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Glossary of Personal Injury Law Terms
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Pardon: A form of executive clemency preventing
criminal prosecution or removing or extinguishing a
criminal conviction.
Parens Patriae: The doctrine under which the
court protects the interests of a juvenile.
Parole: The supervised conditional release of
a prisoner before the expiration of his or her sentence.
If the parolee observes the conditions, he or she need
not serve the rest of his or her term.
Party: A person, business, or government
agency actively involved in the prosecution or defense
of a legal proceeding.
Partial Disability: In a workers' compensation
case, this refers to any disability that is less than
total. Workers' compensation benefits are generally
measured by earning power in this situation.
Patent: A government grant giving an inventor
the exclusive right to make or sell his or her invention
for a term of years.
Peremptory Challenge: A challenge that may be
used to reject a certain number of prospective jurors
without giving a reason.
Perjury: Intentional false statement of
material importance made under oath; lying under oath.
Permanent Injunction: A court order requiring
that some action be taken, or that some party refrain
from taking action. It differs from forms of temporary
relief, such as a temporary restraining order or
preliminary injunction.
Person: Generally, a human being. Legally, a
"person" may statutorily include a
corporation, partnership, trustee, legal representative,
etc.
Personal Property: Tangible physical property
(such as cars, clothing, furniture, and jewelry) and
intangible personal property. This does not include real
property such as land or rights in land.
Personal Jurisdiction: The power of a court over
a person. Compare with subject matter jurisdiction.
Personal Recognizance: In criminal
proceedings, the pretrial release of a defendant without
bail upon his or her promise to return to court. See
also own recognizance.
Personal Representative: One who stands in the
place of another..
Person in Need of Supervision: Juvenile found
to have committed a status offense rather than a crime
that would provide a basis for a finding of delinquency.
Typical status offenses are habitual truancy. violating
a curfew, or running away from home. These are not
crimes, but they might be enough to place a child under
supervision. In different states, status offenders might
be called children in need of supervision or minors in
need of supervision.
Petition: A formal request that the court take
some action; a complaint.
Petitioner: The person filing an action in a
court of original jurisdiction. Also, the person who
appeals the judgment of a lower court. The opposing
party is called the respondent.
Petition to Terminate, Modify or Suspend Benefits:
In a workers' compensation case, this is the petition
filed by the employer/insurance carrier in an attempt to
modify, suspend or terminate an injured employee's
compensation.
Plaintiff: In civil law, the person who brings
an action or starts a lawsuit.
Plea: In a criminal proceeding, it is the
defendant's declaration in open court that he or she is
guilty or not guilty. The defendant's answer to the
charges made in the indictment or information.
Plead: In civil law, a defendant's formal
answer to a plaintiff's complaint.
Plea Bargaining or Plea Negotiating: The
process through which an accused person and a prosecutor
negotiate a mutually satisfactory disposition of a case.
Usually it is a legal transaction in which a defendant
pleads guilty in exchange for some form of leniency. It
often involves a guilty plea to lesser charges or a
guilty plea to some of the charges if other charges are
dropped. Such bargains are not binding on the court.
Pleading: A document filed in a court that
pertains to a case.
Pleadings: The written statements of fact and
law filed by the parties to a lawsuit.
Polling the Jury: The act, after a jury
verdict has been announced, of asking jurors
individually whether they agree with the verdict.
Possessor of Land: A person who occupies land and
intends to control it. Most often, it is the owner of
the property.
Pour-Over Will: A will that leaves some or all
estate assets to a trust established before the
will-maker's death.
Power of Attorney: Written document
authorizing one person to take certain legal actions on
behalf of the person giving the power of attorney..
Precedent: Decision by a court that provides
an example or authority for later cases involving a
similar question of law. See binding authority.
Preliminary Hearing: Another term for
arraignment.
Pre-Injunction: Court order requiring action
or forbidding action until a decision can be made
whether to issue a permanent injunction. It differs from
a temporary restraining order.
Preponderance of the Evidence: The amount of
evidence needed for a plaintiff to win in a civil
action. A preponderance of the evidence is the greater
weight of the evidence or the more convincing evidence
in comparison to the evidence offered in opposition. A
plaintiff can win by a preponderance of the evidence
even if plaintiff's evidence merely tips the scales in
plaintiff's favor.
Presumptively Capable of Negligence: Pennsylvania
law places minors in three categories based on age.
