Terms for Law School Flashcards
from https://lawtutors.net/words-you-should-knowbefore-law-school/ & https://www.ala.org/advocacy/intfreedom/censorship/courtcases
Affirm
To confirm a judgment on appeal, or uphold it. The appellate court confirms that the lower court ruled “correctly.”
Appellant
A party who appeals a lower court’s decision, usually seeking to reverse that decision. A party would do this if they lose at court.
Appellee
A party against whom an appeal is taken. Their role is to respond to that appeal, and they usually want to affirm (or keep) the lower court’s decision.
Appellate Court
This is the type of court that hears appeals. This means the party that lost at the lower court level appealed to a higher court. The cases you typically read in law school are at the appellate court level.
Bar Exam
The Bar Exam, or sometimes just “bar”, is what most (there are some state exceptions, but not many) lawyers must take in order to be licensed. When you graduate law school, you have a juris doctorate, but you are not a lawyer. You don’t become a lawyer until you pass your jurisdiction’s bar exam, and are sworn in. The Bar Exam is a two day test in either July or Feb. Your Academic Support person on campus will tell you more, but you do not need to worry about it your first year.
Black’s Law Dictionary
A legal dictionary. You should always look up legal terms using a legal dictionary versus a normal dictionary, as sometimes the terms will have different meanings. Any trustworthy legal dictionary will suffice for this, it just so happens that “Black’s” is the most famous.
BlueBook
This is the book most legal writing courses, law firms, judges, and law journals and law reviews use for uniform citation. You might hear people talk about “bluebooking”, which generally means checking citations.
CALI
The Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction (CALI) non-profit is known in law schools for lessons and online interactive tutorials.
Case Book
Your textbook. A compilation of cases, chosen and edited to teach a subject.
Case Brief
As you read cases for class, you will want to “brief” them. You will receive instruction on how to do this, likely during orientation. Essentially, it is a summary of the case, so that you can remember things like important facts, issues, and the holding, when you are called on in class, and when you need to study and review.
Case Law
The law derived from a collection of cases. Essentially, judges will write opinions, and that creates caw law, or precedent. Case law can be common law, or, it can be used to explain and supplement statutory law.
Citation
A legal reference. In legal writing (aside from most exams) you will want to “cite” your sources. You will learn more about this in your legal writing courses. You typically use the bluebook to determine the correct citation format.
“Civ Pro”
This is the abbreviation typically used for the subject of Civil Procedure. Civil Procedure is the process, or rules, of a case. So, how to file a claim, and which court has jurisdiction. Essentially the rules of court. Typically, Civil Procedure courses will use FRCP, or the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Clerking
This is the abbreviation typically used for the subject of Civil Procedure. Civil Procedure is the process, or rules, of a case. So, how to file a claim, and which court has jurisdiction. Essentially the rules of court. Typically, Civil Procedure courses will use FRCP, or the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
Clinic
Law school training in which students participate in actual cases under the supervision of a practicing attorney or law professor.
Cold Call
Calling on students without warning, or without looking for volunteers. So, the professor might say “Mr. Jones, what was the holding in Smith v Smith” even though you haven’t raised your hand or volunteered. Every professor runs their class in their own way, so after 1-2 classes, you’ll start to get a feeling for how your professor “cold calls”, if they do so at all.
Common Law
The body of law derived from cases, rather than a statute.
Conclusory
This is often used in legal writing, and means you have left out a proper analysis. You don’t want your writing to be conclusory, you want a conclusion supported by analysis. Your legal writing professors, and your academic support professors, will help you with this.
“Con Law”
This is an abbreviation typically used for constitutional law.