ChineseTools

Could You Pass Law School?

Quiz completed!

Here are your results...

🥁

You're a star!

Well done!

Good effort!

Not too bad!

Better luck next time!

You scored out of
Question 1

What Is The Highest Court In The United States?

Question 1

What Do We Call The First Ten Amendments To The United States Constitution?

Question 1

What Is The Basic Written Document That Creates The United States Federal Government?

Question 1

Which Landmark Case Declared School Segregation Unconstitutional?

Question 1

What Rights Must Police Inform You Of When You Are Arrested In The United States?

Question 1

Which Branch Of The United States Government Makes Federal Laws?

Question 1

In A Civil Lawsuit What Do We Call The Person Who Sues?

Question 1

In A Criminal Case What Do We Call The Person Accused Of A Crime?

Question 1

What Do We Call A Law Passed By A Legislature?

Question 1

What Is A Common Name For A Licensed Legal Professional Who Represents Clients In Court?

Question 1

What Is The Standard Of Proof In A United States Criminal Trial?

Question 1

What Legal Document States How A Person Wants Property Distributed After Death?

Question 1

Which Element Is Essential For A Simple Contract To Exist?

Question 1

What Is A Person Under The Legal Age Of Adulthood Commonly Called?

Question 1

Who Represents The Government In A Criminal Prosecution?

Question 1

What Do We Call A Group Of Citizens Who Decide Facts In A Trial?

Question 1

What Is The Decision Reached By A Jury In A Trial Called?

Question 1

What Do We Call A Person Who Gives Evidence In Court Under Oath?

Question 1

What Is The Money Or Security Paid To Ensure A Defendant Returns To Court?

Question 1

What Is An Agreement Where A Defendant Pleads Guilty For A Lesser Charge Or Sentence?

Question 1

The Right To Remain Silent Protects Against What Legal Danger?

Question 1

Which Amendment To The United States Constitution Protects Freedom Of Speech?

Question 1

What Do We Call A Failure To Perform A Duty Promised In A Contract?

Question 1

What Is The Legal Term For Failing To Use Reasonable Care And Causing Harm?

Question 1

What Do Lawyers Call An Earlier Court Decision That Guides Future Cases?

Question 1

Which Famous Case First Recognized A Constitutional Right To Abortion In The United States?

Question 1

What Do We Call The Formal Written Order From A Court Authorizing A Search?

Question 1

What Is The Main Difference Between Criminal Law And Civil Law?

Question 1

Which Historic Supreme Court Case Upheld Racial Segregation Under Separate But Equal Doctrine?

Question 1

What Level Of Suspicion Do Police Usually Need To Make An Arrest?

Question 1

What Do We Call The Party That Brings Criminal Charges On Behalf Of The State?

Question 1

Which Case Established The Power Of Judicial Review For The United States Supreme Court?

Question 1

Which Case Guaranteed Lawyers For Poor Defendants In Serious Criminal Cases?

Question 1

Which Court Handles Most Bankruptcy Cases In The United States?

Question 1

Which Supreme Court Case Struck Down Laws Banning Same Sex Marriage Nationwide?

Question 1

Which Constitutional Amendment Protects Against Unreasonable Searches And Seizures?

Question 1

What Is The Legal Term For A Wrongful Act Other Than A Breach Of Contract?

Question 1

Which Constitutional Amendment Protects Against Being Tried Twice For The Same Offense?

Question 1

Which Case Protected Student Armbands As Symbolic Speech In Public Schools?

Question 1

Which Case Limited Prior Restraint On Newspapers Publishing Classified Documents About The Vietnam War?

Question 1

Which Case Set The Actual Malice Standard For Defamation Of Public Officials?

Question 1

What Landmark Case Denied Citizenship To Enslaved People And Intensified Pre Civil War Tensions?

Question 1

Which Case Applied The Exclusionary Rule To The States For Illegally Obtained Evidence?