Minors under 7 are conclusively presumed incapable of
negligence. Simply put, under the law, they cannot
commit torts. Minors between 7 and 14 are presumed
incapable of negligence, but the presumption is
rebuttable or disputable, and the presumption grows
weaker as the child nears his or her 14th birthday.
Minors over 14 are presumptively capable of negligence.
Simply put, under the law they are presumed as being
able to commit torts. The burden is on the minor to
prove incapacity.
Pre-Sentence Report: A report to the
sentencing judge containing background information about
the crime and the defendant to assist the judge in
making his or her sentencing decision.
Presentment: Declaration or document issued by
a grand jury that either makes a neutral report or notes
misdeeds by officials charged with specified public
duties. It ordinarily does not include a formal charge
of crime. A presentment differs from an indictment.
Pretermitted Child: A child borne after a will
is executed, who is not provided for by the will. Most
states have laws that provide for a share of estate
property to go to such children.
Pre-Trial Conference: A meeting between the
judge and the lawyers involved in a lawsuit to narrow
the issues in the suit, agree on what will be presented
at the trial, and make a final effort to settle the case
without a trial.
Prevailing Party: Generally, the winning party in
a lawsuit.
Prima Facie: Literally means "at first
sight" or "on the face of it."
"Prima facie evidence" is evidence that is
good and sufficient on its face. A plaintiff makes out a
"prima facie case" when he or she presents
"prima facie evidence," which means that the
plaintiff is permitted to prevail on that evidence
alone, unless the defendant can put forth sufficient
evidence to overcome it.
Prima Facie Case: A case that is sufficient
and has the minimum amount of evidence necessary to
allow it to continue in the judicial process.
Primary Care Physician (PCP): A physician that
is employed by or contracts with a managed health care
system like an HMO that coordinates all of the member's
medical care. A PCP is usually afamily practitioner .
PCP's are also known as "gatekeepers" because
they control a member's access to medical care within a
health plan.
Privileged Communication: Statement protected
from forced disclosure in court because the statement
was made within a "protected" relationship
such as attorney/client. See attorney-client privilege.
Probable Cause: A reasonable belief that a
crime has or is being committed; the basis for all
lawful searches, seizures, and arrests.
Probate: The court-supervised process by which
a will is determined to be the will-maker's final
statement regarding how the will-maker wants his or her
property distributed. It also confirms the appointment
of the personal representative of the estate. Probate
also means the process by which assets are gathered;
applied to pay debts, taxes, and expenses of
administration; and distributed to those designated as
beneficiaries in the will.
Probate Court: The court with authority to
supervise estate administration.
Probate Estate: Estate property that may be
disposed of by a will.
Probation: An alternative to imprisonment
allowing a person found guilty of an offense to stay in
the community, usually under conditions and under the
supervision of a probation officer. A violation of
probation can lead to its revocation and to
imprisonment.
Procedural Law: Generally, the body of law
establishing the method or procedure of enforcing rights
or obtaining redress for invasion of rights. Compare
with substantive law which establishes rights.
Process Serving: The method by which a
defendant in a lawsuit is notified that a plaintiff has
filed a suit against him.
Products Liability: Area of the law involving
the liability of manufacturers and sellers of dangerous
or defective goods or products.
Promulgate: To officially announce.
Property Damage Liability Coverage: Automobile
insurance coverage required under Pennsylvania law that
provides money to pay claims if your car damages the
property of another person.
Pro Bono: (Latin: "for the good")
Used to describe the provision of services free of
charge.
Pro Bono Publico: For the public good. Lawyers
representing clients without a fee are said to be
working pro bono publico.
Pro Se: A Latin term meaning "on one's
own behalf"; in courts, it refers to persons who
present their own cases without lawyers.
Prosecutor: A trial lawyer representing the
government in a criminal case and the interests of the
state in civil matters. In criminal cases, the
prosecutor has the responsibility of deciding who and
when to prosecute.
Proximate Cause: The proximate cause of an
injury is the primary or moving cause that produces the
injury and without which the accident could not have
happened, if the injury is one which might be reasonably
anticipated or foreseen as a natural consequence of the
wrongful act.
Public Defender: Government lawyer who
provides free legal defense services to a poor person
accused of a crime.
Punitive Damages or Exemplary 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.
Purchaser: In products liability law, a person
who buys a product.
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