Personal Injury Legal Glossary
Glossary of Personal Injury Law Terms
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Click on the first letter of the word from the list above to go to the appropriate section of the glossary.
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Search Warrant: A written order issued by a judge
that directs a law enforcement officer to search a
specific area for a particular piece of evidence.
Secured Debt: In bankruptcy proceedings, a debt is
secured if the debtor gave the creditor a right to
repossess the property or goods used as collateral.
Self-Defense: Claim that an act otherwise criminal was
legally justifiable because it was necessary to protect a
person or property from the threat or action of another.
Self-Incrimination, Privilege Against: The
constitutional right of people to refuse to give testimony
against themselves that could subject them to criminal
prosecution. The right is guaranteed in the Fifth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Asserting the right is
often referred to as taking the Fifth.
Self-Proving Will: A will whose validity does not have
to be testified to in court by the witnesses to it, since
the witnesses executed an affidavit reflecting proper
execution of the will prior to the maker's death.
Sentence: The punishment ordered by a court for a
defendant convicted of a crime. A concurrent sentence
means that two or more sentences would run at the same
time. A consecutive sentence means that two or more
sentences would run one after another.
Sentence Report: A document containing background
material on a convicted person. It is prepared to guide
the judge in the imposition of a sentence. Sometimes
called a presentence report.
Sequester: To separate. Sometimes juries are separated
from outside influences during their deliberations. For
example, this may occur during a highly publicized trial.
Sequestration of Witnesses: Keeping all witnesses
(except plaintiff and defendant) out of the courtroom
except for their time on the stand, and cautioning them
not to discuss their testimony with other witnesses. Also
called separation of witnesses. This prevents a witness
from being influenced by the testimony of a prior witness.
Service: The delivery of a legal document, such as a
complaint, summons, or subpoena, notifying a person of a
lawsuit or other legal action taken against him or her.
Service, which constitutes formal legal notice, must be
made by an officially authorized person in accordance with
the formal requirements of the applicable laws.
Settlement: An agreement between the parties disposing
of a lawsuit.
Settlor: The person who sets up a trust. Also called
the grantor.
Several Liability: Liability separate and distinct
from the liability of another which is sufficient to
support a lawsuit without reference to anyone else's
liability.
Severance of Actions: Judicial proceeding
separating the claims of multiple parties and permitting
separate actions on each one or some combination of them.
Service of Process: Providing a formal notice to
the defendant that orders him to appear in court to answer
plaintiff’s allegations.
Show Cause Order: Judicial direction to appear in
court and present reasons why the court should not take a
proposed action.
Sidebar: A conference between the judge and lawyers,
usually in the courtroom, out of earshot of the jury and
spectators.
Slander: False and defamatory spoken words tending to
harm another's reputation, business, or means of
livelihood. Slander is spoken defamation; libel is
published.
Small Claims Court: A court that handles civil claims
for small amounts of money. People often represent
themselves rather than hire an attorney.
Social Host Liability: The liability of a person
(the "social host") who furnishes free alcoholic
beverages to another (the "guest"), when the
guest subsequently sustains injuries or causes injury to a
third person because of his intoxication.
Sovereign Immunity: The doctrine that the government,
state or federal, is immune to lawsuit unless it gives its
consent.
Special Jurisdiction: Power of a court to deal with
only a limited type of case.
Specific Loss: In a workers' compensation case,
this is the compensation payable for loss (amputation) or
permanent loss of use of members of the body, complete
loss of hearing in one or both ears, loss of vision in one
or both eyes, and disfigurement.
Specific Performance: A remedy requiring a person who
has breached a contract to perform specifically what he or
she has agreed to do. Specific performance is ordered when
damages would be inadequate compensation.
Spendthrift Trust: A trust set up for the benefit of
someone who the grantor believes would be incapable of
managing his or her own financial affairs.
Spoliation: Generally, the destruction of evidence.
Stack or Stacking: In Pennsylvania automobile
insurance law, purchasers of insurance have the option to
"stack" uninsured and underinsured motorist
coverage. If you choose "stacking," this means
that you can add the coverage together for each vehicle
you have insured, at least under the policy. (An issue
presently exists as to whether you can "stack"
coverages under separate policies of insurance.) For
example, if you have two vehicles, with $100,000/$300,000
(meaning $100,000 available per person, and $300,000
available per accident) in uninsured or underinsured
motorist coverage, you can "stack" the coverages
and have available $200,000/$600,000 in coverage.
Standard of Care: In the law of negligence, the degree
of care which a reasonable, prudent or careful person
should exercise under the same or similar circumstances.
If the standard falls below that established by law for
the protection of others against unreasonable risk of
harm, the person may be liable for damages resulting from
such conduct.
