Across
- 3. law developed by judges through the decisions of court
- 6. to take legal action against another person for a criminal offence
- 13. a situation where a person breaches a duty to exercise reasonable care to avoid a foreseeable risk, resulting in another person being injured or suffering a risk of injury
- 14. a legal principle developed by a court in the process of resolving a dispute
- 15. unlawful damage to a person’s good reputation through written or verbal statements
- 16. interference with someone’s enjoyment of public or private property
- 17. the accidental or unintentional killing of one person by another person
- 19. the party in a civil or criminal trial against whom an action has been brought
- 20. the most common or well known express right
- 21. the level of proof required to establish a case. In criminal law, the prosecution must prove that the accused is guilty beyond reasonable doubt
- 22. the Queen’s authority in the Australian parliament, represented by the Governor-General at the federal level and a Governor at the state level
- 23. the killing of one person by another person
- 24. a body of people (typically twelve in number) sworn to give a verdict in a legal case on the basis of evidence submitted to them in court
Down
- 1. a proposed law that has not yet been agreed to by parliament or received royal assent
- 2. a law passed by Parliament
- 4. a court official who hears cases in the lowest court in the legal system
- 5. laws laws made by parliament
- 7. the main political party in the lower house of parliament not in power
- 8. the legal principle describing who has to prove a case in court. In a criminal trial, this burden is on the prosecution
- 9. a tort (civil wrong) involving direct and intentional interference with a person, or a person’s land or goods
- 10. laws, considered collectively
- 11. a situation where a legally binding agreement is not honoured by one or more of the parties to the contract
- 12. legally responsible for a civil wrong
- 18. a system of government by the whole population or all the eligible members of a state, typically through elected representatives