Question 1

Which Case Upheld Internment Of Japanese Americans During World War Two?

Question 1

Which Case Struck Down Laws Banning Interracial Marriage?

Question 1

Which Case Recognized That Students Have Some Free Speech Rights At School?

Question 1

What Is The Written Statement Starting A Civil Lawsuit Called?

Question 1

What Is The Written Document Formally Charging Someone With A Serious Crime Called?

Question 1

What Do We Call The Authority Of A Court To Hear A Case?

Question 1

What Do We Call The Process Of Selecting Jurors For A Trial?

Question 1

What Is The Term For Releasing A Prisoner Early Under Supervision Instead Of Serving Full Sentence?

Question 1

What Is The Legal Duty To Act With The Care A Reasonable Person Would Use?

Question 1

What Is The Written Answer Filed By A Defendant Responding To A Complaint?

Question 1

What Is The Court Order Requiring Someone To Do Or Not Do A Specific Act?

Question 1

Which Case Held That Police Must Inform Suspects Of Their Right To Remain Silent And To Counsel?

Question 1

What Is The Process Where Parties Exchange Evidence Before Trial Called?

Question 1

What Do We Call A Neutral Third Person Who Helps Parties Reach A Voluntary Agreement?

Question 1

What Is The Legal Concept That Government Must Follow Fair Procedures Before Taking Life Liberty Or Property?

Question 1

What Do We Call A Case Brought By One Or More Persons On Behalf Of A Large Group?

Question 1

What Is The Name For A Trial Held Only Before A Judge Without A Jury?

Question 1

What Do We Call The Written Opinion Of Judges Who Disagree With The Majority Decision?

Question 1

Which Case Ruled That Evidence From A Wiretap Requires A Warrant Under The Fourth Amendment?

Question 1

What Is The Legal Document Used To Transfer Ownership Of Real Property?

Question 1

What Do We Call The Person Who Makes A Will?

Question 1

What Is The Person Or Entity Receiving Property Under A Will Called?

Question 1

What Do We Call The Legal Right To Possess And Use Property?

Question 1

Which Area Of Law Deals Mostly With Rules About Buying And Selling Goods?

Question 1

What Is The Legal Relationship Where One Person Manages Property For Another Benefit?

Question 1

Which Case Upheld A Broad Reading Of Congressional Power To Regulate Interstate Commerce?

Question 1

Which Case Upheld Congress Power To Create A National Bank And Expanded Implied Powers?

Question 1

Which Case Upheld Use Of Federal Commerce Power To Ban Racial Discrimination In Public Accommodations?

Question 1

What Is The Legal Term For The Power Of Courts To Declare Laws Unconstitutional?

Question 1

What Do We Call The Rules A Court Uses To Decide Which Jurisdiction Laws Apply To A Case?

Question 1

What Is The Concept That Final Judgments Cannot Be Relitigated Between The Same Parties?

Question 1

What Latin Phrase Refers To Following Previously Decided Cases?

Question 1

What Do We Call The Mental State Or Intent Required For Many Crimes?

Question 1

What Is The Legal Doctrine That Holds Employers Liable For Employees Acts Within Job Scope?

Question 1

Which Case Held That School Sponsored Prayer Violates The Establishment Clause?

Question 1

Which Case Created A Three Part Test For Establishment Clause Violations Involving Government And Religion?

Question 1

Which Case Held That Burning The United States Flag Is Protected Symbolic Speech?

Question 1

What Case Struck Down A Total Ban On Handgun Possession In The District Of Columbia?

Question 1

Which Case Applied The Second Amendment Right To The States Through The Fourteenth Amendment?

Question 1

Which Case Struck Down Laws Criminalizing Same Sex Intimate Conduct?

Question 1

Which Case Recognized A Right Of Married Couples To Use Contraceptives Under Privacy Principles?

Question 1

What Is The Legal Principle That Evidence Directly Derived From An Illegal Search Is Inadmissible?

