Legal Glossary - T

Browse the Lawyers Glossary Letter T

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Lawyers Terms & Standards taking
See eminent domain.
Lawyers Terms & Standards taking against the will
A procedure under state law that gives a surviving spouse the right to demand a certain share (usually one-third to one-half) of the deceased spouse's property. The surviving spouse can take that share instead of accepting whatever he or she inherited through the deceased spouse's will. If the surviving spouse decides to take the statutory share, it's called "taking against the will." Dower and curtesy is another name for the same legal process.
Lawyers Terms & Standards tangible personal property
Personal property that can be felt or touched. Examples include furniture, cars, jewelry and artwork. However, cash and checking accounts are not tangible personal property. The law is unsettled as to whether computer data is tangible personal property. Compare intangible property.
Lawyers Terms & Standards tax basis
See basis.
Lawyers Terms & Standards temporary restraining order (TRO)
An order that tells one person to stop harassing or harming another, issued after the aggrieved party appears before a judge. Once the TRO is issued, the court holds a second hearing where the other side can tell his story and the court can decide whether to make the TRO permanent by issuing an injunction. Although a TRO will often not stop an enraged spouse from acting violently, the police are more willing to intervene if the abused spouse has a TRO.
Lawyers Terms & Standards tenancy by the entirety
A special kind of property ownership that's only for married couples. Both spouses have the right to enjoy the entire property, and when one spouse dies, the surviving spouse gets title to the property (called a right of survivorship). It is similar to joint tenancy, but it is available in only about half the states.
Lawyers Terms & Standards tenancy in common
A way two or more people can own property together. Each can leave his or her interest upon death to beneficiaries of his choosing instead of to the other owners, as is required with joint tenancy. In some states, two people are presumed to own property as tenants in common unless they've agreed otherwise in writing.
Lawyers Terms & Standards tenant
Anyone, including a corporation, who rents real property, with or without a house or structure, from the owner (called the landlord). The tenant may also be called the "lessee."
Lawyers Terms & Standards tenants in common
See tenancy in common.
Lawyers Terms & Standards tender offer
A public offer to purchase stock at a specified price per share, usually done to gain a controlling interest in a corporation.
Lawyers Terms & Standards testamentary disposition
Leaving property in a will.
Lawyers Terms & Standards testamentary trust
A trust created by a will, effective only upon the death of the willmaker.
Lawyers Terms & Standards testate
The circumstance of dying after making a valid will. A person who dies with a will is said to have died "testate." Compare intestate.
Lawyers Terms & Standards testator
Someone who makes a will.
Lawyers Terms & Standards testify
To provide oral evidence under oath at a trial or at a deposition.
Lawyers Terms & Standards third degree instruction
See dynamite charge.
Lawyers Terms & Standards TILA
See Truth in Lending Act.
Lawyers Terms & Standards title
Evidence of ownership of real estate.
Lawyers Terms & Standards title company
A company that issues title insurance.
Lawyers Terms & Standards title insurance
Insurance issued by a title company that protects a property owner against loss if it is later discovered that title is imperfect.
Lawyers Terms & Standards tort
An injury to one person for which the person who caused the injury is legally responsible. A tort can be intentional -- for example, an angry punch in the nose -- but is far more likely to result from carelessness (called "negligence"), such as riding your bicycle on the sidewalk and colliding with a pedestrian. While the injury that forms the basis of a tort is usually physical, this is not a requirement -- libel, slander and the "intentional infliction of mental distress" are on a good-sized list of torts not based on a physical injury.
Lawyers Terms & Standards tortious interference
The causing of harm by disrupting something that belongs to someone else -- for example, interfering with a contractual relationship so that one party fails to deliver goods on time.
Lawyers Terms & Standards Totten trust
Another term for a payable-on-death bank account.
Lawyers Terms & Standards toxic tort
A personal injury caused by exposure to a toxic substance, such as asbestos or hazardous waste. Victims can sue for medical expenses, lost wages and pain and suffering.
Lawyers Terms & Standards trade dress
The distinctive packaging or design of a product that promotes the product and distinguishes it from other products in the marketplace -- for example, the shape of Frangelico liqueur bottles. Trade dress can be protected under trademark law if a showing can be made that the average consumer would likely be confused as to product origin if another product were allowed to appear in similar dress.
Lawyers Terms & Standards trade name
The official name of a business, the one it uses on its letterhead and bank account when not dealing with consumers.
Lawyers Terms & Standards trade secret
In most states, a formula, pattern, physical device, idea, process, compilation of information or other information that 1) provides a business with a competitive advantage, and 2) is treated in a way that can reasonably be expected to prevent the public or competitors from learning about it, absent improper acquisition or theft.
Lawyers Terms & Standards trademark
A word, phrase, logo, symbol, color, sound or smell used by a business to identify a product and distinguish it from those of its competitors. If the business uses the name or logo to identify a service, such as photo copying, it is called a service mark. In practice, the legal protections for trademarks and service marks are identical.
Lawyers Terms & Standards trademark ownership
In the United States, trademark ownership arising from "first use" of a mark. First use can be established by actual use or by application with the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) for registration on an intent to use basis. If the same mark has been in use by different businesses in different parts of the country without causing customer confusion, the mark may be owned by both businesses in their respective regions. If the mark owners then come into conflict in another part of the country, ownership for the purpose of that region will be determined according to who was the first user and which business could most likely consider the region as a natural zone of expansion.
Lawyers Terms & Standards trademark registration
Federal registration of a mark with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) requires that the mark be used in commerce and the filing of a registration application. Once a mark is registered, the owner should always place the trademark registration symbol (®) or "Reg. U.S. Pat. Off." next to the mark. Without this designation, it may be hard to collect damages from one who infringes the mark.
Lawyers Terms & Standards trademark search
An investigation to discover potential conflicts between a proposed trademark or service mark and any marks already in use in the marketplace. Preferably done before a proposed mark is used, a trademark search reduces the possibility of inadvertently infringing a mark belonging to another. Businesses can conduct trademark searches themselves, either manually in a Patent and Trademark Depository library, through a computer in one of the online trademark databases (for a fee) or by hiring a search firm to do the search for them.
Lawyers Terms & Standards treble damages
See damages.
Lawyers Terms & Standards triple net lease
See net lease.
Lawyers Terms & Standards TRO
See temporary restraining order.
Lawyers Terms & Standards trust corpus
Latin for "the body" of the trust. This term refers to all the property transferred to a trust. For example, if a trust is established (funded) with $250,000, that money is the corpus. Sometimes the trust corpus is known as the "res," a Latin word meaning "thing."
Lawyers Terms & Standards trust deed
The most common method of financing real estate purchases in California (most other states use mortgages). The trust deed transfers the title to the property to a trustee -- often a title company -- who holds it as security for a loan. When the loan is paid off, the title is transferred to the borrower. The trustee will not become involved in the arrangement unless the borrower defaults on the loan. At that point, the trustee can sell the property and pay the lender from the proceeds.
Lawyers Terms & Standards trust merger
Under a trust, the situation that occurs when the sole trustee and the sole beneficiary are the same person or institution. Then, there's no longer the separation between the trustee's legal ownership of trust property from the beneficiary's interest. The trust "merges" and ceases to exist.
Lawyers Terms & Standards trustee
The person who manages assets owned by a trust under the terms of the trust document. A trustee's purpose is to safeguard the trust and distribute trust income or principal as directed in the trust document. With a simple probate-avoidance living trust, the person who creates the trust is also the trustee.
Lawyers Terms & Standards trustee powers
The provisions in a trust document defining what the trustee may and may not do.
Lawyers Terms & Standards trustor
See grantor.
Lawyers Terms & Standards Truth in Lending Act (TILA)
A federal law that requires credit and charge card companies to disclose interest rates and other information about an account. It also requires lenders to disclose the terms of a loan, including the total amount of the loan, the annual interest rate and the number, amount and due dates of all payments necessary to repay the loan. The TILA requires additional disclosures and places many restrictions on mortgages.
Legal Glossary - T News
 Lawyers News Estrin stays, despite alleged conflict of interest - Canada.com

