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Law UnanimityUnconscionable

Unanimous : There are 12 people on a jury trial, except when the parties in civil or misdemeanor cases agree that there may be fewer than 12. A decision is unanimous when the full jury have agreed upon the verdict.

 


In a unanimous opinion, the Supreme Court found for Yick Wo and directed his discharge. Justice Stanley Matthews wrote that the ordinances as enforced conferred an authority broader than the traditional police power to regulate the use of property.

Consensu - Unanimously or, by general consent
Consensus ad idem - Agreement as to the same things
Contra - To the contrary ...

Expanded Legal Definition of Hue and CryHung Jury A jury which is unable to arrive at a required unanimous or near unanimous verdict.

The result was a practically unanimous determination to take stock in the new Federal Reserve banks.

In criminal cases, this is usually expressed as guilty or not guilty and may be unanimous or by a majority of 11-1 or 10-2. In a civil case, the verdict would be a finding for the plaintiff or for the defendant by at least nine of the 12 jurors.

Supreme Court observed in its unanimous decision in Kay v. Ehrler, 499 U.S.

In the United States, verdicts must be unanimous in federal courts, but majority verdicts are constitutionally permissible in state courts. The jury may be instructed to render a general verdict, a special verdict, or both.

Traditionally, an American jury was made up of 12 people who had to arrive at a unanimous decision. But today, in many states, juries in civil cases may be composed of as few as six members and non-unanimous verdicts may be permitted.

TOP Hung jury: A jury is required to make a unanimous or near unanimous verdict.

In criminal cases the verdict shall be unanimous, and shall be returned by the jury to the judge in open court. In civil cases the parties may stipulate that a verdict of a stated majority of the jurors shall be taken as a verdict of the jury.

: a verdict produced not by sincere unanimous agreement on guilt or liability but by an improper surrender of individual convictions
specif ...

A jury is required to make a unanimous or near unanimous verdict. When the jurors, after full debate and discussion, are unable to agree on a verdict and are deadlocked with differences of opinion that appear to be irreconcilable, ...

In a criminal 302 case, for each "count," the jury will render one of three decisions: (1) "guilty," (2) "not guilty" or (3) "can't agree unanimously" (or by whatever non-unanimous standard some state may have rather than unanimous).

UNA VOCE.
With one voice unanimously. ... more
UNALIENABLE
The state of a thing or right which cannot be sold. 2. Things which are not in commerce, as public roads, are... more ...

The Latin term "Consensu" means, in a UK legal context: "unanimously or, by general consent".
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(n) Hung Jury is the situation when the jury cannot reach a unanimous or enforceable decision in a criminal case due to a deadlocking of the affairs among the juries and none of the side could prevail the situation
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Twelve at least must agree, in order to find a true bill; but it is not required that they should be unanimous. Unless that number consent, the bill must be ignored.

verdict - The formal and unanimous decision or finding made by a jury.
voir dire -"To speak the truth". The questioning of potential jurors by the judge and the lawyers to determine any biases, prejudices or other reasons for disqualification.

Usually it means there is no unanimous verdict. If the jury is hung the trial judge will declare a mistrial. A new trial from scratch, with a new jury panel, is required.

A jury which, after full debate and discussion, is unable to agree on a verdict and is deadlocked with differences of opinion that appear to be irreconcilable is said to be a "hung jury". Since a jury is required to make a unanimous or near unanimous ...

A result achieved through negotiation whereby a hybrid solution is arrived at between parties to an issue, dispute or disagreement, comprising typically of concessions made by all parties, and to which all parties then subscribe unanimously as an ...

The "Chip Smith Charge" is an instruction to deadlocked jurors in civil and criminal cases, urging those jurors who disagree with the majority vote to reexamine the majority views in an effort to reach a unanimous verdict.

See also: Law, Court, Person, State, Question

Law UnanimityUnconscionable

 
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