Title: Judicial Branch
1Judicial Branch
2Judicial Branch
- The courts serve as an impartial forum for
resolution of disputes in both civil and criminal
cases.
3Article III
- Section I gave Congress the authority to
establish other courts as it saw fit. - Section II specifies the judicial power of the
Supreme Court and discusses the Courts original
and appellate jurisdiction. - Also specifies that all federal crimes, except
those involving impeachment, shall be tried by
jury in the state in which the crime was
committed - Section III defines treason and mandates that at
least two witnesses appear in such cases.
4Article III
- Framers gave federal judges tenure for life with
good behavior - Did not want judges to be subject to the whims of
politics, the public, or politicians - Hamilton argued in Federalist 78 that the
independence of judges was needed to guard the
Constitution and the rights of individuals.
5Article III
- Some checks on judiciary include
- Congress has the authority to alter the Courts
jurisdiction. - Congress can propose constitutional amendments
that, if ratified, can effectively reverse
judicial decisions. - Congress can impeach and remove federal judges.
- President (with advise and consent of Senate)
appoints federal judges
6The Judiciary Act of 1789 and the Creation of the
Federal Judicial System
- Established the basic three-tiered structure of
the federal court system - District courts at least one in each state, each
staffed by a federal judge - Circuit Court avenue for appeal
- Each circuit court initially composed of one
district court judge and two itinerant Supreme
Court Justices who met as a circuit court twice a
year - Supreme Court size set in the Act chief justice
and five associates - Number of justices set to 9 in 1869
7Judicial Review
- Allows the judiciary to review the
constitutionality of acts of the other branches
of government and the states - Settled under Marbury v. Madison (1803) for
national governments acts - Settled under Martin v. Hunters Lessee (1816)
for state laws
8The American Legal System
- Trial courts
- Courts of original jurisdiction where a case
begins - Appellate courts
- Courts that generally review only findings of law
made by lower courts
9Jurisdiction
- Authority vested in a particular court to hear
and decide the issues in any particular case - Original jurisdiction The jurisdiction of courts
that hears a case first, usually in a trial - Appellate jurisdiction The power vested in an
appellate court to review and/or revise the
decision of a lower court
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11The American Legal System
- Criminal law
- Codes of behavior related to the protection of
property and individual safety
- Civil law
- Codes of behavior related to business and
contractual relationships between groups and
individuals (typically disputes over money or
property)
12The Federal Court System
- Constitutional courts
- Federal courts specifically created by the U.S.
Constitution or Congress pursuant to its
authority in Article III - Legislative courts
- Courts established by Congress for specialized
purposes, such as the Court of Military Appeals
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14The Federal Court System
- District Courts
- 94 federal district courts staffed by 646 active
judges, assisted by more than 300 retired judges - No district courts cross state lines
- Every state has at least one federal district
court - The most populous states have four. (CA, TX, and
NY)
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16Original Jurisdiction of Federal District Courts
- Involve the federal government as a party
- Present a federal question based on a claim under
the U.S. Constitution, a treaty with another
nation, or a federal statute - Involve civil suits in which citizens are from
different states, and the amount of money at
issue is more than 75,000
17District Courts
- Each federal judicial district has a U.S.
attorney. - This individual is nominated by the president and
confirmed by the senate. - The attorney is that districts chief law
enforcement officer. - They have a considerable amount of discretion as
to whether they pursue criminal or civil
investigations or file charges against
individuals or corporations.
18The Courts of Appeals
- The losing party in a case heard and decided in a
federal district court can appeal the decision to
the appropriate court of appeals. - 11 numbered circuit courts
- Twelfth, D.C. Court of Appeals
- Handles most appeals involving federal regulatory
commissions and agencies - Thirteenth, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit - Deals with patents and contract and financial
claims against the federal government
19The Courts of Appeals
- Have no original jurisdiction
- Try to correct errors of law and procedure that
have occurred in the lower courts or
administrative agencies - Hear no new testimony
- Briefs submitted to them containing legal written
arguments in a case
20The Courts of Appeals
- Decisions of the court of appeals are binding on
only the district courts within the geographic
confines of the circuit - Decisions of the Supreme Court are binding
throughout the nation and establish national
precedents - Reliance on past decisions or precedents to
formulate decisions in new cases is called stare
decisis.
