Answer

filed by a defendant to respond to a complaint in a lawsuit filed and served upon that defendant

Antenuptial (prenuptial) Agreement

written contract between two people about to marry; setting out the terms of of possession of assets, treatment of future earnings, control of the property of each, and potential division if the marriage is later dissolved

Anti-trust Laws

acts adopted by Congress to outlaw or restrict business practices considered to be monopolistic or which restrain interstate commerce; the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 declared illegal "every contract, combination, or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce" between states or foreign countries; the Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914, amended by the Robinson-Patman Act of 1936, prohibits discrimination among customers through pricing and disallows mergers, acquisitions or takeovers of one firm by another if the effect will "substantially lessen competition"

Anticipatory Breach

when a party to a contract repudiates on his or her obligations under that contract before fully performing those obligations

Apparent Authority

appearance of being the agent of another (employer or principal) with the power to act for the principal; since under the law of agency the employer (the principal) is liable for the acts of his employee (agent), if a person who is not an agent appears to an outsider (a customer) to have been given authority by the principal, then the principal is stuck for the acts of anyone he allows to appear to have authority

Appeal

1) to ask a higher court to reverse the decision of a trial court after final judgment or other legal ruling 2) the name for the process of appealing, as in "he has filed an appeal"

Appearance

the arrival and acceptance to proceed in court

Appellant

the party who appeals a trial court decision they have lost

Appellate Court

court of appeals which hears appeals from lower court decisions

Appellee

in some jurisdictions, this name is used for the party who has wont at the trial court level, but the loser has appealed the decision to a higher court, thus the appellee has to file a response to the legal brief filed by the appellant; in many jurisdictions the appellee is called the "respondent"