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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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Tangible Personal
Property Memorandum (TPPM): A legal document that is
referred to in a will and used to guide the distribution
of tangible personal property.
Temporary Relief:
Any form of action by a court granting one of the parties
an order to protect its interest pending further action by
the court.
Temporary Restraining
Order: A judge's order forbidding certain actions
until a full hearing can be held. Usually of short
duration. Often referred to as a TRO.
Technical Errors:
Errors committed during a trial that have not prejudiced
the losing party's rights and therefore are not grounds
for reversal on appeal.
Testamentary Capacity:
The legal ability to make a will.
Testamentary Trust:
A trust set up by a will.
Testator: Person who
makes a will (female: testatrix).
Testimony: Evidence
delivered by a witness at trial either orally at trial or
in the written form of an affidavit or deposition.
Third Party: A
person, business, or government agency not actively
involved in a legal proceeding, agreement, or transaction.
Third Party Benefit:.
In insurance law, third party benefits refer to the amount
of available coverage that the at-fault party has in
bodily injury and property damage.
Third Party Lawsuit:
In workers' compensation law, when an injury is caused by
the act or failure to act of a party other than the
employer, that party is the "third party," and
the injured worker may file a lawsuit against that party.
An example of a third party lawsuit in workplace injury
would be a products liability suit against the
manufacturer of a defective tool.
Third Party litigation:
When a lawsuit is brought against a defendant and that
defendant wants to add another party to the suit, the
original defendant may file a “third party complaint”
which results in a third party litigation or lawsuit.
Third-Party Claim:
An action by the defendant that brings a third party into
a lawsuit.
Thrombotic Stroke:
Occurs when a blood clot forms in an artery and blocks
blood flow to the brain.
Tipstaff:
Court-appointed officer whose duty it is to serve the
judge in a variety of ways while court is in session. See
bailiff.
Title: Legal
ownership of property, usually real property or
automobiles.
Tort: In civil law,
generally, a wrong or injury committed against a person or
property. A tort does not include breach of contract.
Tort-Feasor: One who
commits a tort.
Tortious: Having the
quality of a tort; the wrongdoer.
Total Disability: In
a workers' compensation case, this is the compensation
paid when an injured employee is totally impaired due to a
work-related injury. Benefits at the total disability rate
are generally two-thirds of wages up to a maximum
compensation rate
Transcript: Official
written copy of proceedings in a case, including hearings,
depositions, and trial. Usually made by a court reporter.
Traumatic Brain Injury:
An insult to the brain caused by an external physical
force that may produce a diminished or altered state of
consciousness that results in an impairment of cognitive
abilities or physical functioning and/or a disturbance of
behavioral or emotional functioning.
Trespasser: In civil
law, a person who enters land without invitation,
permission or privilege.
Trial: The judicial
examination and determination of issues between the
parties to an action.
Trial Calendar: List
maintained by the clerk of court or the trial judge of
cases awaiting trial, which includes trial dates, names of
attorneys representing parties, and other such
information.
Trial Court: The
first court to hear the case, as opposed to an appellate
court which hears appeals of decisions made in trial
courts.
Trust: A legal
device used to manage real or personal property,
established by one person (the grantor or settlor) for the
benefit of another (the beneficiary). A third person (the
trustee) or the grantor manages the trust.
Trust Agreement or
Declaration: The legal document that sets up a living
trust. Testamentary trusts are set up in a will.
Trustee: The person
or institution that manages the property put in trust.
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