Personal Injury Legal Glossary
Glossary of Personal Injury Terms
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Elements of a Crime: Specific factors
that define a crime which the prosecution must prove
beyond a reasonable doubt in order to obtain a
conviction. The elements that must be proven are (1)
that a crime has actually occurred, (2) that the accused
intended the crime to happen, and (3) a timely
relationship between the first two factors.
Eminent Domain: The power of the government to take
private property for public use through condemnation.
Emotional Distress: Mental anguish.
Employee Verification Form: In a workers' compensation
case, it's a bi-annual report of earnings to be
completed by the injured employee. The form is required
to be returned to the insurance carrier within 30 days
of receipt or benefits may be stopped.
En Banc: All the judges of a court sitting together.
Appellate courts can consist of a dozen or more judges,
but often they hear cases in panels of three judges. If
a case is heard or reheard by the full court, it is
heard en banc.
Enjoining: An order by the court telling a person to
stop performing a specific act.
Entrapment: A defense to criminal charges alleging that
agents of the government induced a person to commit a
crime he or she otherwise would not have committed.
Equal Protection of the Law: The guarantee in the
Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that all
persons be treated equally by the law. Court decisions
have established that this guarantee requires that
courts be open to all persons on the same conditions,
with like rules of evidence and modes of procedure; that
persons be subject to no restrictions in the acquisition
of property, the enjoyment of personal liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness, which do not generally affect
others; that persons are liable to no other or greater
burdens than such as are laid upon others, and that no
different or greater punishment is enforced against them
for a violation of the laws.
Equitable Remedies: Remedies that do not include
monetary settlements. Examples include injunctions and
restraining orders.
Equity: Generally, justice or fairness. Historically,
equity refers to a separate body of law developed in
England in reaction to the inability of the common-law
courts, in their strict adherence to rigid writs and
forms of action, to consider or provide a remedy for
every injury. The king therefore established the court
of chancery, to do justice between parties in cases
where the common law would give inadequate redress. The
principle of this system of law is that equity will find
a way to achieve a lawful result when legal procedure is
inadequate. Equity and law courts are now merged in most
jurisdictions.
Error: In the legal sense, a mistaken interpretation of
facts or application of the law that can prove grounds
for an appeal.
Escheat (es-chet): The process by which a deceased
person's property goes to the state if no heir can be
found.
Escrow: Money or a written instrument such as a deed
that, by agreement between two parties, is held by a
neutral third party (held in escrow) until all
conditions of the agreement are met.
Estate: An estate consists of personal property (car,
household items, and other tangible items), real
property, and intangible property, such as stock
certificates and bank accounts, owned in the individual
name of a person at the time of the persons death. It
does not include life insurance proceeds unless the
estate was made the beneficiary) or other assets that
pass outside the estate (like joint tenancy asset).
Estate Tax: Generally, a tax on the privilege of
transferring property to others after a person's death.
In addition to federal estate taxes, many states have
their own estate taxes.
Estoppel: A person's own act, or acceptance of facts,
which preclude his or her later making claims to the
contrary.
Et al: And others.
Evidence: Proof of a probative matter presented at trial
for the purpose of inducing belief in the minds of the
jury or judge. Evidence comes in a variety of forms,
including testimony, writings, tangible objects, and
exhibits.
Exemplary Damages or Punitive Damages: Compensation
greater than is necessary to pay a plaintiff for a loss.
These damages are awarded because the loss was
aggravated by violence, oppression, malice, fraud or
wanton and wicked conduct on the part of the defendant.
Such damages are intended to punish the defendant for
his evil behavior or make an example of him or her.
Exempt Property: In bankruptcy proceedings, this refers
to certain property protected by law from the reach of
creditors.
Exceptions: Declarations by either side in a civil or
criminal case reserving the right to appeal a judge's
ruling upon a motion. Also, in regulatory cases,
objections by either side to points made by the other
side or to rulings by the agency or one of its hearing
officers.
Exclusionary Rule: The rule preventing illegally
obtained evidence to be used in any trial.
Execute: To complete the legal requirements (such as
signing before witnesses) that make a will valid. Also,
to execute a judgment or decree means to put the final
judgment of the court into effect.
Executor: A personal representative, named in a will,
who administers an estate.
Exhibit: A document or other item introduced as evidence
during a trial or hearing.
Exonerate: Removal of a charge, responsibility or duty.
Expert: A witness who may give an opinion in court based
on the particular competence of that witness.
Ex Parte: On behalf of only one party, without notice to
any other party. For example, a request for a search
warrant is an ex parte proceeding, since the person
subject to the search is not notified of the proceeding
and is not present at the hearing.
Ex Parte Proceeding: The legal procedure in which only
one side is represented. It differs from adversary
system or adversary proceeding.
Ex Post Facto: After the fact. The Constitution
prohibits the enactment of ex post facto laws. These are
laws that permit conviction and punishment for a lawful
act performed before the law was changed and the act
made illegal.
Extenuating Circumstances: Circumstances which render a
crime less aggravated, heinous, or reprehensible than it
would otherwise be.
Expungement: Official and formal erasure of a record or
partial contents of a record.
Extradition: The process by which one state or country
surrenders to another state, a person accused or
convicted of a crime in the other state.
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