Question 1

What Do We Call A Case That Originates In A Lower Court And Is Taken To A Higher Court?

Question 1

What Do We Call The Written Argument Submitted To An Appellate Court?

Question 1

Which Case Clarified That Separate But Equal In Public Education Is Inherently Unequal?

Question 1

What Is The Legal Term For Government Taking Private Property For Public Use With Payment?

Question 1

What Do We Call Long Uninterrupted Possession Allowing Someone To Gain Ownership Of Land?

Question 1

What Is The Legal Term For Two Or More People Owning Property Together With Right Of Survivorship?

Question 1

What Case Addressed Race Based Affirmative Action In University Admissions Allowing Limited Consideration Of Race?

Question 1

Which Case Upheld Use Of Race As One Factor In Law School Admissions Under Strict Scrutiny?

1
The United States Court Of Appeals
2
A State Supreme Court
3
The United States Supreme Court
4
A Federal District Court

The Supreme Court is the highest federal court and has final authority on constitutional interpretation.
1
The Bill Of Rights
2
The Federalist Papers
3
The Articles Of Confederation
4
The Magna Carta

The Bill of Rights is the collective name for the first ten amendments protecting individual liberties from government action.
1
The Emancipation Proclamation
2
The United States Constitution
3
The Charter Of Rights
4
The Declaration Of Independence

The United States Constitution establishes the structure of government and divides powers between branches and levels.
1
Brown v. Board Of Education
2
Plessy v. Ferguson
3
Dred Scott v. Sandford
4
Roe v. Wade

Brown v. Board of Education held that segregated public schools violated equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment.
1
Property Ownership Rights
2
Miranda Rights
3
Dual Citizenship Rights
4
Taxpayer Bill Of Rights

Miranda rights include the right to remain silent and the right to an attorney during questioning by police.
1
The President
2
The Supreme Court
3
State Governors
4
Congress

Congress consisting of the House and Senate is the federal legislative branch responsible for making national laws.
1
The Plaintiff
2
The Bailiff
3
The Defendant
4
The Juror

The plaintiff is the party who brings a civil case to court claiming harm and seeking a legal remedy.
1
The Judge
2
The Prosecutor
3
The Defendant
4
The Clerk

The defendant is the individual formally charged with a crime and required to appear in criminal court.
1
A Regulation
2
A Statute
3
A Treaty
4
An Ordinance

A statute is a written law enacted by a legislative body such as Congress or a state legislature.
1
A Lawyer
2
An Investigator
3
An Arbitrator
4
An Accountant

A lawyer is a trained and licensed professional who advises clients and advocates for them in legal matters.
1
Probable Cause
2
Preponderance Of The Evidence
3
Clear And Convincing Evidence
4
Beyond A Reasonable Doubt

Beyond a reasonable doubt is the highest standard requiring jurors to be firmly convinced of the defendant guilt.
1
A Contract
2
A Lease
3
An Indictment
4
A Will

A will is a written document directing how a person property and assets are distributed upon death.
1
Offer And Acceptance
2
Government Approval
3
Physical Possession
4
Personal Friendship

Offer and acceptance are core elements showing mutual agreement between parties forming the basis of a valid contract.
1
A Trustee
2
A Minor
3
An Adult
4
An Agent

A minor is someone below the legal age of majority and often has limited legal capacity.
1
The Court Clerk
2
The Prosecutor
3
The Bailiff
4
The Defendant Lawyer

The prosecutor is the government attorney responsible for bringing criminal charges and presenting evidence against the accused.
1
A Panel Of Judges
2
A Committee
3
A Jury
4
A Mediation Team

A jury is a group of citizens sworn to hear evidence and decide facts in a legal case.
1
A Summons
2
A Verdict
3
A Motion
4
An Appeal

A verdict is the formal decision of a jury deciding whether the defendant is liable or guilty.
1
A Bailiff
2
A Witness
3
A Juror
4
A Mediator

