The Federal Court System. Background Information Article III, Section 1 : “The Judicial Power of...

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The Federal Court System

Transcript of The Federal Court System. Background Information Article III, Section 1 : “The Judicial Power of...

Page 1: The Federal Court System. Background Information Article III, Section 1 : “The Judicial Power of the U.S. shall be vested in one Supreme Court and in.

The Federal Court System

Page 2: The Federal Court System. Background Information Article III, Section 1 : “The Judicial Power of the U.S. shall be vested in one Supreme Court and in.

Background Information

• Article III, Section 1 : “The Judicial Power of the U.S. shall be vested in one Supreme Court and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish.”

• This is the only mention in the Constitution of a federal judiciary.

Page 3: The Federal Court System. Background Information Article III, Section 1 : “The Judicial Power of the U.S. shall be vested in one Supreme Court and in.

Background Information

• The Judiciary Act of 1789 – Established a Supreme Court – Chief Justice and five Associate Justices. – Created a structure of lower courts.

Page 4: The Federal Court System. Background Information Article III, Section 1 : “The Judicial Power of the U.S. shall be vested in one Supreme Court and in.

Background Information

• Alexander Hamilton Federalist No. 78– Least dangerous branch– “… could exercise neither force nor will, but

merely judgment.”

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Background Information

• John Marshall

– a Federalist

– Third Chief Justice

– Elevated Court to powerful branch

– Marbury v. Madison – Judicial Review

– McCulloch v. Maryland – Necessary and Proper Clause

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Precedent & Stare Decisis• Precedent

– The practice of deciding cases with reference to former decisions.– This is a cornerstone of our Judicial system.

• Stare Decisis – Latin for “let the decision stand.” It obligates judges to follow the

precedents set previously be their own courts or by higher courts. However, it does not apply across states.

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Types of Federal Courts

U.S. District Courts

U.S. Courts of Appeals

U.S. Supreme Court

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U.S. District Courts

• Trial Courts– Criminal and Civil

• At least one in every state

• Hear more than 275,000 cases annually

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U.S. Courts of Appeal • 13 U.S. Courts of Appeal

– 156 Judges– Three-judge panel/Majority vote.

• Hear appeals from District Courts under their jurisdiction• Another trial is not conducted• Reviews the proceedings/whether the lower court

committed an error. • Does not look at questions of fact but at questions of law• Decisions are usually final

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U.S. Supreme Court• Highest court in the land• Nine justices

– Chief Justice presides – Each Justice has one vote

• Congress can change Court’s size. • Supreme Court nominations have to be approved by the

Senate. • Most of its work is from appeals

– Lower Federal Courts– State Supreme Courts

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The Current Supreme Court• Conservative• Members:

– John Roberts/Chief Justice– 7 appointed by Republican Presidents– 2 appointed by Democratic Presidents– 4 liberal/moderates (Stevens, Souter, Ginsberg, Breyer)– 4 conservatives (Roberts, Scalia, Thomas, Alito)– Kennedy swing vote– One woman– One African American– 5 Catholics, 2 Protestants, 2 Jews

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Basic Judicial Requirements

• Before a case can be brought before either a state or federal court 2 important criteria must be met:– Jurisdiction– Standing to Sue

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Jurisdiction• Jurisdiction is the authority of the court to hear and

decide a case• Federal courts’ jurisdiction are limited to cases

involving:– Federal question – pertains to the U.S.

Constitution, acts of Congress, or treaties– Diversity of citizenship

• Lawsuits between citizens of different states• Lawsuits between U.S. citizens and citizens of

a foreign country.

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Standing to Sue

• Sufficient stake in the outcome of the case. The party bringing a lawsuit must have suffered or been threatened by some harm

• Must be a justiciable controversy.• Must be a real and substantial issue – no

hypothetical questions.• Court does not give advisory opinions.

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Which Cases Reach the Supreme Court• No absolute right of appeal• Justices never explain reasons for hearing cases • Factors that bear on the decision to hear a case:

– A legal question has been decided differently by various lower courts

– Lower court’s decision conflicts with existing Supreme Court ruling

– Issue has significance beyond the parties – Solicitor General is pressuring the Court to hear

case

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The role of the Solicitor General• High-ranking member of Justice Department.• Represents national government in the Supreme

Court • Promotes presidential policies in the federal courts.• Decides which cases government will ask Supreme

Court to review • Decides the positions the government will take. (The

Court will hear 75% of those cases)• Power so great referred to as “Tenth Justice”• Solicitor General is Paul Clement

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Role of Interest Groups• Bring to trial cases involving:

– Racial/gender discrimination– Civil liberties – Business

• File class-action suits• File amicus curiae briefs

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The Supreme Court Process1. Court grants petition for review and issues a writ of certiorari ordering

lower court to send up the record of the case for review.- Court denies 90 percent of petitions- Court only hears case if four justices agrees. Called the Rule of

Four

2. Deciding Cases:- Extensive research on legal issues and facts involved in case. - Do not hear evidence. - Attorneys present oral arguments - Justices ask questions. These are tape recorded.- Justices then meet to discuss and vote on cases. Strictly private

sessions. No records of it.

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The Supreme Court Process3. Decisions and Opinions

- Court writes an opinion explaining the legal reasoning on which ruling is based.

- In many cases decision of the lower court is affirmed.- If a reversible error was committed the decision of the

lower court will be reversed.- Some cases remanded back to lower court for new trial - Opinions are signed by all justices who agree with it.

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The Supreme Court Process3. Decisions and Opinions

- Unanimous opinion - all justices agree on the opinion- When opinion is not unanimous a majority opinion is

written, outlining the view of the majority - Concurring Opinion - a separate opinion written by a

justice who supports the decision but wants to clarify a point or to voice disapproval of the grounds on which the decision was made

- Dissenting Opinion - one or more written opinions written by justices who do not agree with the majority. Important because it forms the basis in later years to establish a new precedent

4. After opinion is written Court announces it from the bench

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Judicial Activismand

Judicial Restraint

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Judicial Activism and Judicial Restraint

• Liberal• Constitution living document

– Meaning not fixed– Many times intention of framers cannot be determined– Language must be adapted to new times and conditions

• Activist judiciary has an essential role in adapting Constitution to new political problems.

• Federal judiciary should take active role in checking activities of President, Congress, state legislatures, and administrative agencies when they exceed their authority.

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Judicial Restraint• Conservative• Judges should apply the Constitution not rewrite it

– Judges must adhere strictly to the intent of the framers

– To do otherwise is to substitute personal views for those specified in Constitution

• Courts should defer to the decisions made of legislative and executives branches because they were elected by the people.

• Judiciary should only be involved if a law clearly violates specific language in the Constitution.