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Legal Dictionary H
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Habeas corpus :
Latin: a court petition which orders that a person being detained be
produced before a judge for a hearing to decide whether the detention is
lawful. Habeas corpus was one of the concessions the British Monarch
made in the Magna Carta and has stood as a basic individual right
against arbitrary arrest and imprisonment. Habitual offender : A person
who is convicted and sentenced for crimes over a period of time and even
after serving sentences of incarceration, such as demonstrates a
propensity towards criminal conduct. Reformation techniques fail to
alter the behavior of the habitual offender. Many countries now have
special laws that require the long-term incarceration, without parole,
of habitual offenders as a means of protecting society in the face of an
individual that appears unable to comply with the law.
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Harassment :
Unsolicited words or conduct which tend to annoy, alarm or abuse
another person. An excellent alternate definition can be found in
Canadian human rights legislation as: "a course of vexatious comment or
conduct that is known or ought reasonably to be known to be unwelcome."
Name-calling ("stupid", "retard" or "dummy") is a common form of
harassment. (See also sexual harassment.)
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Hearsay :
Any evidence that is offered by a witness of which they do not have
direct knowledge but, rather, their testimony is based on what others
have said to them. For example, if Bob heard from Susan about an
accident that Susan witnessed but that Bob had not, and Bob attempted to
repeat Susan's story in court, it could be objected to as "hearsay." The
basic rule, when testifying in court, is that you can only provide
information of which you have direct knowledge. In other words, hearsay
evidence is not allowed. Hearsay evidence is also referred to as
"second-hand evidence" or as "rumor." You are able to tell a court what
you heard, to repeat the rumor, and testify that, in fact, the story you
heard was told to you, but under the hearsay rule, your testimony would
not be evidence of the actual facts of the story but only that you heard
those words spoken.
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Holograph will :
A will written entirely in the testator's handwriting and not
witnessed. Some states recognize holograph wills, other do not. Still
other states will recognize a will as "holograph" if only part of it is
in the testator's handwriting (the other part being type-written).
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Homicide :
The word includes all occasions where one human being, by act or
omission, takes away the life of another. Murder and manslaughter are
different kinds of homicides. Executing a death-row inmate is another
form of homicide, but one which is excusable in the eyes of the law.
Another excusable homicide is where a law enforcement officer shoots and
kills a suspect who draws a weapon or shoots at that officer.
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Hostile witness :
During an examination-in-chief, a lawyer is not allowed to ask
leading questions of their own witness. But, if that witness openly
shows hostility against the interests (or the person) that the lawyer
represents, the lawyer may ask the court to declare the witness
"hostile", after which, as an exception of the examination-in-chief
rules, the lawyer may ask their own witness leading questions.
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Hung jury:
A jury is required to make a unanimous or near unanimous verdict.
When the jurors, after full debate and discussion, are unable to agree
on a verdict and are deadlocked with differences of opinion that appear
to be irreconcilable, it is said to be a "hung jury". The result is a
mistrial.
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Husband-wife privilege :
A special right that married persons have to keep communications
between them secret and even inaccessible to a court of law. While this
privilege may have been varied in some states, it has always been held
to be lifted where one spouse commits a crime on the other. Similar to
the client-solicitor privilege.
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