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Test your basic knowledge |
Business Law Test
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
law
,
business-law
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The power to speak the law.
State level appeal eligibility
Online dispute resolution
Summons
Jurisdiction
2. The First Amendment guarantee that citizens may freely engage in the religious activities of their choice
American Arbitration Association
Analogy
Third Amendment
Free exercise clause
3. Inherent powers of state governments to pass laws to protect the public health - safety - and welfare; the national government has no directly granted police powers but accomplishes the same goals through other delegated powers.
Police powers
Fifth Amendment
Defense
Hearsay
4. A basis for federal court jurisdiction over a lawsuit between (1) citizens of different states (2) a foreign country and citizens of a state of of different states - or (3) citizens of a state and citizens or subjects of a foreign country. The amount
Cyber torts
Arbitrability
Fourth Amendment
diversity of citizenship
5. The act of delivering a writ or summons upon someone
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
Counterclaim
ordinaces
Service of process
6. Set of books containing published court decisions
Commerce clause
Reporters
Arbitration clause
Second Amendment
7. 1. Federal statute 2. Constitution(U.S.) 3. Diversity of Citizenship($75 -000 or more)
Second Amendment
Malpractice
Torts(Wrongs)
Federal Jurisdiction
8. Questioning of a witness during a trial or during the taking of a deposition - by the party opposed to the one who produced the witness.
Standing to sue
Cross-examination
In rem jurisdiction
Burden of proof
9. A sum of money paid in compensation for loss or injury
Assumption of risk
Damages
Motion for judgement as a matter of law
Police powers
10. The First Amendment guarantee that the government will not create and support an official state church
Motion for a new trial
Negotiation
establishment clause
Historical school
11. A major provider of arbitration services
Counterclaim
Relevant evidence
Free exercise clause
American Arbitration Association
12. A reasoning process in which an individual links his or her moral convictions or ethical standards to the particular situation at hand.
Compensatory damages
Commerce clause
Ethical reasoning
Exclusive Jurisdiction
13. A computer program that is designed to block access to certain Web sites based on their content. The software blocks the retrieval of a site whose URL or key words are on a list within the program.
Criminal law
Closing argument
Probable cause
Filtering software
14. State courts that handle only matters relating to the transfer of a person's assets and obligations after that person's death - including issues relating to custody and guardianship of children
Probate courts
Alternative dispute resolution
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
Remedies of Law
15. Relieve you of some liability when reasonable care is used
Good samaritan statues
Burden of proof
Natural law
Third Amendment
16. A motion made by a party - during trial - claiming the opposing party has insufficient evidence to reasonably support its case
Exclusive Jurisdiction
Motion for judgement as a matter of law
Rejoinder
Stages in an A Typical Lawsuit
17. When the matter is between private parties the constitution laws do not apply. Between individuals and government organizations then constitutional laws apply.
Probate courts
Tenth Amendment
When constitutional lawz apply
importance of common law
18. The reasoning process used by judges in deciding what law applies to a given dispute and then applying that law to the specific facts or circumstances of the case
Federal form of government
abnormally dangerous
Remedies of Law
Legal reasoning
19. (civil law) a law established by following earlier judicial decisions
Case law
Bill of Rights
Analogy
Opening statements
20. A form of alternative dispute resolution in which a neutral third party evaluates the strengths and weakness of the disputing parties' positions; the evaluator's opinion forms the basis for negotiating a settlement.
Early neutral case evaluation
Motion
positive law
Business Ethics
21. Torts committed via the internet
Natural law
positive law
jurisprudence
Cyber torts
22. Settlement of civil disputes between parties using neutral mediators or arbitrators without going to court
Police powers
In rem jurisdiction
positivist school
Alternative dispute resolution
23. The process by which the parties in a dispute submit their difference to the judgment of an impartial person or group appointed by mutual consent
Search warrant
Arbitration
Common law
Civil Law
24. A question asked to determine what is true or to what extent something is true
Question of fact
Pretrial motions
Federal Jurisdiction
Alternative dispute resolution
25. A system of government in which the states form a union and the sovereign power is divided between the central government and the member states