Standard of Proof or Burden of Proof: Degree of proof
required in a specific kind of case to prevail. In the
majority of civil cases, it is proof by a preponderance of
the evidence.
Standing: The legal right to bring a lawsuit. Only a
person with something at stake has standing to bring a
lawsuit.
Stare Decisis: Policy of the courts to not overturn
precedents; adherence to precedents.
Status Offenders: Youths charged with the status of
being beyond the control of their legal guardian or are
habitually disobedient, truant from school, or having
committed other acts that would not be a crime if
committed by an adult. They are not delinquents (in that
they have committed no crime), but rather are persons in
need of supervision, minors in need of supervision, or
children in need of supervision, depending on the state in
which they live. Status offenders are placed under the
supervision of the juvenile court.
Statute: Generally, a law created by a legislature.
Statute of Limitations: The time prescribed by statute
in which a plaintiff can bring a lawsuit.
Statutory Construction: Process by which a court seeks
to interpret the meaning and scope of legislation.
Statutory Law: Law enacted by the legislative branch
of government, as distinguished from case law or common
law.
Stay: Court-ordered suspension of a judicial
proceeding.
Strict Construction: Judicial interpretation of the
law whereby the judge adheres to the literal meaning of
the words. Compare with liberal construction which expands
the literal meaning of the statute to meet cases that are
clearly within the spirit or reason of the law.
Strict Liability: Doctrine that holds defendants
liable for harm caused by their actions regardless of
their intentions or lack of negligence. Often applied to
manufacturers or sellers of defective products in products
liability cases.
Stroke: Damage to a part of the brain when its blood
supply is suddenly reduced or stopped. This stoppage in
blood flow can occur as the result of a blood vessel
becoming blocked or bursting inside the brain. The part of
the brain deprived of blood dies and can no longer
function.
Stipulation: An agreement by attorneys on both sides
of a civil or criminal case about some aspect of the case;
e.g., to extend the time to answer, to adjourn the trial
date, or to admit certain facts at the trial.
Strike: Highlighting in the record of a case, evidence
that has been improperly offered and will not be relied
upon.
Sua Sponte: A Latin phrase which means on one's own
behalf. Voluntary, without prompting or suggestion.
Subject Matter Jurisdiction: The court's power to
deal with the general subject matter involved in a case.
For example, a bankruptcy court judge has no subject
matter jurisdiction to hear a divorce case.
Subornation of Perjury: Procuring someone to make a
false statement under oath.
Subpoena: Command to appear at a certain place and
time to give testimony on a matter.
Subpoena Duces Tecum: Command to produce some document
or paper.
Subrogation: Substitution of one person for another,
giving the substitute the same legal rights as the
original party. For example, an insurance company may have
a right of subrogation to sue anyone whom the person it
compensated had a right to sue.
Substantive law. The body of law that creates, defines
and regulates right. Compare with procedural law which
prescribes the manner to enforce rights or obtaining
redress for invasion of rights.
Sue: The act of bringing a lawsuit.
Suit or Lawsuit: Generally, a court action brought by
one person, the plaintiff, against another, the defendant
, seeking compensation for some injury or enforcement of a
right.
Summary Judgment: A decision made on the basis of
statements and evidence presented for the record without a
trial. It is used when there is no dispute as to the facts
of the case, and one party is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law.
Summons: Formal document beginning a civil action or
special proceeding which is a means to gain jurisdiction
over a party. Also, a document directed to a sheriff or
other authorized person ordering him to serve the person
named on the summons who must appear at a certain place
and time to respond to the action.
Supplier of Goods: In products liability law, all
parties in the chain of supply of a product for profit,
including manufacturers, sellers, and dealers.
Supplemental Agreement: In a workers' compensation
case, this is the form signed by the injured employee when
there has been a change in disability status.
Support Trust: A trust that instructs the trustee to
spend only as much income and principal (the assets held
in the trust) as needed for the beneficiary's support.
Suppress: To forbid the use of evidence at a trial
because it is improper or was improperly obtained. See
also exclusionary rule.
Surety Bond: A bond purchased at the expense of the
estate to insure the executor's proper performance. Often
called a fidelity bond.
Survival Action: A survival action is brought by
the administrator of a deceased person's estate in order
to recover loss to the estate resulting from a tort. A
survival action continues in the decedent's personal
representative a right of action which accrued to the
decedent at common law because of a tort. A survival
action, unlike a wrongful death action, is not a new cause
of action. Where death is caused by negligence, both a
survival action and a wrongful death action may be
brought.
Survival Statutes: Statutory law that provides for
a legal action to continue after the death of a person
involved in the action.
Survivorship: Another name for joint tenancy.
Sustain: A court ruling upholding an objection or a
motion.