|
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W X Y Z #
Click on the
first letter of the word from the list above to go to the
appropriate section of the glossary.
- J -
Joint and Several Liability:
Refers to a plaintiff's ability to sue one or more defendants
separately or all together at his or her option. Permits a
group of defendants to be held both individually and
collectively liable for all damages suffered by the plaintiff.
The plaintiff can recover the entire amount of damages from
one defendant, even if all of the defendants are liable.
For incidents arising after
August 17, 2002: Due to a new Pennsylvania law, joint and
several liability has been changed so that a plaintiff may no
longer be able to collect all his damages from one defendant,
even if more than one defendant is found responsible. A
percentage of fault will be assessed against each defendant
and, unless a defendant's negligence is 60% or greater, an at
fault defendant will be responsible for only its percentage of
fault.
Joint Tenancy: A form of
legal co-ownership of property (also known as survivorship).
At the death of one co-owner, the surviving co-owner becomes
sole owner of the property. Tenancy by the entirety is a
special form of joint tenancy between a husband and wife.
Judge: Workers'
compensation judges are appointed and are representatives of
the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry. They
conduct hearings in an administrative proceeding for workers'
compensation cases.
Judgment: Official
decision of a court resolving the issues in a legal action and
stating the rights and obligations of the parties. See also
decree, order.
Judgment Notwithstanding the
Verdict (n.o.v.): An order by the trial judge entering a
judgment in a manner contradictory to the jury’s verdict.
This is granted only when the verdict is unreasonable and
unsupportable.
Judicial: Pertaining to
a judge.
Judicial Notice: The
procedure by which a judge recognizes the existence of the
truth of a certain fact having bearing on the case without the
production of evidence because such fact is established by
common notoriety. For example, if the accident happened on
Thanksgiving, the judge can take judicial notice that the
accident happened on a Thursday.
Judicial Review: The
authority of a court to review the official actions of other
branches of government. Also, the authority to declare
unconstitutional the actions of other branches.
Jurisdiction: The legal
right by which judges exercise their authority.
Jurisprudence: The study
of law and the structure of the legal system.
Jury: Persons selected
according to law and sworn to inquire into and declare a
verdict on matters of fact. A petit jury is an ordinary or
trial jury, composed of six to 12 persons, which hears either
civil or criminal cases.
Jury Commissioner: The
court officer responsible for choosing the panel of persons to
serve as potential jurors for a particular court term.
Justiciable: Issues and
claims capable of being properly examined in court.
|