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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. A process whereby the prosecutor and the defendant's attorney agree for the defendant to plead guilty in exchange for the prosecutor's promise to charge him or her with a lesser offense - drop some additional charges - or request a lesser sentence.
Motion to suppress
Plea bargaining
Reverse
Corroborative evidence
2. Affiliated with the federal government's Legal Services Corporation - these offices serve those who would otherwise be unable to afford legal assistance.
Limited jurisdiction
Pinpoint cite
Legal services offices
Third-party claim
3. A trial court error that is not sufficient to warrant reversing the decision.
Preemption
Vicarious representation
Harmless error
International Paralegal Management Association (IPMA) www.paralegal management.org
4. Law that regulates how the legal system operates.
Adverse possession
Lay advocate
Procedural law
Separation of powers
5. The defense's request that the court find the prosecution failed to meet its burden and that it remove the case from the jury by finding the defendant not guilty.
Restatement of the Law of Torts - Second
Motion to require a finding of not guilty
Interrogatories
Distinguishable cases
6. Questions relating to what happened: who - what - when - where - and how.
Real property
Subsequent case history
Distinguishable cases
Questions of fact
7. A group of people - usually 23 - whose function is to determine if probable cause exists to believe that a crime has been committed and that the defendant committed it.
Best evidence rule
Contingency Fee
Competency
Grand jury
8. The heading section of a pleading that contains the names of the parties - the name of the court - the title of the action - the docket or file number - and the name of the pleading.
Caption
Retreat exception
Booking
Derogation of the common law
9. A constitutional protection against being tried twice for the same crime.
Self-defense
Cause of action
Appellee or respondent
Double jeopardy
10. When the product was not being used for its intended purpose or was being used in a dangerous manner; it is a defense to a products liability claim so long as the misuse was not foreseeable.
Pocket part
U.S. Supreme Court
Assumption of the risk
Product misuse
11. 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
Paralegal
Real or physical evidence
Products liability
Diversity jurisdiction
12. Money or something else of value that is held by the government to ensure the defendant's appearance in court.
Affirmative defense
Complaint
Bail
Negligence per se
13. 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.
Bailment
Case reporters
Major premise
Discovery
14. A tort committed by one who intends to do the act that creates the harm.
Implied warranty of habitability
Doctrine of implied powers
Intentional tort
Subpoena
15. 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.
Res ipsa loquitur
Proximate cause
Subsequent case history
Competency
16. When a judge formally recognizes something as being a fact without requiring the attorneys prove it through the introduction of other evidence.
Judicial notice
Comparative negligence
Practice of law
Confidentiality
17. The party in a case against whom an appeal has been filed.
Counterclaim
Analogous cases
Appellee or respondent
Discovery
18. Once actual cause is found - as a policy matter - the court must also find that the act and the resulting harm were so foreseeably related as to justify a finding of liability.
Headnote
Deductive reasoning
Subsequent case history
Proximate cause
19. Information about what happened procedurally to the litigation after the case cited. Include this information in a citation. There is no entry for the topic Husband and Wife.
Judicial activism
Personal property
Recklessness
Subsequent case history
20. A summary of a court opinion that appears at the beginning of the case.
Cumulative evidence
Arbitration
Syllabus
Majority opinion
21. An intentional tort that covers a variety of situations - including disclosure - intrusion - appropriation - and false light.
Mistrial
Double jeopardy
Exclusionary rule
Invasion of Privacy
22. An advance or down payment that is given to engage the services of an attorney.
Unauthorized practice of law
Retainer
Case citation
Invasion of Privacy
23. The educated ability to apply law to specific facts.
Professional judgment
Shepardizing
Miranda warnings
Summary jury trials
24. An actual incident or condition; not a legal consequence.
Fact
Writ of habeas corpus
Personal property
Concurrent conflict of interest
25. A reason for invalidating a statute where it covers both protected and criminal activity.
Derogation of the common law
Notice pleading
Overbreadth
Execute
26. A decision is overruled when a court in a later case changes the law so that its prior decision is no longer good law.
