Foundations of Law
Courts & ADR
Torts & Ethics
Intellectual Property
Criminal Law
Contracts
100

The body of rules that governs relationships between individuals and society.

What is law?
(Defines enforceable rules that maintain order and justice.)

100

Before hearing a case, a court must have this power over parties or property.

What is jurisdiction?
(Essential for a valid ruling.)

100

A private civil wrong that causes injury or harm to another.

What is a tort? (Separate from criminal wrongdoing.)

100

A symbol, word, or logo identifying a product or company.

What is a trademark? (Protects brand identity.)

100

A public wrong punishable by law.

What is a crime? (Brought by the government, not a private party.)

100

A legally enforceable promise between two or more parties.

What is a contract? (Requires mutual assent and consideration.)

200

The “supreme law of the land” in the United States.

What is the U.S. Constitution?
(All other laws must align with it.)

200

The correct geographic location for a trial.

What is venue?
(Usually where the event occurred or defendant resides.)

200

This type of defamation is spoken rather than written.

What is slander? (Libel is written.)

200

The federal law protecting authors and artists.

What is the Copyright Act? (Covers creative expression.)

200

The Latin term for the “guilty mind.”

What is mens rea? (Refers to criminal intent.)

200

The four required elements of a valid contract.

What are offer, acceptance, consideration, and legality? (Plus capacity.)

300

This legal principle requires courts to follow precedents from previous decisions.

What is stare decisis?
(Ensures consistency and predictability.)

300

The main advantage of ADR over litigation.

What is that it’s faster and less expensive? (Also more flexible.)

300

The four elements of negligence.

What are duty, breach, causation, and damages? (All must be proven.)

300

Patent protection for inventions generally lasts this long.

What is 20 years? (From the date of filing.)

300

The constitutional requirement for reading rights before interrogation.

What is the Miranda rule? (Protects the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.)

300

When only one party makes a promise in exchange for an act.

What is a unilateral contract? (A reward offer is an example.)

400

Law that defines rights and duties, rather than procedures.

What is substantive law?
(Procedural law dictates how rights are enforced.)

400

In arbitration, the neutral third party does this.

What is issues a binding decision? (Different from mediation, which is non-binding.)

400

The purpose of punitive damages.

What is to punish and deter wrongful conduct? (Not to compensate.)

400

Using another’s logo in a misleading domain name.

What is cybersquatting? (Prohibited under federal law.)

400

White-collar crimes typically involve this type of conduct.

What is financial deception? (Non-violent crimes for financial gain.)

400

Value exchanged between parties that makes a contract binding.

What is consideration? (Can be money, goods, or a promise.)

500

These are the four main sources of American law.

What are constitutions, statutes, administrative regulations, and case law?
(Covers the hierarchy of legal authority.)

500

The term for the party appealing a lower-court decision.

Who is the appellant? (Versus appellee, who defends the ruling.)

500

Ethical theory that focuses on producing the greatest good for the greatest number.

What is utilitarianism? (Key principle in business decision-making.)

500

Protects the visual appearance or packaging of a product.

What is trade dress? (Distinct from trademark text or logo.)

500

Crimes committed through technology to cause fear or disruption.

What is cyberterrorism? (Targets digital infrastructure.)

500

This rule excludes prior oral agreements that contradict a written contract.

What is the parol evidence rule? (Protects integrity of written agreements.)