Witness
					A person who testifies under oath at a  deposition or trial, providing firsthand or expert evidence. In addition, the  term also refers to someone who watches another person sign a document and then  adds his name to confirm (called "attesting") that the signature is  genuine.
 
								
               		                    
				
					Visitation Rights
					The right to see a child regularly,  typically awarded by the court to the parent who does not have physical custody  of the child. The court will deny visitation rights only if it decides that  visitation would hurt the child so much that the parent should be kept away.
 
								
               		                    
				
					Uncontested Divorce
					A divorce automatically granted by a court  when the spouse who is served with a summons and complaint for divorce fails to  file a formal response with the court. Many divorces proceed this way when the  spouses have worked everything out and there's no reason for both to go to  court -- and pay the court costs.
 
								
               		                    
				
					Tenancy in Common /Tenants 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.
 
								
               		                    
				
					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.
 
								
               		                    
				
					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.
 
								
               		                    
				
					Tangible Personal Property
					Personal property 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.
 
								
               		                    
				
					Surviving Spouse
					
								
               		                    
				
					Supreme Court
					America's  highest court, which has the final power to decide cases involving the  interpretation of the U.S. Constitution, certain legal areas set forth in the  Constitution (called federal questions) and federal laws. It can also make  final decisions in certain lawsuits between parties in different states. The  U.S. Supreme Court has nine justices -- one of whom is the Chief Justice -- who  are appointed for life by the President and must be confirmed by the U.S.  Senate. Most states also have a supreme court, which is the final arbiter of the  state's constitution and state laws. However, in several states -- most notably  New York and Maryland,  where it's called the "Court of Appeals," and Massachusetts, where it's called the "Supreme Judicial Court"  -- the highest state court uses a different name.
 
								
               		                    
				
					Superior Court
					The main county trial court in many states,  mostly in the west. See state court.
 
 
								
               		                    
				
					Summons
					A paper prepared by the plaintiff and  issued by a court that informs the defendant that she has been sued. The  summons requires that the defendant file a response with the court -- or in  many small claims courts, simply appear in person on an appointed day -- within  a given time period or risk losing the case under the terms of a default  judgment.
 
								
               		                    
				
					Summary Judgment
					A final decision by a judge that resolves a  lawsuit in favor of one of the parties. A motion for summary judgment is made  after discovery is completed but before the case goes to trial. The party  making the motion marshals all the evidence in its favor, compares it to the  other side's evidence, and argues that a reasonable jury looking at the same  evidence could only decide the case one way--for the moving party. If the judge  agrees, then a trial would be unnecessary and the judge enters judgment for the  moving party.
 
								
               		                    
				
					Spousal Support
					
								
               		                    
				
					Split Custody
					A custody arrangement in the case of multiple children, awarding sole custody of one child to one parent and sole custody of another child to the other parent. This arrangement is generally disfavored by judges because they are reluctant to split up siblings.
 
								
               		                    
				
					Sole Custody
					An arrangement whereby only one parent has physical and legal custody of a child and the other parent has visitation rights.