Act

statutory plan passed by Congress or any legislature which is a bill until enacted and becomes law 2) (v.) a court offering a decision or ruling on a motion or petition

Act Of God

unpreventable natural catastrophe, such as; an earthquake, tidal wave, volcanic eruption, hurricane, or tornado; an act of God is determined on two grounds: 1) the extent of damage and chaos they wreak 2) the impingement on established contracts, which often state that "acts of God" are admissible excuses for delay or failure to fulfill a commitment; many insurance policies exempt coverage for damage caused by acts of God.

Action

A lawsuit in which one party (or parties) sue(s) another.

Actionable

When enough facts or circumstances exist to meet the legal requirements to file a legitimate lawsuit; if the facts required to prove a case cannot be alleged in the complaint, the case is not "actionable" and the client and his/her attorney should not file a suit; whether many cases are actionable is a matter of judgment and interpretation of the facts and law; if a case is filed which is clearly not actionable, it may result in a lawsuit against the filer of the original suit for malicious prosecution by the defendant after he/she has won the original suit.

Actual Controversy

A true legal dispute which leads to a genuine lawsuit rather than merely a "cooked up" legal action filed to get a court to give the equivalent of an advisory opinion.

Actual Notice

Having been informed directly of something or having seen it occur, as distinguished from constructive notice.

Ad Hoc

From Latin, meaning "for this purpose only;" thus, an ad hoc committee is formed to serve a specific purpose; an ad hoc attorney is hired to handle one problem and often is a specialist in a particular area.

Ad Litem

From Latin, "for the purposes of the legal action only;" most often the term that applies to a parent who files a lawsuit for his or her minor child as "guardian at litem" (guardian just for the purposes of legal action, or a lawsuit)

Ad Seriatim

Latin for "one after another"

Ad Valorem

Latin for "based on value," which generally applies to property taxes based on a percentage of the county's assessment of the property's value.