Glossary of Personal Injury Law Terms
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Immunity: Grant by the court, which assures
someone will not face prosecution in return for
providing criminal evidence.
Impaneling: Selecting a jury from the list of
potential jurors.
Impeach: Attacking the credibility of a witness.
Impeachment of a Witness: An attack on the
credibility (believability) of a witness, through
evidence introduced for that purpose.
Incarcerate: To confine in jail.
Inadmissible: That which, under the rules of
evidence, cannot be admitted or received as evidence.
In Camera: In a judge's chambers; in private.
In Camera Inspection: Judge's private inspection
of a document prior to his or her ruling on its
admissibility or use at trial.
In Camera Proceedings. Trial or proceeding in a
place not open to the public, usually in a judge's
chambers.
Indemnify: To restore the victim of a loss,
either in whole or in part, by payment of money or
repair or replacement of the thing lost.
Independent Executor: A special kind of
executor, permitted by the laws of certain states, who
performs the duties of an executor without intervention
by the court.
Indeterminate Sentence: A sentence of
imprisonment to a specified minimum and maximum period
of time, specifically authorized by statute, subject to
termination by a parole board or other authorized agency
after the prisoner has served the minimum term.
Indictment: A written accusation by a grand
jury charging a person with a crime.
Indigent: Needy or impoverished. A defendant
who can demonstrate his or her indigence to the court
may be assigned a court-appointed attorney at public
expense.
Information: Accusatory document, filed by the
prosecutor, detailing the charges against the defendant.
An alternative to an indictment, it serves to bring a
defendant to trial.
Informed Consent: Person's agreement to allow
something to happen, such as a medical procedure, that
is based on full disclosure of the facts necessary to
make an intelligent decision.
In Forma Pauperis: In the manner of a pauper.
Permission given to a person to sue without payment of
court fees on claim of indigence or poverty.
Infraction: A violation of law not punishable
by imprisonment. Minor traffic offenses generally are
considered infractions.
Inheritance Tax: A state tax on property that
an heir or beneficiary under a will receives from a
deceased person's estate. The heir or beneficiary pays
this tax.
Initial Appearance: In criminal law, the
hearing at which a judge determines whether there is
sufficient evidence against a person charged with a
crime to hold him or her for trial. The Constitution
bans secret accusations, so initial appearances are
public unless the defendant asks otherwise; the accused
must be present, though he or she usually does not offer
evidence. Also called first appearance.
Injunction: Writ or order by a court
prohibiting a specific action from being carried out by
a person or group. A preliminary injunction is granted
provisionally, until a full hearing can be held to
determine if it should be made permanent.
In Propria Persona: In court's it refers to
persons who present their own case without lawyers. See
Pro Se.
Instructions: Judge's explanation to the jury
before it begins deliberations of the questions it must
answer and the applicable law governing the case. Also
called charge.
Intangible Assets: Nonphysical items such as
stock certificates, bonds, bank accounts, and pension
benefits that have value and must be taken into account
in estate planning.
Intentional Inflication of Emotional Distress: -
Intentionally causing severe emotional distress by
extreme or outrageous conduct.
Interlocutory: Provisional; not final. An
interlocutory order or an interlocutory appeal concerns
only a part of the issues raised in a lawsuit.
Interrogatories: Written questions asked by
one party in a lawsuit for which the opposing party must
provide written answers.
Intervention: An action by which a third
person who may be affected by a lawsuit is permitted to
become a party to the suit. Differs from the process of
becoming an amicus curiae.
Inter Vivos Gift: A gift made during the
giver's life.
Inter Vivos Trust: Another name for a living
trust.
Intestacy Laws: See descent and distribution
statutes.
Intestate: Dying without a will.
Intestate Succession: The process by which the
property of a person who has died without a will passes
on to others according to the state's descent and
distribution statutes. If someone dies without a will,
and the court uses the state’s interstate succession
laws, an heir who receives some of the deceased's
property is an intestate heir.
Invitee: A person is an invitee on land if he
enters land by invitation; his entry is connected with
business being conducted on the land by the possessor of
land; and the possessor of land is benefited by the
entry.
Irrevocable Trust: A trust that, once set up,
the grantor may not revoke.
Irritable Bowel Syndrome: A condition of
abnormally increased spontaneous movement (motility) of
the small and large intestine, generally stress can
contribute to this condition.
Ischemic Colitis: An inflammation caused by
interference with the blood flow to the large intestine.
This lack of blood flow leads to death of tissue.
Issue: (1) The disputed point in a
disagreement between parties in a lawsuit. (2) To send
out officially, as in to issue an order.
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