Judicial Branch - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 43
About This Presentation
Title:

Judicial Branch

Description:

Judicial Branch ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:317
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 44
Provided by: mceachern4
Category:
Tags: branch | judicial

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Judicial Branch


1
Judicial Branch
2
Judicial Branch
  • The courts serve as an impartial forum for
    resolution of disputes in both civil and criminal
    cases.

3
Article 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.

4
Article 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.

5
Article 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

6
The 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

7
Judicial 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

8
The 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

9
Jurisdiction
  • 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

10
(No Transcript)
11
The 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)

12
The 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

13
(No Transcript)
14
The 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)

15
(No Transcript)
16
Original 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

17
District 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.

18
The 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

19
The 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

20
The 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.

21
Coverage 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.

22
The 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

23
(No Transcript)
24
How 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

25
Who 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

26
(No Transcript)
27
(No Transcript)
28
Appointments 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

29
The Roberts Court
  • Conservatives
  • Roberts, Kennedy, Thomas, Scalia, Alito
  • Liberals Breyer, Ginsburg, Sotomayor, Kagan

30
Current Supreme Court
31
(No Transcript)
32
(No Transcript)
33
(No Transcript)
34
The 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

35
Cases 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

36
(No Transcript)
37
(No Transcript)
38
Supreme 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.

39
How 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.

40
(No Transcript)
41
Hearing and Deciding a Case
  • Oral Arguments
  • 7 sittings, 2 weeks long
  • Supreme Court Conference
  • Each Friday
  • Vote and write Majority Opinion

42
Written 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

43
Judicial 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)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com