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Legal terms [Xem 1062 lần]
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Legal terms
October 30, 2003, 03:51 PM
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[b]solicitor lawyer attorney barrister counsellor
Is there any difference in use? [/b]
These legal terms all belong to the same family of words, but are quite different in use.
[b]Solicitors[/b] are [b]lawyers[/b] who give legal advice to clients and prepare legal documents and cases. Solicitors often specialise in different areas: there are, for example, [b]family law solicitors [/b] and [b]company law solicitors.[/b] They do not usually, to my knowledge, appear in court. The following would be an example of usage:
'When my husband left me, I was advised to put the matter into the hands of a solicitor.'
[b]Attorney [/b] is American English word for a British English lawyer. The D.A. or [b]District Attorney [/b] is a lawyer in the U.S. who works for the state and prosecutes people on behalf of it. There are also, of course, defense [b]attorneys[/b] in America who act on behalf of their clients. Consider the following:
'Nobody wanted the position of district attorney – it was poorly paid in comparison with that of defense attorney.' (Note that in British English defence is spelt ‘defence’ and not ‘defense’.)
A [b]lawyer[/b], then, in British English, is a person who is qualified to advise people about the law and represent them in court. We talk about lawyers for the prosecution and [b]lawyers [/b] for the defence. Study the following: 'The defence court case cost £560,000 in lawyers’ fees alone.'
[b]A barrister [/b] in British English is a [b]lawyer[/b] who operates in the higher courts of law in Britain and speaks on behalf of either the prosecution or the defence: 'He was regarded as an eloquent and persuasive[b] barrister [/b] and was much in demand for a period of over twenty years.'
We also speak about the [b]prosecution[/b] counsel or the [b]defence[/b] counsel when referring to the team of lawyers who are operating on behalf of either the state or a client: 'The counsel for the [b]defence[/b] argued that the case should never have been brought to court as it relied only on circumstantial evidence.'
However, please note that we do not use the term counsellor in the legal sense at all! A [b]counsellor [/b] can be any person whose job it is to give advice, care and support to those who need it. Consider the following: 'This hospital employs 15 [b]counsellors[/b] whose job it is to deal with patients suffering from severe depression.'
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