Nevada Legal System Glossary: Key Terms and Definitions
The Nevada legal system operates through a structured vocabulary that defines procedural rights, judicial authority, and party relationships. This glossary covers the core terminology used across Nevada's civil, criminal, and administrative proceedings, drawing on the Nevada Revised Statutes (NRS), Nevada Rules of Civil Procedure (NRCP), and Nevada Rules of Criminal Procedure (NRCP Crim.). Precise understanding of these terms matters because misapplication — such as confusing a demurrer with a motion to dismiss, or a judgment with a decree — can affect filing deadlines, appeal rights, and litigation strategy. The Nevada Legal Services Authority home provides the broader framework within which this glossary operates.
Definition and scope
Legal terminology in Nevada derives its operative meaning from statutory text, court rules, and case law interpreted by the Nevada Supreme Court and the Nevada Court of Appeals. The glossary below is organized by functional category rather than alphabetical order, because terms within the same procedural phase interact with one another.
Scope of this page: This reference covers terminology applicable to Nevada state court proceedings governed by the NRS, the NRCP, and the Nevada Rules of Appellate Procedure (NRAP). It does not cover federal court terminology under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP), United States Code provisions, or tribal court terminology. For federal proceedings in Nevada, the U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada operates under separate rules. For tribal jurisdiction, see Nevada Tribal Law and Sovereign Jurisdiction. For the broader regulatory framing that governs Nevada's court system, see the Regulatory Context for Nevada's Legal System.
Parties and standing
- Plaintiff — The party who initiates a civil action by filing a complaint. In criminal matters, the prosecuting party is the State of Nevada, not a private plaintiff.
- Defendant — The party against whom a civil complaint or criminal charge is filed.
- Petitioner / Respondent — In family court, probate, and appellate proceedings, the initiating party is typically called a petitioner and the opposing party the respondent.
- Intervenor — A third party granted permission by the court to join an existing proceeding under NRCP Rule 24.
- Guardian ad litem — A court-appointed representative for a minor or incapacitated person, distinct from legal counsel.
Pleadings and motions
- Complaint — The initial pleading filed by a plaintiff that sets out the factual basis and legal claims of the action (NRCP Rule 8).
- Answer — A defendant's formal written response to a complaint. Under NRCP Rule 12(a), a defendant generally has 21 days after service of the complaint to file an answer.
- Demurrer — Abolished under Nevada's modern rules; its function is now served by a motion to dismiss under NRCP Rule 12(b).
- Motion to Dismiss — A pre-answer motion asserting that the complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted (NRCP Rule 12(b)(5)).
- Summary Judgment — A motion arguing that no genuine dispute of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law (NRCP Rule 56).
- Default Judgment — A judgment entered against a party who has failed to respond or appear. Under NRCP Rule 55, default must be entered by the clerk before a default judgment can be sought from the court.
Jurisdiction and venue
- Subject matter jurisdiction — The court's authority to hear a particular type of case. The Nevada Supreme Court has original jurisdiction over certain matters under Article 6 of the Nevada Constitution.
- Personal jurisdiction — Authority over the parties. Nevada's long-arm statute, codified at NRS 14.065, permits courts to exercise jurisdiction over out-of-state defendants who have minimum contacts with Nevada.
- Venue — The geographic county or district within Nevada where a case is properly filed. Venue rules for civil actions appear primarily in NRS Chapter 13.
- Original jurisdiction vs. appellate jurisdiction — Original jurisdiction means a court hears a case first; appellate jurisdiction means the court reviews a decision already made by a lower tribunal.
How it works
Nevada court terminology functions within a 4-phase procedural architecture:
- Pre-filing phase — Parties identify claims, gather evidence, and determine which court has subject matter jurisdiction. The Nevada State Court Structure page outlines which trial courts handle which case types.
- Pleading phase — Complaints, answers, counterclaims, and cross-claims are exchanged. Deadlines at this phase are governed by the NRCP and, for criminal matters, by the Nevada Rules of Criminal Procedure.