A witness is someone who gives testimony under oath about facts they observed or know.
1
Fine
2
Bail
3
Rent
4
Tuition

Bail is money or property pledged to guarantee that a defendant returns for scheduled court appearances.
1
A Settlement Conference
2
A Class Action
3
A Plea Bargain
4
A Civil Complaint

A plea bargain is a negotiated agreement where the defendant pleads guilty in exchange for reduced charges or penalties.
1
Unemployment
2
Double Jeopardy
3
Self Incrimination
4
Deportation

The privilege against self incrimination allows people to refuse answers that could help prove their own guilt.
1
The Tenth Amendment
2
The Second Amendment
3
The Fifth Amendment
4
The First Amendment

The First Amendment protects freedoms of speech religion press assembly and petition against government interference.
1
Mutual Rescission
2
Specific Performance
3
Breach Of Contract
4
Estoppel

Breach of contract occurs when a party does not do what they legally promised under the agreement.
1
Embezzlement
2
Robbery
3
Negligence
4
Perjury

Negligence is careless conduct falling below reasonable standards that results in injury or damage to another person.
1
Affidavit
2
Indictment
3
Precedent
4
Subpoena

A precedent is a previous decision that courts look to when deciding similar legal questions later.
1
Obergefell v. Hodges
2
Buck v. Bell
3
Roe v. Wade
4
Kelo v. City Of New London

Roe v. Wade held that the right to privacy included a woman decision to have an abortion.
1
A Contract
2
A License
3
A Search Warrant
4
A Deed

A search warrant permits law enforcement to search a specific place for evidence based on probable cause.
1
Criminal Law Punishes Offenses Against Society Civil Law Resolves Disputes Between Individuals
2
Civil Law Punishes Crimes Criminal Law Handles Contracts
3
Neither Involves Government Participation
4
Both Deal Only With Property Issues

Criminal law addresses offenses against society with possible jail while civil law handles private disputes seeking money or specific remedies.
1
Texas v. Johnson
2
Brown v. Board Of Education
3
Plessy v. Ferguson
4
Miranda v. Arizona

Plessy v. Ferguson approved state segregation laws under separate but equal later rejected by later civil rights decisions.
1
Mere Suspicion
2
Absolute Certainty
3
Probable Cause
4
Random Guess

Probable cause exists when facts would lead a reasonable person to believe a crime was committed by the suspect.
1
The Defense
2
The Prosecution
3
The Clerk
4
The Jury

The prosecution represents the government in criminal cases and attempts to prove the defendant guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
1
Gibbons v. Ogden
2
Marbury v. Madison
3
Roe v. Wade
4
McCulloch v. Maryland

Marbury v. Madison affirmed that the Supreme Court can strike down laws that conflict with the Constitution.
1
Miranda v. Arizona
2
Brown v. Board Of Education
3
Katz v. United States
4
Gideon v. Wainwright

Gideon v. Wainwright held that states must provide attorneys to indigent defendants in felony cases.
1
Federal Bankruptcy Court
2
The United States Supreme Court
3
Local Traffic Court
4
State Small Claims Court

Most bankruptcy cases are heard in specialized federal bankruptcy courts applying federal bankruptcy law.
1
Baker v. Carr
2
Planned Parenthood v. Casey
3
Obergefell v. Hodges
4
Bowers v. Hardwick

Obergefell v. Hodges ruled that same sex couples have a fundamental right to marry under the Constitution.
1
The Thirteenth Amendment
2
The First Amendment
3
The Ninth Amendment
4
The Fourth Amendment

The Fourth Amendment protects people against unreasonable government searches and requires warrants supported by probable cause.
1
A Tort
2
A Verdict
3
A Lien
4
A Statute

A tort is a civil wrong such as negligence that allows the injured person to seek damages.
1
The Seventh Amendment
2
The Third Amendment
3
The Eighteenth Amendment
4
The Fifth Amendment

