must convince the jury that its version of the case is correct; the defendant is not obligated to disprove the allegations
stare decisis
the principle that precedent is binding on later cases "let the decision stand"
Litigation
the process of filing claims in court and ultimately going to trail
Voir Dire
the process of selecting a jury
peremptory challenges
the right to excuse a juror for virtually any reason
Life Principles
the rules by which you live your life
Falsity
the statement must be false
Constitution 1787
the supreme law of the land. Established the national government with three branches, created a system of checks and balances, guarantees many basic rights.
affirm,modify,reverse and remand
to allow the decision to stand, to affirm the outcome but with changes, to nullify the lower decision and return the case for reconsideration or retrial
Legal realism
who enforces the law counts more than what is in writing
briefs
written arguments on the case
Libel
written defamation
state supreme court
highest court in the state and accepts some appeals from the court of appeals
Difference principle
Rawls's suggestion that society should reward behavior that provides the most benefit to the community as a whole.
Texas V. Lawrence reversed
Bowers v Hardwick
Legislative power
Congress, which is comprised of Senate and a House of Representatives.
Food processing ethics
Creating food that is more addictive, increasing portion sizes/calories, targeting children, false packaging, funding dubious science, targeting poorer countries or areas.
What are the four elements to a defamation case that must be proved
Defamatory statement, Falsity, communicated, Injury
Trail Courts
Determine the facts of a particular dispute and apply to those facts the law given by earlier appellate court decisions. can either have limited or general jurisdiction. limited: small court issues, general: broad range of cases
must prove what to get a federal question case
Diversity Jurisdiction- Applies when (1) the plaintiff and defendant are citizens of different states and (2) the amount in dispute exceeds $75,000
Defamation Statement
False statement stated as fact
rules of evidence
Rules governing the admissibility of evidence in trial courts.
class action
One plaintiff represents the entire group of plaintiffs, including those who are unaware of the lawsuit or even unaware they were harmed
depositions
Oral questions asked of parties and witnesses under oath.
Brown V Board of education reversed
Plessy V. Ferguson
Criminal Law
Prohibits and punishes conduct that threatens public safety and welfare.
reply
answer to the counterclaim
Ethics decisions
any choice about how a person should behave that is based on a sense of right and wrong.
Subject matter jurisdiction
authority of a court to decide a particular kind of case
Intentional tort
harm caused by deliberate action
Obergfell V. Hodges reversed
baker v. Nelson
Court orders
binding obligations on specific people or businesses judges issue
Right to a Jury trial
both plaintiff and defendant have a right to demand a jury trial, if the plaintiff is seeking an equitable remedy such as an injunction, there is no jury right for either party
Injunctions
can require people to do things like perform on a contract or remove a nuisance
cultural relativism
depends on the norms and practices in each society
ethical traps: money and competition
doing something unethical for money or to keep up with competition
Defamation
false statements that harm someone's reputation, libel/slander
Indigenous roots
federalism, and the checks and balances, and branches of government
slippery slope
first unethical step will lead to subsequent steps that cannot be prevented, down a slippery slope.
Judicial power-
gives the right to interpret laws and determine their validity. Court at the head of the judicial branch of the federal government.