points

Legal TerminologyLegal glossary term

Legal Definition

In a legal context, 'points' refers to specific, distinct items, arguments, or findings within a legal proceeding or document. It denotes a discrete unit of evidence, a specific assertion made during litigation, or a defined measure of success or failure.

Plain-English Translation

Points are like specific pieces of information or arguments that help prove a case in court. They are the distinct facts or legal arguments that form the foundation of a legal claim or defense.

Context in Contracts

Points matter because they are the distinct elements that must be proven to establish a claim, constitute a valid defense, or form the basis for a legal decision in a lawsuit or contractual dispute.

Visual model

Understand points fast

An explainer image has not been generated for this term yet.
01

The plaintiff's initial point regarding the breach of contract.

02

A specific finding that the defendant failed to meet the standard of care.

Document context

How points shows up in legal documents

What is it?

A 'point' in a legal context refers to a specific assertion, finding, argument, or piece of evidence presented during litigation or within a legal document. It represents a discrete unit of legal reasoning or factual basis.

Why does it matter?

Points matter because they are the distinct elements that must be proven to establish a claim, constitute a valid defense, or form the basis for a legal decision in a lawsuit or contractual dispute.

When does it matter?

Points usually appear when analyzing evidence, outlining legal arguments in briefs, detailing the specific causes of action, or enumerating the specific findings made by a court.

Where is it usually seen?

Points are typically seen in pleadings, judicial opinions, legal briefs, contract clauses defining obligations, or regulatory compliance checklists where distinct legal requirements are enumerated.

Who is affected?

The parties involved in litigation (plaintiffs/defendants) and the legal professionals who analyze the evidence and arguments are affected by the concept of points.

How does it work?

Practically, a point is established when a lawyer presents a specific factual assertion or legal theory to support their claim; it dictates the scope of the legal argument being made.

Share

Send this term to someone else fast

Copy the link, open native sharing, or scan the QR code from another device.

QR code for points

Scan to open this glossary page on another device.

Move from term to document

See the real contract language around this term

A glossary definition helps, but actual risk usually lives in the surrounding clause. Upload the full document and BrieflyGo will map plain-English meaning, red flags, and next steps.

Disclaimer: We do not provide legal advice. We translate legal language into plain English and help you prepare for a conversation with a lawyer.