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Legal Dictionary

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- Jactitation
- A false boast designed to increase standing at the expense of another. This used to form
the basis of an ancient legal petition called "jactitation of marriage" wherein
a person could be ordered by the courts to cease claims of being married to a certain
person when, in fact, they were not married. The tort of
slander of title is a form of jactitation.
- J. D.
- Abbreviation for "juris doctor" or "doctor of jurisprudence" and the formal name given to the university
law degree in the United States. It is a prerequisite to most bar admission exams.
- Joint and several liability
- Liability of more than one person for which each person may be sued for the entire
amount of damages done by all.
- Joint custody
- A child custody decision which means that both
parents share joint legal custody and joint physical custody. This is not very common and many
professionals have taken to referring to "joint legal custody but sole maternal
physical custody" as "joint custody".
- Joint tenancy
- When two or more persons are equally owners of some property. The unique aspect of joint
tenancy is that as the joint tenancy owners die, their shares accrue to the surviving
owner(s) so that, eventually, the entire share is held by one person. A valid joint
tenancy is said to require the "four unities": unity of interest (each joint
tenant must have an equal interest including equality of duration and extent), unity of
title (the interests must arise from the same document), unity of possession (each joint
tenant must have an equal right to occupy the entire property) and unity of time: the
interests of the joint tenants must arise at the same time.
- Judicial review
- When a court decision is appealed, it is known as an "appeal." But there are
many administrative agencies or tribunals
which make decisions or deliver government services of one sort or another, the decisions
of which can also be "appealed." In many cases, the "appeal" from
administrative agencies is known as "judicial review" which is essentially a
process where a court of law is asked to rule on the appropriateness of the administrative
agency or tribunal's decision. Judicial
review is a fundamental principle of administrative
law. A distinctive feature of judicial review is that the "appeal" is not
usually limited to errors in law but may be based on alleged errors on the part of the
administrative agency on findings of fact.
- Jure
- Latin, from Roman law: by right, under legal authority or by the authority of the law. A
variation, "juris" means "of right" or "of the law." See jurisprudence below which means "science of the law."
- Jurisdiction
- Refers to a court's authority to judge over a situation usually acquired in one of three
ways: over acts committed in a defined territory (eg. the jurisdiction of the Supreme
Court of Australia is limited to acts committed or originating in Australia), over certain
types of cases (the jurisdiction of a bankruptcy court is limited to bankruptcy cases), or
over certain persons (a military court has jurisdiction limited to actions of enlisted
personnel).
- Jurisprudence
- Technically, jurisprudence means the "science of law". Statutes articulate the bland rules of law, with only rare
reference to factual situations. The actual application of these statutes to facts is left
to judges who consider not only the statute but also other legal rules which might be
relevant to arrive at a judicial decision; hence, the "science". Thus,
jurisprudence" has come to refer to case law, or
the legal decisions which have developed and which accompany statutes in applying the law
against situations of fact.
- Jury
- A group of citizens randomly selected from the general population and brought together
to assist justice by deciding which version, in their opinion, constitutes "the
truth" given different evidence by opposing parties.
- Jus
- Latin: word which, in Roman law, meant the law or a right. Also spelt "ius" in
some English translations. For example, public law was called "jus publicum" and
private law was called "jus privatum."
- Jus spatiandi et manendi
- Latin: referring to a legal right of way, and to enjoyment, granted to the public but
only for the purposes of recreation or education, such as upon parks or public squares.
Very similar to an easement of which some courts
have said a jus spatiandi is a special type.
- Justice
- Fairness. A state of affairs in which conduct or action is both fair and right, given
the circumstances. In law, it more specifically refers to the paramount obligation to
ensure that all persons are treated fairly. Litigants "seek justice" by asking
for compensation for wrongs committed against them; to right the inequity such that, with
the compensation, a wrong has been righted and the balance of "good" or
"virtue" over "wrong" or "evil" has been corrected.

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