Common law
Statutory Law
Federal form of government
State and Federal Court Systems
26. Precedents are determined under stare decisis. Courts of law and courts or equity have been combined.
Closing argument
abnormally dangerous
Award
importance of common law
27. Adj. from the Latin 'against or about a thing -' referring to a lawsuit or other legal action directed toward property - rather than toward a particular person. Thus - if title to property is the issue - the action is 'in rem.' The term is important
In rem jurisdiction
Tenth Amendment
Proximate cause
Justicable controversy
28. Contains the courts reasons for its decision - the rules of law that apply - and the judgement
Opinions
Administrative law
Ethical reasoning
Police powers
29. The government may not house soldiers in private homes without consent of the owner
ordinaces
Principle of rights
Damages
Third Amendment
30. Liability without fault. (Strict product liability)
Strict liability
Case Precedents and the doctrine of stare decisis
Direct examination
Alternative dispute resolution
31. The body of laws created by legislative statutes
Probate courts
Statutory Law
Opinions
In rem jurisdiction
32. The obligation of organization management to make decisions and take actions that will enhance the welfare and interests of society as well as the organization
Trade libel
Corporate social responsibility
Burden of proof
Cyber torts
33. Enforcable rules governing relationships among individuals and between individuals and thier society.
law
Arbitrability
Courts of equity
Binding authority
34. Violation of a law - duty - or other form of obligation - either by engaging in an action or failing to act
Slander of title
Federal Jurisdiction
Jurisdiction
breaches
35. Authority shared by both federal and state courts
Concurrent Jurisdiction
Trespass to land
Federal question
Negligence
36. Clause in the Constitution (Article IV - Section 1) requiring each state to recognize the civil judgments rendered by the courts of the other states and to accept their public records and acts as valid
Remedies of Law
Fifth Amendment
Opening statements
Full faith and credit clause
37. If the injured party can be made whole by receiving something of economic value - the remedy is a legal remedy [damages] - if a remedy at law is inadequate - a litigant may seek a remedy in equity - which involves notions of fair dealing and justice
Legal and Equitable Remedies
Public Policy
Complaint
law
38. Highest official of a monarch. Granted new an unique remedies.
Chancellor
citation
Motion for judgement on the pleadings
Public Policy
39. 14th amendment clause that prohibits states from denying equal protection under the law - and has been used to combat discrimination
Disparagement of property
Jurisdiction
Symbolic speech
Equal protection clause
40. The course of action the government takes in response to an issue or problem as deemed by widely held belief.
State Jurisdiction
Constitutional Law
Closing argument
Public Policy
41. A response to a plaintiff's claim that does not deny the plaintiff's facts but attacks the plaintiff's legal right to bring an action. An example is the running of the statute of limitations.
abnormally dangerous
Damages
Free exercise clause
Affirmative defense
42. The party who appeals a decision of a lower court
Statutory Law
Defense
diversity of citizenship
Appellant
43. The publication of false information about another's product - alleging it is not what its seller claims; also referred to as slander of quality.
Trade libel
Alleges
Negotiation
Arbitration clause
44. A doctrine by which equitable relief is denied to one who has waited TOO long to seek relief
Rules of evidence
Cross-examination
diversity of citizenship
laches
45. A motion asserting that the trial was so fundamentally flawed (because of error - newly discovered evidence - prejudice - or another reason) that a new trial is necessary to prevent a miscarriage of justice.
Statues of limitation
Motion for a new trial
Second Amendment
Causation in fact
46. An economically injurious falsehood made about another's product or property; a general term for torts that are more specifically referred to as slander of quality or slander of title.
Legal realism
Symbolic speech
Disparagement of property
abnormally dangerous
47. Law concerned with public wrongs against society
Alleges
Brief
Criminal law
Direct examination
48. An argument made after the plaintiff and defendant have rested their cases. Closing arguments are made prior to the jury charges.
Arbitration
Probable cause
Free exercise clause
Closing argument
49. Any testimony given in court about a statement made by someone else who was not under oath at the time of the statement
diversity of citizenship
Hearsay
Eighth Amendment
Venue
50. The branch of philosophy concerned with the law and the principles that lead courts to make the decisions they do
jurisprudence
Probable cause
Trespass to personal property
Symbolic speech