Title: The%20Judicial%20Branch
1The Judicial Branch
2(No Transcript)
3The Judicial Branch
At 375 words, Article III provides the shortest
description of any of the three branches of
government. It reads, in part The judicial
Power of the United States, shall be vested in
one supreme Court, and in such inferior Courts as
the Congress may from time to time ordain and
establish. The Judges, both of the supreme and
inferior Courts, shall hold their Offices during
good Behaviour, and shall, at stated Times,
receive for their Services, a Compensation, which
shall not be diminished during their Continuance
in Office. The Courts most important powerthat
of judicial reviewis never explicitly mentioned
in the Constitution.
4The Power of Judicial Review
If this power is not found in the Constitution,
where does it come from? There are two early
sources
- Alexander Hamiltons essay, Federalist 78, makes
it clear that the framers intended the Courts to
have the power of judicial review. He writes
that the interpretation of the laws is the
proper and peculiar province of the courts. - Hamilton also calls the judiciary the least
dangerous branch - Marbury v. Madison (1803), which asserted
(created) and solidified that power. - Between 1803 and 2009, 162 acts of Congress have
been held unconstitutional in whole or in part
5This is the very essence of judicial duty
It is emphatically the duty of the Judicial
Department to say what the law is, wrote Chief
Justice John Marshall in Marbury v. Madison
(1803).
John Marshall
Notice he does not say sole or exclusive duty
6Authoritativeness of Supreme Court
- Three theories
- Judiciary final word
- No final interpreter each branch considers
constitutionality on its own - Each branch definitive in its sphere
7S.Ct. concludes it is the final arbiter
- Cooper v. Aaron (1958)
- States cannot nullify decisions of the federal
courts. - Several government officials in southern states,
including the governor and legislature of
Alabama, refused to follow the Supreme Court's
Brown v. Board of Education decision. They argued
that the states could nullify federal court
decisions if they felt that the federal courts
were violating the Constitution. The Court
unanimously rejected this argument - City of Boerne v. Flores (1997)
- When the Court has interpreted the Constitution,
it has acted within the province of the Judicial
Branch, which embraces the duty to say what the
law is. Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch, at 177.
When the political branches of the Government act
against the background of a judicial
interpretation of the Constitution already
issued, it must be understood that in later cases
and controversies the Court will treat its
precedents with the respect due them under
settled principles, including stare decisis, and
contrary expectations must be disappointed.
8Article III CourtsConstitutional Courts
- Supreme Court - One court with national
jurisdiction - Courts of Appeals 12 geographic-based and one
for the Federal Circuit (generally patent cases) - District Courts - 94 in 50 states, District of
Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam,
and the Northern Mariana Islands. - Court of International Trade.
- United States Court of Federal Claims
- Article III Judges serve during good behavior and
salaries may not be reduced while in office
9Circuit Courts of Appeal
10Clarence Thomas (G.H.W. Bush 1991)
Antonin Scalia (Reagan 1986)
Anthony Kennedy (Reagan 1988)
Ruth Bader Ginsburg (Clinton 1993)
John Roberts (G.W. Bush 2005)
Stephen Breyer (Clinton 1994)
Sonia Sotomayor (Obama 2009)
Samuel Alito (G.W. Bush 2006)
Elena Kagen Obama 2010)
11Special Federal Courts Created by Congress
- Magistrate judges These judges handle certain
criminal and civil matters, often with the
consent of the parties. - Bankruptcy courts These courts handle cases
arising under the Bankruptcy Code. - U.S. Court of Military Appeals This court is the
final appellate court for cases arising under the
Uniform Code of Military Justice. - U.S. Tax Court This court handles cases arising
over alleged tax deficiencies. - U.S. Court of Veterans' Appeals This court
handles certain cases arising from the denial of
veterans' benefits.
122011 Federal Judicial Pay
- Chief Justice, Supreme Court 223,500
- Associate Justice Supreme Court 213,900
- Circuit Court Judge 175,300
- District Court Judge 174,000
U.S. Senator U.S. Representative 174,000
13Supreme Court Workload
- Most cases come to the Supreme Court on Petitions
for Writs of Certiorari (from the Latin "to be
informed") - Judiciary Act of 1925 (also known as the Judges
Bill) made the overwhelming bulk of Supreme Court
caseload discretionary - To be accepted, a Cert petition needs only 4
Justices to vote yes (The Rule of Four)
14Certiorari
- "Whether or not to vote to grant certiorari
strikes me as a rather subjective decision, made
up in part of intuition and in part of legal
judgment. One factor that plays a large part with
every member of the Court is whether the case
sought to be reviewed has been decided
differently from a very similar case coming from
another lower court If it has, its chances for
being reviewed are much greater than if it
hasn't." - Chief Justice Rehnquist
15Supreme Court Workload
- Term runs from first Monday in October to June of
following year - During the 2010 Term, 86 cases were argued and 83
were disposed of in 77 signed opinions (slightly
up from the previous term) - That out of a total 7,857 filings (most of which
were in forma pauperis petitions (6,299)) - Paid filing actually decreased by 1.5
2011 Year-End Report on the Federal Judiciary
16Process in Supreme Court
- Briefs
- Parties petitioner and respondent
- amicus curiae (friend of the court)
- Solicitor General (argues cases on behalf of the
U.S.) - Oral arguments
- Initial vote on the merits and opinion assignment
- Opinion drafted and circulated
- dissenting or concurring opinions
17Getting into Federal Court
- Federal Courts are courts of limited
jurisdiction - That is, there are only certain cases the courts
may decide AND there are cases that the courts
technically may decide, but determine not to. - Federal courts can hear cases and controversies
arising under the Constitution, the laws of the
United States, and treaties (federal-question
cases) and cases between citizens of different
states (diversity cases). - Original jurisdiction vs. Appellate jurisdiction
18Justiciability Issues Textual (found in the
text of Constitution)
- Case or controversy requirement
- Judges decide only real cases---No advisory
opinions - Standing guidelines
- Personal harm must be demonstrated
- Sierra Club v. Morton (1972) relaxed
standardenjoyment of the environment - Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife (1992) shift in
analysis with shift in court more required than
the Sierra Club standard. - a litigant must show that it has suffered a
concrete and particularized injury that is either
actual or imminent, that the injury is fairly
traceable to the defendant, and that a favorable
decision will likely redress that injury. - Most recent Hein v. Freedom from Religion
Foundation (2007) (taxpayer may not challenge
under Establishment Clause expenditures by the
Executive from general funds allocated to
Executive branch by Congress - Arizona Christian School Tuition Organization V.
