Corrections Officer State Certification (SOCE) Practice Exam

Disable ads (and more) with a membership for a one time $2.99 payment

Prepare for the Corrections Officer State Certification (SOCE) Exam. Strengthen your knowledge with detailed questions and informative explanations to help you succeed. Get ready to demonstrate your skills and knowledge!

Each practice test/flash card set has 50 randomly selected questions from a bank of over 500. You'll get a new set of questions each time!

Practice this question and more.


What is an assumption in the context of legal definitions?

  1. A proven fact accepted by the court

  2. A belief accepted as true without verification

  3. A statement made under oath

  4. A conclusion reached after conducting an investigation

The correct answer is: A belief accepted as true without verification

In legal definitions, an assumption refers to a belief that is accepted as true without any requirement for verification. This means that it does not have to be proven or substantiated with evidence at the time it is made. Assumptions can often play a significant role in legal proceedings, where certain premises are accepted for the sake of argument or as a basis for further reasoning. This understanding is foundational in various legal contexts, such as when determining liability or when jurors are instructed to accept certain premises as true to guide their deliberations. In contrast, the other options involve concepts that require some degree of verification or evidence. Proven facts are validated by the court, statements made under oath carry legal weight and are subject to penalties for falsehood, and conclusions reached after investigations rely on factual analysis and evidence collection. All these elements differ fundamentally from the notion of an assumption, which is based on acceptance rather than verification.