Title: Chapter 15: The Federal Courts
1Chapter 15 The Federal Courts
2Article III of the Constituition
- Article III of the Constitution vests the
judicial power of the United States in the
United States Supreme Court. - Although the Constitution does not stipulate as
such, there are 9 Supreme Courts justices 8
associate justices and the chief justice.
3The Federal Courts
- The legal system
- Federal courts
- The power of the Supreme Court Judicial review
- Judicial power and politics
4The Legal System
- Within what broad categories of law do cases
arise? - How is the U.S. court system structured?
5Cases and the LawTypes of Law
- Criminal law
- Civil law
- Public law
6Cases and the LawTerms
- Criminal cases
- Government
- Defendant
- Beyond a reasonable doubt
- Civil cases
- Plaintiff
- Defendant
- Preponderance of the evidence
- Precedent or stare decisis
7Types of Courts
- Trial court
- Appellate court
- Supreme court
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9Geographic Boundaries of Federal District Courts
and Circuit Courts of Appeals
10Federal Jurisdiction
- What is the importance of the federal court
system? - What factors play a role in the appointment of
federal judges? - What shapes the flow of cases through the Supreme
Court?
11Federal Jurisdiction
- The lower federal courts
- The appellate courts
- The Supreme Court
- How judges are appointed
- Controlling the flow of cases
12The Lower Federal Courts
- Courts of original jurisdiction
- 272,661 cases in 1996
- Eighty-nine district courts in the fifty states
and one in Puerto Rico - 610 federal district judges
13The Appellate Courts
- Appellate jurisdiction
- 51,524 cases in 1996
- Twelve appellate circuits
- Six to twenty judges per court of appeals
14The Supreme Court
- Original and appellate jurisdiction
- 7,601cases reviewed in the 19971998 term
- One chief justice and eight associate justices
15Supreme Court Justices
16How Judges Are Appointed
- Appointed by the president
- Confirmed by the Senate
- Senatorial courtesy
17Controlling the Flow of Cases
- The solicitor general
- The FBI
- Law clerks
18Federal Courts and Judicial Review
- What is judicial review?
- How does judicial review make the courts a
lawmaking body? - How does a case reach the Supreme Court?
- What factors influence the judicial philosophy of
the Supreme Court?
19The Power of the Supreme CourtJudicial Review
- Judicial review of acts of Congress
- Judicial review of state actions
- Judicial review of lawmaking
- How cases reach the Supreme Court
- Explaining Supreme Court decisions
20Judicial Review of Acts of Congress
- Judicial review is the power to review the
constitutionality of governmental actions. - Marbury v. Madison (1803)
- Federalist 78
21Judicial Review of State Actions
- Supremacy clause provides that the Constitution
is the supreme law of the land. - Supreme Court uses supremacy clause to declare
acts of the states unconstitutional. - Examples
- Brown v. Board of Education (segregation)
- Roe v. Wade (abortion statutes)
- Loving v. Virginia (interracial marriages)
22Judicial Review and Lawmaking
- The power of judicial review is used to define
basic concepts as they apply to laws enacted by
Congress and the president. - The courts become lawmakers.
23How Cases Reach the Supreme Court
- Constitutional jurisdiction
- Standing
- Mootness
- Writ of habeas corpus
- Writ of certiorari
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26The Supreme Courts Procedures
- Briefs
- Oral argument
- Conference
- Opinions and dissent
- Majority opinion
- Concurring opinion
- Dissenting opinion
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28Explaining Supreme Court Decisions
- Judicial activism
- Judicial restraint
- Political ideology
29Judicial Power and Politics
- How has the power of the federal courts been
limited throughout much of American history? - How has this changed over the last fifty years?
- How has this changed the Supreme Courts role in
the political process?
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31Judicial Power and Politics
- Traditional limitations on the federal courts
- Two judicial revolutions
- The judiciary Liberty and democracy
32Traditional Limitations on the Federal Courts
- Standing
- Remedies
- Lack of enforcement powers
- Political appointments
- Congress controls size and jurisdiction
33Two Judicial Revolutions
- Substantive revolution of judicial policy
- Procedural revolution expanding judicial power