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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.
- M -
Magistrate: Judicial
officer exercising some of the functions of a judge. It also
refers in a general way to a judge.
Malfeasance: Commission
of a wrongful act; evil doing; wrongful conduct.
Malicious Prosecution:
An action instituted with intention of injuring the defendant
and without probable cause, and which terminates in favor of
the person prosecuted.
Mandamus: A writ issued
by a court ordering a public official to perform an act.
Manslaughter: The
unlawful killing of another without intent to kill; either
voluntary (upon a sudden impulse); or involuntary (during the
commission of an unlawful act not ordinarily expected to
result in great bodily harm). See also murder.
Material Fact:
Generally, a fact essential to a case or a defense without
which said case or defense could not be supported.
Mediation: A form of
alternative dispute resolution in which the parties bring
their dispute to a neutral third party, who helps them agree
on a settlement.
Medical Malpractice:
Broadly, a claim brought against a health-care professional
based on professional negligence wherein the health-care
professional violates the applicable standard of care and an
injury results.
Member: In relation to
health care, a member is a person who belongs to a health care
plan, like an HMO
Memorialized: In
writing.
Mens Rea: The
"guilty mind" necessary to establish criminal
responsibility.
Mental Anguish: Mental
suffering. In some cases, damages may be awarded for mental
anguish even though no physical injury is present.
Miranda Warning:
Requirement that police tell a suspect in their custody of his
or her constitutional rights before they question him or her.
So named as a result of the Miranda v. Arizona ruling by the
U.S. Supreme Court.
Misdemeanor: Crimes less
serious than felonies. In Pennsylvania, the punishments
associated with misdemeanors vary according to degree. A
misdemeanor of the first degree may be sentenced to a term of
imprisonment of not more than five years. A misdemeanor of the
second degree may be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of
not more than two years. A misdemeanor of the third degree may
be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of not more than one
year.
Misfeasance: Improper
performance of a lawful act.
Mistrial: An invalid
trial, caused by fundamental error. When a mistrial is
declared, the trial must start again from the selection of the
jury.
Mitigating Circumstances:
Those which do not constitute a justification or excuse for an
offense but which may be considered as reasons for reducing
the degree of blame.
Mitigation of Damages or
Doctrine of Avoidable Consequences: Imposes a duty on
victims of a tort to take reasonable steps to minimize their
damages after an injury has been inflicted.
Mittimus: The name of an
order in writing, issuing from a court and directing the
sheriff or other officer to convey a person to a prison,
asylum, or reformatory, and directing the jailer or other
appropriate official to receive and safely keep the person
until his or her fate shall be determined by due course of
law.
Moot: A moot case or a
moot point is one not subject to a judicial determination
because it involves an abstract question or a pretended
controversy that has not yet actually arisen or has already
passed. Mootness usually refers to a court's refusal to
consider a case because the issue involved has been resolved
prior to the court's decision, leaving nothing that would be
affected by the court's decision.
Motion: An application
made to a judge for the purpose of obtaining an order
directing some act to be done in favor of the party presenting
the application.
Moving Party: The party
presenting the motion. Compare with non-moving party.
Murder: The unlawful
killing of a human being with deliberate intent to kill.
Murder in the first degree is characterized by premeditation;
murder in the second degree is characterized by a sudden and
instantaneous intent to kill or to cause injury without caring
whether the injury kills or not. (See also manslaughter.)
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