Wherein the party of the first part hereby confuses the party of the second part.
An agreement to end a lawsuit by paying money instead of going to trial, because both sides realized that the only people winning are the lawyers. The legal equivalent of splitting the check because nobody wants to argue anymore.
A legal document that politely demands your presence in court, except the politeness is backed by the threat of jail time if you do not show up. The world's most aggressive invitation.
A law written down by legislators who probably did not read the whole thing before voting on it. Statutes are the rules of society, assuming you can find them, understand them, and afford a lawyer to explain what they actually mean.
A contract clause stating that if one provision is invalid, the rest remains enforceable—the legal version of 'if one part breaks, don't throw out the whole thing.' Saves contracts from the all-or-nothing problem.
The lawyerly art of demanding specific conditions in a contract or graciously admitting something is true so everyone can move on with the case. It's either 'I want this or no deal' or 'fine, yes, that's my client in the video.' In negotiations, it's how you sneak your must-haves into the fine print while sounding totally reasonable.
The formal process of dragging someone to court and demanding compensation for wrongs, whether real, imagined, or somewhere in between. It's the adult version of telling the teacher, except it costs thousands in legal fees and takes years instead of minutes. The nuclear option of dispute resolution that enriches lawyers while both parties slowly lose the will to live through discovery.
The deadline for filing a lawsuit, after which your claim expires like old milk. It's the legal system's way of preventing people from ambushing you with decades-old grievances at Thanksgiving dinner—at least in court.
The legal process of isolating assets or people from outside influence, whether it's locking away property in a dispute or keeping jurors from watching Netflix during a trial. In government finance, it's the automatic budget cuts that kick in when politicians can't agree on spending, slashing programs with the precision of a blindfolded lumberjack. Either way, it's about separation and control, usually court-ordered.
A padded jail or prison cell designed to prevent inmates from harming themselves or others during episodes of extreme distress or intoxication. It's essentially a rubber room with less dignity and more bureaucracy. Not to be confused with the 1980s synth-pop band, though both involve confinement and questionable life choices.
To formally agree to specific terms or conditions in a contract, or to agree that certain facts are true so you don't have to waste time proving them in court. It's the legal profession's way of saying "fine, we'll accept that for the sake of argument." Also saves billable hours, which is probably the real reason lawyers do it.
In modern legal-speak, a party involved in litigation—basically anyone brave or foolish enough to take someone to court or get taken there themselves. Historically, it meant someone romantically pursuing marriage, but in today's courtrooms it's more about pursuing justice (or revenge) with paperwork. The term makes legal combat sound oddly romantic.
When a judge takes action on their own initiative without either party asking for it, like a referee calling a foul nobody else saw. It's judicial intervention that can surprise everyone in the courtroom, including the judge's own clerk.
When one party steps into another's shoes to claim their rights, typically your insurance company suing on your behalf after paying your claim. They get the money, you get the satisfaction of watching.
To lock something down so tight that even a determined squirrel couldn't breach it. In legal and practical terms, to secure means to make safe, protect from loss, or physically fasten something with the reliability of a medieval castle.
The legal doctrine requiring courts to follow precedents set by previous decisions, Latin for 'to stand by things decided.' It's why lawyers obsessively cite old cases and why bad precedents haunt us for generations.
The formal delivery of legal documents to a party, ensuring they're aware of legal proceedings against them. Basically, the official 'you've been served' moment you see in movies.
Something unique and in a class by itself, Latin for 'of its own kind'—legal speak for 'we've never seen this before and don't quite know what to do with it.' The catchall for legal oddities.
To be formally commanded by legal writ to appear in court or produce documents, whether you want to or not. A subpoena is the legal system's way of saying "your presence is mandatory, not optional." Ignoring one is a terrible idea unless you're interested in experiencing contempt of court charges firsthand.
A judge's decision to resolve a case without going to trial because there are no genuine disputes about the material facts. It's the legal equivalent of calling a game due to rain when one team is up 50-0.
When a company buys another company and inherits its legal problems like a cursed inheritance. It's why due diligence exists—to discover you're not just buying assets but also three pending lawsuits and a toxic waste cleanup.
The legal right to bring a lawsuit, requiring that you've actually been harmed rather than just being generally annoyed. It's the court's way of saying 'mind your own business' to busybodies trying to sue over issues that don't affect them.
The adjective meaning something is created by, defined by, or regulated by statutes—aka laws passed by legislatures rather than judge-made common law. When something is statutory, it's written down in the books and you can actually point to it. The opposite of those vague "because that's how we've always done it" legal principles.
In legal terms, the act of asking, urging, or downright begging someone to commit a crime, which is itself a crime even if they never do it. It's like being arrested for asking your friend to rob a bank, whether they actually rob it or tell you to get lost. Prosecutors love it because they can nail you before anyone actually does anything stupid.
The deceptively simple word that becomes legally binding magic when inserted into contracts and statutes, meaning "you absolutely must do this or else." Unlike its casual cousin "will," shall creates mandatory obligations that courts take very seriously. Lawyers debate its exact meaning endlessly, which is why modern drafters often just use "must" instead.