The Fifth Amendment includes the double jeopardy protection preventing multiple prosecutions for the same offense by the same government.
1
Korematsu v. United States
2
New Jersey v. TLO
3
Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier
4
Tinker v. Des Moines

Tinker v. Des Moines held that students do not shed free speech rights at the schoolhouse gate.
1
Texas v. Johnson
2
Schenck v. United States
3
New York Times v. United States
4
Brandenburg v. Ohio

New York Times v. United States ruled that government could rarely stop publication before printing even with national security claims.
1
New York Times v. Sullivan
2
Reno v. ACLU
3
Miller v. California
4
Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire

New York Times v. Sullivan required public officials to prove actual malice to win defamation lawsuits over criticism.
1
Plessy v. Ferguson
2
Dred Scott v. Sandford
3
Lochner v. New York
4
Korematsu v. United States

Dred Scott v. Sandford held that enslaved people and their descendants could not be citizens under the Constitution.
1
Mapp v. Ohio
2
Miranda v. Arizona
3
Riley v. California
4
Berghuis v. Thompkins

Mapp v. Ohio decided that evidence obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment must be excluded in state courts.
1
Hamdi v. Rumsfeld
2
Youngstown Sheet And Tube v. Sawyer
3
Ex parte Milligan
4
Korematsu v. United States

Korematsu v. United States approved wartime internment though later widely condemned as a grave civil liberties violation.
1
Buck v. Bell
2
Bowers v. Hardwick
3
Lawrence v. Texas
4
Loving v. Virginia

Loving v. Virginia ruled that bans on interracial marriage violated equal protection and due process rights.
1
Bethel v. Fraser
2
Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier
3
Morse v. Frederick
4
Tinker v. Des Moines

Tinker v. Des Moines confirmed student rights to express peaceful political views absent substantial disruption of school operations.
1
A Verdict
2
A Complaint
3
An Indictment
4
A Sentencing Order

A complaint is the initial pleading where a plaintiff states claims and requests relief from the court.
1
An Indictment
2
A Deed
3
A Motion
4
A Subpoena

An indictment is a formal criminal charge issued by a grand jury accusing a person of serious offenses.
1
Preemption
2
Jurisdiction
3
Consideration
4
Immunity

Jurisdiction is the legal power of a court to hear and decide particular kinds of cases.
1
Arraignment
2
Voir Dire
3
Discovery
4
Probation

Voir dire is the questioning of potential jurors to ensure they can be fair and impartial in the case.
1
Parole
2
Indemnity
3
Default Judgment
4
Acquittal

Parole allows a prisoner supervised release before a sentence ends subject to compliance with specific conditions.
1
Absolute Immunity
2
Strict Liability
3
Duty Of Reasonable Care
4
Assumption Of Risk

Duty of reasonable care requires people to act as a prudent person would under similar circumstances.
1
An Injunction
2
An Answer
3
A Verdict
4
A Treaty

An answer is the defendant pleading that responds to allegations and may raise defenses.
1
An Appeal
2
A Waiver
3
An Injunction
4
A Contract

An injunction is an order directing a party to act or refrain from acting to prevent harm.
1
Escobedo v. Illinois
2
Miranda v. Arizona
3
Berghuis v. Thompkins
4
Salinas v. Texas

Miranda v. Arizona required police to give warnings so suspects understand rights during custodial interrogation.
1
Arbitration
2
Discovery
3
Booking
4
Sentencing

Discovery is the pretrial phase where parties request and exchange information documents and witness testimony.
1
A Bailiff
2
A Respondent
3
A Marshal
4
A Mediator

A mediator facilitates communication between disputing parties to help them reach a mutually acceptable solution.
1
Judicial Review
2
Sovereign Immunity
3
Standing
4
Due Process

