Melbourne Uni law Terminology Flashcards
Affidavit
Latin for ‘he or she has sworn’. This is a written statement setting out certain facts which the person making the affidavit swears or affirms are true.
Appeal
An appeal involves a party in a lower court decision asking a higher court to change that decision in some way (most often, to have the opposite decision made). Although in lower courts appeals might be made from a single judge of a court to a larger panel of judges within that same court, appeals in the High Court are in practice always determined by a ‘Full Court’ of five to seven Justices.
Appeal to the High Court
As the final court of appeal in Australia, the High Court has the power to hear and determine appeals from all judgments, orders, decrees and sentences handed down by a single Justice, a federal court, or a state Supreme Court. However, there is no automatic right to appeal to the High Court: a party must successfully apply for Special Leave, and the decision to grant or refuse that leave lies with (typically) just two judges of the High Court.
Appellant
A person seeking to appeal a ruling of a lower court.
Applicant
An applicant is the name for a plaintiff in the Federal Court and someone seeking special leave to appeal to the High Court.
Attorney-General
An Attorney-General is the chief law officer of a State, Territory or the Commonwealth government. In each of these jurisdictions in Australia, the Attorney-General must also be a Member of Parliament. The Commonwealth Attorney-General also has ministerial responsibility for the High Court. In addition to other responsibilities related to the law, Attorneys-General are frequently involved in proceedings before the Court, either as plaintiffs, defendants or interveners.
Authority
Authority has many different meanings in law. In its everyday meaning, authority may mean permission, or a right coupled with the power to compel its enforcement (as in the police have authority to arrest a person). In explaining legal reasoning, an ‘authority’ is usually used to refer to an earlier judgment that has precedential value, meaning that its reasoning should be followed and applied in the case before the court. In this sense, it is an earlier rule that is authoritative and binding on the present court.
Balance of probabilities
Australian courts resolve most factual disputes by deciding whether the factual claims made by one party are more likely than not to be true. This is called proof on the balance of probabilities and is sometimes also called the ‘civil’ standard of proof, because it applies in nearly all non-criminal (i.e. civil) disputes.
Bar, The
Bar’ can mean several things. In the most basic sense, it refers to the symbolic division in Australia courtrooms between the bench, where the judge sit, and the bar table, where counsel sit.
State bars in Australia are usually private, voluntary, non-profit and self-funded associations, and are responsible for regulating the professional conduct of barristers.
Barristers
A barrister is a Legal Practitioner who specialises in advocacy before courts, and acts a legal representative for a party to litigation. Barristers usually also possess additional expertise in specific areas of the law. A barrister’s role is to prepare the most effective set of legal arguments open to a client and then present those arguments to the court (and respond to the court’s questions) during the hearing.
Barristers are often referred to as ‘counsel’.
Barristers are often referred to as ‘counsel’. Senior barristers who have attained the rank of Queen’s Counsel or Senior Counsel are known as ‘silks’ (QC and SC are different terms for the same rank). A barrister who is not a silk is known as a ‘junior’, though that does not imply lack of seniority or youth. High Court litigation usually involves one silk and one junior. The silk takes responsibility for all or most of the oral argument, while the junior provides support in preparing and debating the arguments with the silk, and through his or her presence at the hearing. In disputes involving complex legal issues, or large sums of money, often multiple silks and juniors will be retained by one or more parties.
Bench, The
‘The Bench’ refers literally to the desk where judges in a court sit, and figuratively to the judges of a court.
Beyond reasonable doubt
As a general rule, prosecutors in Australian criminal trials have to prove all the facts beyond reasonable doubt.
Bona fide
Latin for ‘in good faith’. If a person is bona fide in performing an action, it means that they do it in good faith and with an honest intention.
Cause of action
When a plaintiff or applicant attempts to establish that she is entitled to redress from the court, she must make out facts which establish each element of the cause of action