Estrin stays, despite alleged conflict of interest
Canada.com, Canada - 3 hours ago
The city instead prefers a new downriver bridge location in the Brighton Beach industrial area being planned by a binational government group known as DRIC. ...
 Lawyers News Whales, Navy clash at high court - Christian Science Monitor

Christian Science Monitor

Whales, Navy clash at high court
Christian Science Monitor, MA - 5 hours ago
In March 2007, lawyers with the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and five other environmental groups filed a lawsuit seeking to force the Navy to be ...
 Lawyers News Pre-Election Fight Brings in Lawyers, Accusations - The Ledger

Pre-Election Fight Brings in Lawyers, Accusations
The Ledger, FL - Oct 5, 2008
But each party registers lawyers or other "poll watchers" to be in the voting location to keep an eye on any problems. Ron Meyer, a longtime Democratic ...
 Lawyers News Buck on a wire - Financial Post

Buck on a wire
Financial Post, Canada - 13 hours ago
As a country of immigrants, Canada is a prime location. And our banks are stepping up for a share. At the same time, hard data remains scarce. ...
 Lawyers News Marshall's 'do what's best' ad filmed in a lobbyist's office - Atlanta Journal Constitution

Marshall's 'do what's best' ad filmed in a lobbyist's office
Atlanta Journal Constitution,  USA - 6 hours ago
... act as ?official election lawyers? for the Democratic party. Marshall needed a location that looked like a congressional office, but wasn?t one. ...
 Lawyers News Judge to hear parents' bus lawsuit - The Daily Advertiser

Judge to hear parents' bus lawsuit
The Daily Advertiser, LA - 18 hours ago
The parents' claims of unsafe designated stops, constant location changes and a drop in students' grades were not enough to warrant the injunction, ...
 Lawyers News Debate over Evington quarry to continue tonight - Lynchburg News and Advance

Debate over Evington quarry to continue tonight
Lynchburg News and Advance, VA - 21 hours ago
Boxley currently operates a quarry on Lawyers Road, where the rock is expected to run out in about 15 years. The company owns two land parcels split by ...
Crowd Expected at Quarry Hearing WSET
all 6 news articles
 Lawyers News Vote Caging Comes to Montana - New West

Vote Caging Comes to Montana
New West, MT - 12 hours ago
They have a full list of targeted voters at MontanaVoterSuppression.org, ?a one-stop location for voters to find out what to do if they are challenged, ...
 Lawyers News Accused expected to testify why he inflicted the fatal wounds on ... - Canada.com

Accused expected to testify why he inflicted the fatal wounds on ...
Canada.com, Canada - 6 hours ago
He is being represented by defence lawyers Richard Peck and Peter Wilson. The defence is scheduled to open its case Wednesday at the Vancouver Law Courts, ...
 Lawyers News GC Helps Panda Energy Grow Its Power Plant Business - Law.com (subscription)

GC Helps Panda Energy Grow Its Power Plant Business
Law.com (subscription), CA - Oct 6, 2008
... location, gaining the necessary approvals, designing the plants, arranging financing and supervising construction. "He's an immensely talented lawyer," ...