- Discovery phase — Interrogatories, depositions, requests for production, and requests for admission are the primary discovery tools. Under NRCP Rule 26, parties must exchange initial disclosures within 30 days of a defendant's first appearance.
- Adjudication and post-judgment phase — Trial, verdict, judgment, and any post-trial motions. The Nevada Appellate Process governs review after a final judgment.
Criminal terminology distinct from civil
| Term | Civil Context | Criminal Context |
|---|---|---|
| Burden of proof | Preponderance of evidence (more than 50%) | Beyond a reasonable doubt |
| Initiating party | Plaintiff | State of Nevada (prosecutor) |
| Resolution document | Judgment | Verdict / Sentence |
| Pre-trial release | Not applicable in same form | Bail or own recognizance (O.R.) release |
The Nevada Criminal vs. Civil Law Distinctions page expands on these differences in procedural and evidentiary contexts.
Common scenarios
Scenario 1 — Statute of limitations confusion: A claimant files a personal injury complaint 3 years after an accident. Under NRS 11.190(4)(e), the general personal injury limitation period in Nevada is 2 years. The defendant files a motion to dismiss based on the expired limitation period. The term "statute of limitations" describes a mandatory deadline, not a procedural preference; missing it extinguishes the claim.
Scenario 2 — Default judgment in landlord-tenant disputes: A landlord files for eviction (unlawful detainer) under NRS Chapter 40. The tenant fails to file an answer within the statutory general timeframe. The court enters a default, then a default judgment, resulting in a writ of possession issued to the landlord. The Nevada Landlord-Tenant Legal Framework addresses the full eviction terminology chain.
Scenario 3 — Hearsay objections at trial: A witness attempts to testify about a statement made by an absent third party to prove the truth of that statement. Under Nevada Rules of Evidence (NRS Chapter 51), this constitutes hearsay and is presumptively inadmissible unless a recognized exception applies. The Nevada Evidence Rules page covers the 23 codified exceptions relevant to Nevada proceedings.
Scenario 4 — Pro se litigant filing errors: A self-represented litigant in a small claims action uses "petition" and "complaint" interchangeably. In small claims court (jurisdiction capped at $10,000 under NRS 73.010), the initiating document is a claim form, not a formal complaint governed by NRCP pleading standards. See Nevada Small Claims Court for form-specific terminology.
Decision boundaries
Determining which term applies in a given Nevada proceeding depends on 3 threshold questions:
1. Is the matter civil or criminal?
Criminal proceedings are governed by the Nevada Rules of Criminal Procedure and NRS Title 14 (Procedure in Criminal Cases). Civil proceedings fall under the NRCP and NRS Title 1 (Courts and Judicial Officers). The initiating document, the burden of proof, and the available remedies differ completely between the two tracks.
2. Is the court a court of record or a limited jurisdiction court?
Nevada Justice Courts and Municipal Courts are limited jurisdiction courts. They do not maintain a verbatim transcript of proceedings in the same manner as District Courts. Terms like "appeal" function differently: an appeal from a Justice Court to a District Court is a trial de novo (a completely new trial), not a review of the record as in standard appellate proceedings under the NRAP.
3. Does the matter involve an administrative agency?
Proceedings before agencies such as the Nevada Gaming Control Board, the Nevada Labor Commissioner, or the Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation (DETR) use administrative law terminology — "hearing officer," "administrative order," "final agency decision" — rather than standard judicial terms. Judicial review of administrative decisions is governed by NRS Chapter 233B (Nevada Administrative Procedure Act). The Nevada Administrative Law Agencies page covers agency-specific terminology in detail.
For terms specific to estate and inheritance proceedings, the Nevada Probate and Estate Law page addresses terminology such as "testate," "intestate," "letters testamentary," and "personal representative" as defined under NRS Chapters 132–156.
References
- Nevada Revised Statutes (NRS) — Nevada Legislature
- Nevada Rules of Civil Procedure (NRCP) — Nevada Supreme Court
- Nevada Rules of Evidence — Nevada Legislature, NRS Chapter 51
- Nevada Administrative Procedure Act — NRS Chapter 233B
- Nevada Courts — Official Judiciary Website
- [U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada](https://www.nvd.usc