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Test (law): Difference between revisions

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==United States==
==United States==
*[[Aguilar-Spinelli test]]
*[[Aguilar-Spinelli test]]

*[[Calculus of negligence|Calculus of negligence test (Hand rule)]]
*[[Consumer expectations test]]
*[[Consumer expectations test]]
*[[Daubert standard]]
*[[Daubert standard]]

Revision as of 17:06, 11 December 2019

Legal tests are various kinds of commonly applied methods of evaluation used to resolve matters of jurisprudence.[1] In the context of a trial, a hearing, discovery, or other kinds of legal proceedings, the resolution of certain questions of fact or law may hinge on the application of one or more legal tests.

Legal tests are often formulated from the logical analysis of a judicial decision or a court order where it appears that a finder of fact or the court made a particular decision after contemplating a well-defined set of circumstances. It is assumed that evaluating any given set of circumstances under a legal test will lead to an unambiguous and repeatable result.

International law

Common law

Canada

United Kingdom

United States

Notes and references

  1. ^ Cane, Peter (2002). Responsibility in Law and Morality. Hart Publishing. ISBN 1-84113-321-3.