Real or physical evidence
Appellate brief
Deposition
Overrule
27. Cases that involve different facts and/or rules of law.
Court of record
Booking
Distinguishable cases
Actual cause
28. A set of standardized jury instructions.
Holding
Pattern jury instructions
Entrapment
Motion to suppress
29. A request that the court grant judgment in favor of the moving party because there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. It is similar to a 12(b)(6) motion except that the court a
Nominal damages
Rule 56 motion (summary judgment motion)
Concurrent jurisdiction
Products liability
30. A reason for invalidating a statute where a reasonable person could not determine a statute's meaning.
Legal writing
Mistrial
Void for vagueness
Bill of Rights
31. In a case brief - the court's answer to the issue presented to it; the new legal principle established by a court opinion.
Clear and convincing
Holding
Procedural law
Actual cause
32. Consists of records - contracts - leases - wills - and other written instruments.
Hearsay
Model Rules of Professional Conduct
Documentary evidence
Legal malpractice
33. The law that sets the length of time from when something happens to when a lawsuit must be filed before the right to bring it is lost.
Westlaw
Statute of limitations
International Paralegal Management Association (IPMA) www.paralegal management.org
Products liability
34. A professional entity in which the owners share in the organization's profits but are not liable for the malpractice of their partners.
American Bar Association (ABA) www.abanet.org
Personal recognizance bond
Limited liability partnership (LLP)
Pretrial conference
35. A rule that states that evidence obtained in violation of an individual's constitutional rights cannot be used against that individual in a criminal trial.
Overbreadth
Subpoena duces tecum
Exclusionary rule
Constitutional law
36. An intentional act that creates a reasonable apprehension of an immediate harmful or offensive physical contact.
Structured database
Circumstantial evidence
Assault
Lay advocate
37. The theory holding manufacturers and sellers liable for defective products when the defects make the products unreasonably dangerous.
Holding
Fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine
Closed Questions
Products liability
38. When a person must be brought into a lawsuit as either a plaintiff or a defendant.
Narrow Holding
Compulsory joinder
Mistrial
Property law
39. A defense requiring proof that the defendant was forced to take an action to avoid a greater harm.
Issue of first impression
Necessity
Legislative intent
Proving a case within a case
40. Any tangible object - like a bloody glove.
Count
National Association of Legal Assistants (NALA) www.nala.org
Internet
Real or physical evidence
41. A form in which statutes are published; they are printed individually at the time they are first enacted.
Judicial activism
Punitive damages
Complaint
Slip laws
42. When nonlawyers do things that only lawyers are allowed to do. In most states this is a crime.
Agent
Road Map paragraph
Unauthorized practice of law
Property
43. Court decisions from a higher court in the same jurisdiction.
Affirm
Mandatory authority
Rule
Pocket part
44. A judicial philosophy that supports a limited role for the judiciary in changing the law - including deference to the legislative branch.
Complaint
Execute
Ejusdem generis
Judicial restraint
45. Someone in court testifying to what someone said out of court for the purpose of establishing the truth of what was said.
Relevancy
Hearsay
Primary authority
Summons
46. Being the victem of repeated attacks - self-defense is sometimes allowed to the victim - even when the victim is not in immediate danger.
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47. Consists of the description of events that a witness testifies to under oath in a legal proceeding.
Court of record
Testimonial evidence
Nolo contendere
Issue of first impression
48. A criminal proceeding at which the court informs the defendant of the charges being brought against him or her and the defendant enters a plea.
Statute
Exhaustion of administrative remedies
Punitive damages
Arraignment
49. Indirect evidence - used to prove facts by implication.
Client trust account
Circumstantial evidence
Battered woman's or spouse's syndrome
Restrictive covenant
50. A compilation of federal administrative regulations arranged by agency.
Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.)
per curium
Slip laws
Equity