Due process requires fair procedures and notice before government deprives individuals of important interests.
1
A Class Action
2
A Habeas Petition
3
A Default Appeal
4
A Bench Trial

A class action allows many people with similar claims to be represented together in one lawsuit.
1
An Arbitration Hearing
2
A Grand Jury Trial
3
A Mediation Session
4
A Bench Trial

A bench trial is decided solely by a judge who serves as both fact finder and law interpreter.
1
A Per Curiam Order
2
A Majority Opinion
3
A Dissenting Opinion
4
A Concurring Opinion

A dissenting opinion explains why one or more judges disagree with the court majority reasoning and result.
1
United States v. Jones
2
Katz v. United States
3
Olmstead v. United States
4
Carpenter v. United States

Katz v. United States held that the Fourth Amendment protects reasonable expectations of privacy including phone conversations.
1
An Indictment
2
A Deed
3
A Subpoena
4
A Summons

A deed is a written instrument that transfers legal ownership of real estate from one person to another.
1
The Beneficiary
2
The Testator
3
The Executor
4
The Trustee

The testator is the person who creates and signs a will directing distribution of property after death.
1
A Beneficiary
2
A Defendant
3
A Bailor
4
An Arbitrator

A beneficiary is someone designated in a will or trust to receive assets or benefits.
1
Indictment
2
Probation
3
Ownership
4
Custody

Ownership is the bundle of legal rights allowing someone to possess use and transfer property.
1
Family Law
2
Contract And Commercial Law
3
Criminal Law
4
Constitutional Law

Contract and commercial law governs agreements and transactions involving the sale of goods and services.
1
A Tort
2
An Easement
3
A Trust
4
A Lease

A trust involves a trustee holding property for beneficiaries according to terms set by the trust creator.
1
United States v. Lopez
2
Gibbons v. Ogden
3
United States v. Morrison
4
Printz v. United States

Gibbons v. Ogden interpreted the Commerce Clause to give Congress significant authority over interstate economic activity.
1
Marbury v. Madison
2
Heart Of Atlanta Motel v. United States
3
Brown v. Board Of Education
4
McCulloch v. Maryland

McCulloch v. Maryland confirmed that Congress has implied powers beyond those listed and states cannot tax federal institutions.
1
Heart Of Atlanta Motel v. United States
2
Sweatt v. Painter
3
Civil Rights Cases
4
Shelley v. Kraemer

Heart of Atlanta Motel v. United States approved using commerce power to enforce civil rights laws against discrimination.
1
Judicial Review
2
Judicial Immunity
3
Judicial Restraint
4
Judicial Notice

Judicial review is the authority of courts to invalidate laws or actions that violate the Constitution.
1
Strict Scrutiny
2
Res Judicata
3
Criminal Procedure
4
Conflict Of Laws

Conflict of laws principles determine which place law governs disputes involving multiple states or countries.
1
Mens Rea
2
Habeas Corpus
3
Res Judicata
4
Stare Decisis

Res judicata prevents parties from relitigating claims that were already finally decided on the merits.
1
Prima Facie
2
Habeas Corpus
3
Mens Rea
4
Stare Decisis

Stare decisis means to stand by things decided and encourages courts to follow established precedents.
1
Quid Pro Quo
2
Res Ipsa Loquitur
3
Corpus Delicti
4
Mens Rea

Mens rea refers to the guilty mind or intent element that accompanies wrongful actions in many crimes.
1
Parens Patriae
2
Respondeat Superior
3
Strict Scrutiny
4
Res Ipsa Loquitur

Respondeat superior makes employers responsible for employees torts committed while performing job duties.
1
Lee v. Weisman
2
Santa Fe Independent School District v. Doe
3
Lemon v. Kurtzman
4
Engel v. Vitale

Engel v. Vitale struck down state sponsored prayer in public schools as violating separation of church and state.
1
Lemon v. Kurtzman
2
Marsh v. Chambers
3
Lynch v. Donnelly
4
Van Orden v. Perry