Winn (2011) (taxpayer cannot challenge under
Establishment Clause program of tax credits for
religious purposes rather than expenditures
19Justiciability Issues Textual
- Mootness will not decide cases when the
question will have no impact on the parties - Exception where nature of the issue is such
that judicial review will likely never occur if
standard mootness rules applied e.g. Roe v.
Wade - Adequate and Independent State-law basis for the
decision
20Justiciability Issues Prudential
- Political Question Doctrine
- Where the issue before the court has been
textually committed to another branch of
government - Powell v. McCormick (1969)refusal to seat a
congressman because he acted unethically is not
textually committed to Congress under Article I - Nixon v. U.S. (1992) refused to decide the
scope of the power of the Senate to try
impeachment charges (federal judge) - Where there is a lack of judicially manageable
standards to decide the case on the merits - Baker v. Carr apportionment SC battle over
manageable standards - Foreign policy/national security
21Getting into Federal Court
- General Deterrents
- Costs are very high
- But these can be lowered
- In forma pauperis plaintiff heard as pauper,
with costs paid by the government - Payment by interest groups who have something to
gain (American Civil Liberties Union) - Each party must pay its own way the American
Rule - Losing party will pay (fee shifting) only by
statute (such as Section 1983 suits and only
defendants) or by contract (plaintiff or
defendant)
22Constitutional Interpretation
it is a constitution we are expounding. . .
A constitution, intended to endure for the ages
to come, and consequently, to be adapted to the
various crises of human affairs. Marbury v.
Madison
23Originalism
- Original Meaning Constitution to be interpreted
with reference to the meaning of the words in the
world of the founders - "Oh, how I hate the phrase we havea 'living
document. "We now have a Constitution that
means whatever we want it to mean. The
Constitution is not a living organism, for Pete's
sake." - Justice Antonin Scalia
24Pragmatism
- Attempts to solve a current problem by placing
that problem within the organized whole of past
interpretations of the Constitution as they
relate to specific problems - Significant reliance on the doctrine of stare
decisis (let the decision stand) - Lessens significance of the text itself giving
near-constitutional significance to commentary on
the text
25Pragmatism
- A non-originalist who gives substantial weight to
judicial precedent or the consequences of
alternative interpretations, so as to sometimes
favor a decision "wrong" on originalist terms
because it promotes stability or in some other
way promotes the public good.
26Checks on judicial power
- Selecting judges
- Party background has some effect on judicial
behavior but ideology does not determine behavior - Justice Souter
- Senatorial courtesy
- Protocol, recently ignored, that judges to fill a
vacancy in a U.S. District Court should have the
approval of the state's senators - The litmus test
- Concern this may downplay professional
qualifications - Greatest effect on Supreme Court
27Checks on judicial power
- Congress and the courts
- Confirmation and impeachment proceedings alter
the composition of the courts - Only 11 nominees have been rejected by the full
Senate (last in 1987Robert Bork) - Impeachment power most often used against federal
judges
28Checks on judicial power
- Congress and the courts
- Changing the number of judges (1866 reduce number
to 7 so that Pres. Johnson could not make
appointments) - Altering jurisdiction of the courts and
restricting remedies - E.g. Military Commissions Act (MCA) of 2006
- Revising legislation declared unconstitutional
- But see City of Boerne v. Flores
- Constitutional amendment (e.g.11th Amendment,
14th Amendment and 16th Amendment)
29Judicial Policymaking
- Each time a court reaches a judgment on a case
involving a federal question, it makes policy.
This can occur when - Judges interpret prior judicial decisions
(common, or judge-made law) - Judges interpret legislation statutory
construction - Judges interpret the Constitution
30BUSH V. GORECITIZENS UNITED V. FEC
- Public perception of the Supreme Court
31Pending Health Care Law Cases
Should the Supreme Court Justices be subject to
conflict of interest rules?