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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 10 page paper that provides an overview of civil procedure. A detailed summary of all aspects of civil procedure is based on a reading of the Gilbert Law Summaries. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KW60_KFlaw001.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
it is nevertheless necessary to understand all domains of law that could potentially be invoked during the course of ones legal career. For this reason, summaries dedicated to providing key
information about particular applications of the law can be extremely useful. One key example of this is the Gilbert Law Summary text on civil procedure, which succinctly summarizes all the
key points of laws and proceedings related to civil suits. This paragraph helps the student begin to carry out the summary of the Gilbert text. Any discussion of civil
law necessarily begins with the issue of jurisdiction. Jurisdiction refers specifically to a "states power to hear a case and enforce judgment"; if a court fails to meet the standards
necessary to grant it this instrumental power, then that court can not act as a valid venue for the commission of the case in question (Marcus & Rowe, 2008). Courts
that do not have jurisdiction, however, also enjoy a status as an effective instrument of law, granting power to the judgments of the court that renders those judgments personally binding
to one or more involved parties, or in some cases binding against "all possible claimants" to a piece of property or a given dispute (Marcus & Rowe, 2008). Constitutional
citations are usually given to grant or deny jurisdiction to a given court; this is to say that all court jurisdiction is derived from a constitutional basis. The majority of
constitutional grounds for jurisdiction indicate that individuals can be considered under the "general jurisdiction" of a state if their domicile is located in that state, and that corporations fall under
general jurisdiction in states where they were incorporated, where their headquarters are located, or where they perform "substantial activity" (Marcus & Rowe, 2008). There are certain other matters related
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