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Test your basic knowledge |
Paralegal 101
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
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. Evidence that does not add any new information but that confirms facts that already have been established.
Actus rea
Retreat exception
Motion
Cumulative evidence
2. An attorney's written argument presented to an appeals court - setting forth a statement of the law as it should be applied to the client's facts.
Appellate brief
Administrative law
U.S. Supreme Court
U.S. district courts
3. 'The thing speaks for itself'; the doctrine that suggest negligence can be presumed if an event happens that would not ordinarily happen unless someone was negligent.
Res ipsa loquitur
Disbarment
Enabling act
Federalism
4. Written questions sent by one side to the opposing side - answered under oath.
Interrogatories
Original jurisdiction
Exculpatory evidence
Pleading in the alternative
5. Generally someone operating within the law - representing persons before administrtive agencies that permit this practice.
Headnote
Procedural facts
Lay advocate
Exigent circumstances
6. A witness who possesses skill and knowledge beyond that of the average person.
Plain meaning
Digest
Intellectual Property
Expert witness
7. A law enacted by a state legislature or by Congress.
Statute
Statute of limitations
Holding
Real or physical evidence
8. Law that deals with harm to society as a whole.
Legal services offices
Criminal law
En banc
Retreat exception
9. A statement of the court's decision in which the facts are either omitted or given in very general terms so that it will apply to a wider range of cases.
Broad holding
Statute
Minor premise
Trial courts
10. Cases that involve different facts and/or rules of law.
Defamation
Distinguishable cases
Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.)
Broad holding
11. A statement of the court's decision that contains many of the case's specific facts - thereby limiting its future applicability to a narrow range of cases.
Challenge for cause
Prima facie case
Tickler System
Narrow Holding
12. Law that deals with harm to a person or a person's property.
Criminal law
Testimonial evidence
Tort law
Miranda warnings
13. The papers that begin a lawsuit-generally - the complaint and the answer.
On point
General jurisdiction
Pleadings
Reverse
14. A grand jury's written accusation that a given individual has committed a crime.
Notice
Contributory negligence
Certified
Indictment
15. A court order authorizing a sheriff to take property in order to enforce a judgment.
American Association for Paralegal Education (AAfPE) www.aafpe.org
Dictum
Writ of execution
Landmark decision
16. An activity that requires professional judgment - or the educational ability to relate law to a specific legal problem.
Personal jurisdiction
Third-party claim
Directed verdict
Practice of law
17. Disregarding a substantial and unjustifiable risk that harm will result.
Respondeat superior
Recklessness
Codification of the common law
Issue
18. Not factually true - but accepted by the courts as being legally true.
Personal recognizance bond
Constructive
Judicial activism
Mistrial
19. Law that regulates how the legal system operates.
Liberal construction
Legal Reasoning
Procedural law
Reverse
20. An issue that the court has never faced before.
Unofficial reporter
Eminent Domain
Harmless error
Issue of first impression
21. The law itself - such as statutes and court opinions.
Primary authority
Appellate courts
Overrule
Federalism
22. A witness who has not been shown to have any special expertise.
Syllabus
Legal technician
Personal jurisdiction
Lay witness
23. Voluntarily and knowingly subjecting oneself to danger.
Broad holding
Legal technician
Conflict of interest
Assumption of the risk
24. Courts that determine the facts and apply the law to the facts.
Trial courts
Summary jury trials
Challenge for cause
Intellectual Property
25. In logic - an argument is considered to be valid or sound if the assumption underlying the argument are true.
Valid
Documentary evidence
Specific performance
Inculpatory evidence
26. Negligence by the plaintiff that contributed to his or her injury. Normally - it is a complete bar to the plaintiff's recovery.
Ethical wall or screen or cone of silence
Contributory negligence
Respondeat superior
Legal clinic
27. The power of the federal courts to hear matters of state law if the opposing parties are from different states and the amounts in controversy exceeds $75 -000.00
Preponderance of the evidence
Negligence
Diversity jurisdiction
Grand jury
28. Representing someone who is in a position adverse to a prior client.
Successive conflict of interest
Bail
Contingency Fee
Documentary evidence
29. Generally - an emergency situation that allows a search to proceed without a warrant.
U.S. Supreme Court
Procedural facts
Exigent circumstances
Canons of construction
30. A decision is overruled when a court in a later case changes the law so that its prior decision is no longer good law.
Adverse possession
Statute
Overrule
Retainer agreement
31. The court's power to review statutes to decide whether they conform to the Constitution.
Actus rea
Syllabus
Motion for a new trial
Judicial review
32. An ADR mechanism whereby a neutral third party assists the parties in reaching a mutually agreeable - voluntary compromise.
Legislative intent
Punitive damages
Testimonial evidence
Mediation
33. Relates to the ability of a witness to testify; generally - the witness must be capable of being understood by the jury; must understand the duty to tell the truth; and if a lay witness - must give testimony based on personal knowledge.
Authentication
Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.)
Affirm
Competency
34. The questioning of your own witness.
Direct examination
Tickler System
Lay advocate
Restrictive covenant
35. The modern pretrial procedure by which one party gains information from the adverse party.
Writ of habeas corpus
Westlaw
Slip laws
Discovery
36. A paralegal who works as an independent contractor rather than as an employee of a law firm or corporation.
Easement
Tenancy by the entirety
Freelance Paralegal
Statutory element
37. Either a subcategory of relevancy or simply another word for relevancy - the requirement that the evidence be more probative than prejudicial.
Pleadings
Judicial review
Materiality
Major premise
38. The party in a case who has initiated an appeal.
Appellate or petitioner
Administrative law
Active Listening
Conflict of interest
39. A summary of a court opinion that appears at the beginning of the case.
Questions of fact
Code
Retainer agreement
Syllabus
40. The educated ability to apply law to specific facts.
Professional judgment
Exhaustion of administrative remedies
Concluding paragraph
Open Questions
41. A contract that outlines the attorney's duties and the client's obligations regarding payment - on either an hourly or a contingency fee basis - as well as the client's responsibility reagarding costs and expenses.
Closed Questions
Beyond a reasonable doubt
Retainer agreement
Professional Corporation (PC)
42. A form in which statutes are published; they are printed individually at the time they are first enacted.
Arraignment
Slip laws
International Paralegal Management Association (IPMA) www.paralegal management.org
Subpoena duces tecum
43. A term used to describe two cases that are almost identical - with similar facts and legal issues.
Bailment
On all fours
Holding
Primary authority
44. In deductive reasoning - the statement of a broad proposition that forms the starting point; in law - the statement of a legal rule that you can find in a statute or court opinion.
Major premise
Plain view doctrine
Code
Valid
45. A decision is reversed when an appellate court overturns or negates the decision of a lower court.
Reverse
Proving a case within a case
General jurisdiction
Majority opinion
46. Defendant's reply to the complaint. It may contain statements of denial - admission - or lack of knowledge and affirmative defenses.
Answer
Deponent
Actus rea
Reverse
47. Any tangible object - like a bloody glove.
Necessity
Comparative negligence
Real or physical evidence
Concluding paragraph
48. A judgment that reverses the verdict of the jury when the verdict had no reasonable factual support or was contrary to law.
Lay a foundation
Judgment notwithstanding the verdict (judgment N.O.V.)
Probable cause
Citation
49. An error made by the trial judge sufficiently serious to warrant reversing the trial court's decision.
Certificated
Service
Treatment
Reversible error
50. A judicial philosophy that supports an active role for the judiciary in changing the law.
Judicial activism
Contributory negligence
On all fours
Certificated