21Coverage of the Court of Appeals(as of 2010)
- District of Columbia Circuit, John G. Roberts,
Jr. - First Circuit, Stephen Breyer
- Second Circuit, Ruth Bader Ginsburg
- Third Circuit, Samuel A. Alito, Jr.
- Fourth Circuit, John G. Roberts, Jr.
- Fifth Circuit, Antonin Scalia
- Sixth Circuit, Elena Kagan
- Seventh Circuit, Elena Kagan
- Eighth Circuit, Samuel A. Alito, Jr.
- Ninth Circuit, Anthony M. Kennedy
- Tenth Circuit, Sonia Sotomayor
- Eleventh Circuit, Clarence Thomas
- Federal Circuit, John G. Roberts, Jr.
22The Supreme Court
- Reviews cases from the U.S. courts of appeals and
state supreme courts (as well as other courts of
last resort) - Acts as the final interpreter of the Constitution
- Ensures uniformity in the interpretation of
national laws and the Constitution - Resolves conflicts among the states
- Maintains the supremacy of national law in the
federal system - 8 justices and one chief justice
- Relatively few support staff
- Clerks plus 400 staff members
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24How Federal Court Judges Are Selected
- Often a very political process
- Judges nominated by president and confirmed by
Senate - Can reflect the ideological stamp of the
president - Senatorial Courtesy
- A process by which presidents, when selecting
district court judges, defer to the senator in
whose state the vacancy occurs
25Who Are Federal Judges?
- Typically they have held other political offices.
- State court judge or prosecutor
- Most have been involved in politics
- White males tend to dominate
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28Appointments to the U.S. Supreme Court
- Nomination Criteria
- Competence
- Ideology or Policy Preference
- Strict constructionist an approach to
constitutional interpretation that emphasizes the
Framers original intentions - Rewards
- Pursuit of Political Support
- Religion
- Race, Ethnicity, and Gender
29The Roberts Court
- Conservatives
- Roberts, Kennedy, Thomas, Scalia, Alito
- Liberals Breyer, Ginsburg, Sotomayor, Kagan
30Current Supreme Court
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34The Supreme Court Today Deciding to Hear a Case
- 8,159 cases were filed at the Supreme Court in
its 2009 term. - 82 argued, 73 signed opinions issued
- In the 1940s, fewer than 1000 cases were filed
annually - Today many of the cases involve Bill of Rights
issues
35Cases with Supreme Court Jurisdiction
- All cases arising under the Constitution and laws
or treaties of the United States - All cases of maritime or admiralty jurisdiction
- Cases in which the US is a party
- Controversies between a state and citizens of
another state (later modified by the 11th Amend) - Controversies between two or more states
- Controversies between citizens of different
states - Controversies between citizens of the same states
claiming lands under grants in different states - Controversies between a state, or citizens of a
state, and foreign states or citizens - All cases affecting ambassadors or other public
ministers
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38Supreme Court Today
- Court has two types of jurisdiction Original
Appellate - Writ of certiorari
- A request for the court to order up the records
from a lower court to review the case - Use the Rule of Four
- Court controls its caseload through the
certiorari process. - All petitions for certiorari must meet two
criteria - The case must come either from a U.S. court of
appeals, a special three-judge district court, or
a state court of last resort. - Case must involve a federal question. This means
that the case must present questions of
interpretation of federal constitutional law or
involve a federal statute, action or treaty.
39How Does a Case Survive the Process?
- Characteristics of the cases the Court accepts
- The federal government is the party asking for
review through the Solicitor General - The case involves conflict among circuit courts.
- The case presents a civil rights or civil
liberties question. - The case involves ideological and/or policy
preferences of the justices. - The case has significant social or political
interest, as evidenced by the presence of
interest group amicus curiae briefs.
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41Hearing and Deciding a Case
- Oral Arguments
- 7 sittings, 2 weeks long
- Supreme Court Conference
- Each Friday
- Vote and write Majority Opinion
42Written Decisions of the Court
- Opinion of the Court
- Majority opinion often written by senior member
- Concurring Opinion
- Agreed with Opinion of Court but not the reason
behind the decision - Dissenting Opinion
- Disagreed with Opinion of Court
43Judicial Philosophy
- Judicial restraint
- A philosophy of judicial decision making that
argues courts should allow the decisions of other
branches of government to stand, even when they
offend a judges own sense of principles - Judicial activism
- A philosophy of judicial decision making that
argues judges should use their power broadly to
further justice, especially in the areas of
equality and personal liberty (even if it affects
policy)