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Civil cases are initiated when a wronged party, the Plaintiff, files a civil suit with the court of appropriate jurisdiction against the Defendant(s). While civil cases may involve criminal actions, these trials are separate from the proceedings of a criminal trial. Additionally, civil cases cover the gamut of disputes, disagreements, and grievances a plaintiff feels cannot be resolved sufficiently with defendants without court intervention.  

Within the legal system, various types of civil cases may include:

      • Contractual disputes
      • Personal injury claims
      • Product liability
      • Class action suits
      • Wrongful death
      • Medical malpractice
      • Intellectual property disputes
      • Libel, slander, and defamation of character
      • Estate planning disputes
      • Property and zoning disputes

 

Any disagreement that is not in violation of criminal laws in a given jurisdiction may be an eligible civil suit, as well as the damages stemming from some criminal cases. In all civil cases, plaintiffs will be seeking remedy from a defendant(s).  Remedy  will often  come  in the  form of a court  mandated judgment  that  attempts to rectify, through  judicial ruling, the  outcome  of  a  dispute. 
 
Additionally, remedy  can  be  achieved  in civil suits through settlement, which may be provoked  considering  the  costs  and potential  losses stemming  from an impending civil trial.  Remedies sought by plaintiffs in a civil case may take several forms including:
 
      • Settlements
      • Damages
      • Injunction
      • Declaratory judgment Etc..

 

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