Lemon v. Kurtzman created a test asking whether government actions have secular purpose effect and excessive entanglement with religion.
1
Texas v. Johnson
2
United States v. OBrien
3
Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire
4
Schenck v. United States

Texas v. Johnson ruled that flag burning as political expression is protected speech under the First Amendment.
1
District Of Columbia v. Heller
2
United States v. Miller
3
McDonald v. Chicago
4
Caetano v. Massachusetts

District of Columbia v. Heller held that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to possess firearms for self defense.
1
United States v. Lopez
2
Printz v. United States
3
McDonald v. Chicago
4
United States v. Morrison

McDonald v. Chicago ruled that the individual right to keep and bear arms applies to state and local governments.
1
Lochner v. New York
2
Griswold v. Connecticut
3
Lawrence v. Texas
4
Bowers v. Hardwick

Lawrence v. Texas held that adults have a liberty interest protecting private consensual intimate conduct.
1
Griswold v. Connecticut
2
Planned Parenthood v. Casey
3
Eisenstadt v. Baird
4
Roe v. Wade

Griswold v. Connecticut found that marital privacy protects access to contraceptive information and devices.
1
The Plain View Rule
2
The Reasonable Person Standard
3
The Strict Scrutiny Test
4
The Fruit Of The Poisonous Tree Doctrine

The fruit of the poisonous tree doctrine excludes evidence obtained directly from prior unconstitutional police conduct.
1
A Mediation
2
A Deposition
3
An Arbitration
4
An Appeal

An appeal asks a higher court to review and possibly change a lower court decision.
1
A Deed
2
An Invoice
3
A Brief
4
A Warrant

A brief is a written document explaining legal arguments and authorities to persuade an appellate court.
1
Regents v. Bakke
2
Brown v. Board Of Education
3
Plessy v. Ferguson
4
Sweatt v. Painter

Brown v. Board of Education held that segregated schools are inherently unequal violating equal protection.
1
Estoppel
2
Adverse Possession
3
Specific Performance
4
Eminent Domain

Eminent domain allows government to take private property for public use while paying just compensation.
1
Life Estate
2
Joint Tenancy
3
Adverse Possession
4
Leasehold Estate

Adverse possession permits a possessor to acquire title after open continuous and hostile use for a statutory period.
1
Joint Tenancy
2
Periodic Tenancy
3
Tenancy In Common
4
Tenancy At Will

Joint tenancy includes right of survivorship meaning surviving owners automatically receive a deceased owner share.
1
Regents Of The University Of California v. Bakke
2
Parents Involved v. Seattle
3
Adarand Constructors v. Pena
4
Grutter v. Bollinger

Regents v. Bakke allowed race as one factor in admissions while rejecting rigid racial quotas.
1
Parents Involved v. Seattle
2
Romer v. Evans
3
Grutter v. Bollinger
4
Gratz v. Bollinger

Grutter v. Bollinger approved narrowly tailored use of race to achieve educational diversity in a law school admissions program.
1 / 93
Players who played this quiz:
+
Faster than you:
Wow! You're faster than % of players
Smarter than you:
Amazing! You're smarter than % of players
Think you’ve got what it takes to hang in a law school classroom? From basic legal concepts to tricky scenarios, this quiz will test your inner attorney. Grab your virtual casebook and see if you could actually pass law school!

About us

At ChineseTools, we offer an engaging and interactive way to challenge your knowledge across pop culture, entertainment, history, sports, and more. Our trivia quizzes are crafted to entertain and educate, providing a fun learning experience that's accessible from anywhere. With a diverse selection of topics, you're bound to discover something that sparks your interest.
ChineseTools
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • About
  • Terms of use
  • Contact us
  • CCPA Notice
  • Don't sell my personal information
Copyright © 2026 VerticalScope
Join Our
Newsletter
Start your day with ChineseTools