Title: The Judicial Branch
1The Judicial Branch
2The Constitution and the National Judiciary
- Article III of the Constitution establishes
- a Supreme Court in which the judicial power of
the United States is vested - life tenure or 'good behaviour' for judges
- judges receive compensation that cannot be
diminished during their service - such inferior courts as Congress may choose to
establish - the original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court
- The intent of Article III was to remedy the
failings of the Articles of Confederation which
left judicial matters to the states.
3Judicial Review
- Judicial review is the power of a court to decide
if a law or other legal issue disregards the
Constitution, and overturn it. - This power is not mentioned in the Constitution.
- Judicial review was established by the Marshall
Court in Marbury v. Madison (1803). - Marbury's long-term effect has been to allow the
Court to have the final say in what the
Constitution means.
4The American Legal System
- The American legal system is a dual system
- state courts--actually 50 different 'systems'
- federal courts
- Both systems have three tiers
- Trial courts (a.k.a. District Courts) litigation
begins and courts hear the facts of the case at
hand (original jurisdiction) - One judge, witnesses, presentation of evidence,
jury or judge decides the case - Appellate courts (a.k.a. Circuit Courts) decide
questions of law, not fact reviews decisions of
lower courts (appellate jurisdiction) - Several judges (3-9), no witnesses (lawyers
argue), no evidence presented - Court of Final Appeals Supreme Courts
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6What circuit is Michigan in?
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8Who are Federal Judges?
- Typically federal judges have
- held previous political office such as prosecutor
or state court judge - political experience such as running a campaign
- prior judicial experience
- traditionally been mostly white males
- been lawyers
9Federal Selection Process
President
Dept. of Justice
Senators
ABA
Interest Groups
Senate Jud. Comm.
Senate
10The U.S. Supreme Court
- Highest court in the land
- 9 Justices (all but 5 have been white men)
- Thurgood Marshall and Clarence Thomas African
American Sandra Day OConnor, Ruth Bader
Ginsburg Sonya Sotomayor women - Chief Justice John Roberts
- Selects about 100 of the over 7000 cases that are
submitted to it each year chooses cases that
involve signification Constitutional questions
and are important to the entire country
112 Types of Jurisdiction for the Supreme Court
- Original Jurisdiction the Supreme Court hears
the case directly, without the case going through
an intermediate stage. - The Supreme Court has original and exclusive
jurisdiction to hear disputes between different
states -- meaning that no other federal court can
hear such a dispute. - "Original jurisdiction" cases are rare, with the
Court hearing one or two cases each term - Appellate Jurisdiction - A party seeking to
appeal a decision of a circuit court can file a
petition to the Supreme Court for a writ of
certiorari. - "Certiorari" is a Latin word meaning "to inform",
in the sense that the petition informs the Court
of the request for review. - The Supreme Court gets thousands of petitions for
certiorari, but only issues a writ in a fraction
of cases. The Court will only issue a writ if
four of the nine Justices vote to do so.
12Supreme Court Decisions
- Majority vote required to determine outcome of
case - Write opinions
- Majority opinion states courts decision
- Dissenting opinion states reasons why judge(s)
disagreed with majority opinion - Concurring opinion states reasons why a judge
agrees with the decision but for a different
reason - Courts do not have the power to implement their
decisions. The executive branch must enforce the
Courts decisions.
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14How Supreme Court Decisions are Made
Case on the Docket Approx 95
Briefs and Amicus Briefs submitted
Oral Argument
Justices Conference Cases discussed Votes
taken Opinion Assigned
Opinions Announced
Opinions Drafted and Circulated
15How the Justices Vote
- Legal Factors
- Judicial Philosophy
- Judicial Restraint - advocates minimalist roles
for judges - Judicial Activism - feels that judges should use
the law to promote justice, equality, and
personal liberty. - Precedent
- Prior judicial decisions serve as a rule for
settling later cases of a similar nature. - Precedents can change over time
- Ex. Plessy vs. Ferguson and Brown vs. Board of
Education
Plessy vs. Ferguson
Brown vs. Bd. of Ed.
16How the Justices Vote
- Extra-Legal Factors
- Behavioral Characteristics
- The personal experiences of the justices affect
how they vote. Early poverty, job experience,
friends and relatives all affect how decisions
are made. - Ideology
- Ideological beliefs influence justices' voting
patterns. - The Attitudinal Model
- A justice's attitudes affect voting behavior.
- Public Opinion
- Justices watch TV, read newspapers, and go to the
store like everyone else. They are not insulated
from public opinion and are probably swayed by it
some of the time.
17Important Civil and Criminal Law Terminology
- Criminal Law Laws that regulate public conduct
and set out duties owed to society - Criminal Case Court determines whether person
accused of breaking law is guilty or innocent - Prosecution (government) vs. defendant
- Standard of Proof Guilt beyond a reasonable
doubt (must not have any doubt that defendant
committed crime)
18- Civil Law Laws that regulate relationship
between individuals/groups of individuals - Civil Case Court settles a disagreement over
issues such as contracts, divorce, accidents - Plaintiff (individual bringing complaint) vs.
defendant - Standard of Proof Preponderance of evidence
(more likely than not the plaintiffs version of
case is true)
19Which type of case has a higher standard of
proof?Why?