Answers
venue
rebuke
Estranged husband/wife
probable cause hearing
restitution
Felony
exclusionary rule
irascible
aflrmed
Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR).
When does a judge take judicial notice of a fact?
Corroborating evidence
objection overruled
objection sustained
stipulation
, The objection is denied and the witness must answer
reprimand
The objection stands and the witness may not answer
a wife / husband who lives in a different place
and has a diflcult relationship with their Agreement by attorneys on both side of a case
husband / wife location
Term used in some jurisdictions for a
preliminary hearing to show cause to bring a
case to trial.
(n.) the act of restoring someone or
something to the rightful owner or to a
former state or position; making good on a
loss or damage
A serious crime
The court-made rule preventing illegally
obtained evi- dence from being used in
any trial
irritable; easily angered
In the practice of the court of appeals, it
means that the court of appeals has
concluded that the lower court de- cision is
correct and will stand as rendered by the
lower court.
A procedure for settling a dispute outside the
courtroom. Most forms of ADR are not binding
and involve referral of the case to a neutral
party such as an arbitrator or mediator.
When the fact is so notorious it cannot be
refuted.
Supplementary evidence that confirms the validity
of initialevidence presented in a case.
, verdict the decision a jury makes in a trial
labyrinth a maze
onus burden
quibble to argue
prey victim
appease calm
plunder to steal
impede hinder; block
felonious criminal
deplate Exhausted
oust to remove, drive out of a position or place
Draft picks newly selected players
allay to ease; soothe
abhor hate, loathe;
acquiesce accept without protest; to agree
adroit skillful
trepidation apprehension, anxiety
insergent rebel
ironic contradictory
clandestine concealed, secret,
Vernacular native language
polarize Divide
infinitesimal small
construe to interpret
Heresy