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Unit A-Business Law Essential Standard 1.00

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Federal Courts. U. S. Supreme Court. highest court in land. both original and appellate jurisdiction. exercises its appellate jurisdiction over cases from lower courts – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Unit A-Business Law Essential Standard 1.00


1
Unit A-Business LawEssential Standard 1.00
  • Objective 1.02
  • Understand Court Systems
  • and Trial Procedures

2
Federal Courts
  • U. S. Supreme Court
  • highest court in land
  • both original and appellate jurisdiction
  • exercises its appellate jurisdiction over cases
    from lower courts
  • U. S. Court of Appeals
  • appellate jurisdiction over the district courts,
    certain specialized federal courts and many
    Federal agencies.
  • do not accept any new evidence or call
    witnesses.
  • review the trial transcripts, legal briefs and
    oral arguments from attorneys.
  • 13 Federal Courts of Appeal - 12 of these are
    Circuit Courts and each is assigned a
    geographic area of the U. S.
  • thirteenth court is assigned to the federal
    circuit
  • handles appealed patent cases from district
    court
  • handles appeals from courts with special
    jurisdictions.
  • U. S. District Courts
  • lowest level of Federal court with general
    jurisdiction
  • first to hear the dispute in the Federal system
  • power to determine the facts and make initial
    determinations
  • original jurisdiction on Federal cases that fall
    under the Constitution, U. S. Law and U. S.
    treaties and between a U. S. citizen and a
    foreign nation or a foreign citizen.

3
N. C. State Courts
  • N. C. Supreme Court
  • states highest court
  • Chief Justice and six associate justices
  • decide cases appealed from lower courts,
    including from the Court of Appeals.
  • no jury
  • makes no determinations of fact
  • considers only questions of law
  • means resolving a partys claim that there were
    errors in legal procedures or in judicial
    interpretation of the law in the trial court or
    the Court of Appeals.
  • N. C. Court of Appeals
  • intermediate appellate court
  • fifteen judges
  • sit in panels of three to hear cases with one
    Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals appointed
    by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court
  • decides only questions of law

4
N. C. State Courts (continued)
  • N. C. Superior Court
  • trial court divisions
  • to determine the facts of cases
  • general jurisdiction.
  • N. C. District Court
  • hold trials to determine the facts of cases
  • Magistrates Court
  • both civil and criminal matters
  • preside over small claims "court
  • conduct certain preliminary proceedings and
    are authorized to dispose of some criminal
    cases by pleas of guilty or by trial.

5
N. C. State Courts (continued)
  • Civil Court
  • civil jurisdiction of the trial court divisions
    the superior court and district court is
    concurrent
  • Criminal Court
  • criminal jurisdiction
  • depends on the type of offense charged
  • with a few exceptions, the superior court has
    exclusive jurisdiction over all felonies.
  • Juvenile Court
  • exclusive, original jurisdiction over all
    juvenile cases
  • children under the age of sixteen who are
    accused of being delinquent and children
    under the age of eighteen who are
    undisciplined, abused, neglected or
    dependent.
  • all records of juvenile proceedings are
    confidential and not open to the public.

6
Trial Procedures
  • Criminal Cases
  • Arrest
  • a person who has allegedly committed a felony
    offense or a serious misdemeanor offense that
    does not meet the requirements for a person to be
    released on a signature summons.
  • Initial Bail
  • the arrested person is taken before a magistrate
    and based on the charge, circumstances and the
    offenders prior criminal record, the magistrate
    sets an initial bail-bond amount in order for the
    person charged to be released.
  • Arraignment/Initial Hearing
  • the charged person is brought before a judge to
    determine probable cause to have the case heard
    by a grand jury for possible indictment (if a
    felony charge). This arraignment is also used to
    change or set any bail requirements.

7
Trial Procedures (Continued)
  • Criminal Cases (continued)
  • Grand Jury
  • panel of eighteen citizens
  • randomly drawn from the same pool as those
    selected for jury duty for a trial
  • determine if probable cause exists for the case
    to go to trial

8
Civil Cases
  • Complainant (Plaintiff)
  • person or entity bringing or filing the lawsuit.
  • Defendant
  • person or entity against which the lawsuit is
    brought
  • Complaint
  • initial pleading by which a lawsuit is begun
  • Answer
  • response to a civil complaint
  • Summons
  • issued by the Clerk of Court
  • official notice of the lawsuit
  • Pleadings

9
Trial Procedures
  • Steps to a Trial
  • (Criminal and Civil)
  • Jury Selection
  • attorneys for both prosecution (plaintiff if
    civil) are allowed to strike a specific number
    of jurors without justification referred to as
    Voir dire
  • Opening Statement
  • beginning of the trial
  • limited to outlining facts
  • set the basic scene for the jurors
  • introduce them to the core dispute(s) in the
    case
  • provide a general road map of how the trial is
    expected to unfold

10
Steps to a Trial (Criminal and Civil)
  • Testimony
  • declaration by a witness under oath, as that
    given before a court or deliberative body
  • Evidence Presentation
  • Item such as a coroner's report, a weapon in a
    criminal case or photographs in a civil case
    that can help corroborate or refute the testimony
    of other witnesses
  • Closing Arguments
  • opportunity to remind jurors about key evidence
    presented and to persuade them to adopt an
    interpretation favorable to each sides position
  • Jury Instructions
  • given by the trial judge
  • specifically state what the defendant can be
    found guilty of and what the prosecution or
    plaintiff has to prove in order for a guilty
    verdict.

11
Steps to a Trial (Criminal and Civil)
  • Jury Deliberation
  • jury is charged to find the defendant guilty or
    not guilty
  • in criminal case by all 12 members
  • in civil case by the majority of the jurors in
    a civil trial
  • Verdict/Sentence
  • in a criminal trial the jury must make a
    decision beyond a reasonable doubt
  • in a civil trial the jury must make a decision
    by a preponderance of the evidence.
  • in a civil case the verdict is sometimes called
    a judgment.
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