A
plaintiff (
Π in
legal
shorthand), also known as a
claimant or
complainant, is the party who initiates a
lawsuit (also known as an
action) before a
court. By doing so, the plaintiff seeks a
legal remedy, and if successful, the
court will issue
judgment in favor of
the plaintiff and make the appropriate
court
order (e.g., an order for
damages).
In some
jurisdictions the commencement
of a lawsuit is done by filing a
summons,
claim form and/or a
complaint — these
documents are known as
pleadings — that set
forth the alleged wrongs committed by the
defendant or defendants with a demand for relief.
In other jurisdictions the action is commenced by service of
legal process by delivery of these
documents on the defendant by a process server; they are only filed
with the court subsequently with an
affidavit from the process server that they had
been given to the defendant(s) according to the rules of
civil procedure.
Not all lawsuits are
plenary actions,
involving a full
trial on the merits of the
case. There are also simplified procedures, often called
proceedings, in which the parties are termed
petitioner instead of plaintiff, and
respondent instead of defendant. There are also
cases that do not technically involve two sides, such as petitions
for specific statutory relief that require judicial approval; in
those cases there are no respondents, just a petitioner.
A plaintiff identified by name in a
class
action is called a
named
plaintiff.
The party to whom the complaint is against is the
defendant; or in the case of a petition, a
respondent. Case names are usually given with the plaintiff first,
as in
Plaintiff v. Defendant.
"Complainant" may also denote the complaining witness in a criminal
proceeding.
United Kingdom
In
England and Wales, the
term Claimant has replaced Plaintiff after the
Civil Procedure Rules 1998 came
into force in
26 April 1999.
[4061] In
Scottish law, a
plaintiff is referred to as a
pursuer and a
defendant as a defender.
Elsewhere
In
Hong
Kong
and the United States
, a plaintiff is still referred to as a
plaintiff. Americans traditionally limit the application of
terms such as "claimant" and "claim form" to extrajudicial process
in
insurance and
administrative law. After exhausting
remedies available through an
insurer or
government agency, an American
claimant in need of further relief would turn to the courts, file a
complaint (thus establishing a real court case under judicial
supervision), and become a plaintiff.
Etymology
The word
plaintiff can be traced to the 1278 and stems
from the Anglo-French word
pleintif meaning 'complaining'
from pleint. It was identical with
plaintive at first and it is this form that
receded into legal usage with the -iff spelling in the 1400s.
References