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Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent...

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Chapter 12 The Judiciar y
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Page 1: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Chapter 12 The

Judiciary

Page 2: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Cases and the Law:Types of Law

• Common law - Rule of Precedent

• Constitutional law

• Statutory law

• Administrative law

• Case law

Page 3: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Cases and the Law: Terms

• Criminal cases— Misdemeanor and felony— Government— Defendant— Beyond a reasonable doubt— plea bargains

• Civil cases— Plaintiff— Defendant— Preponderance of the evidence—Settlements

• Precedent or stare decisis

Page 4: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Types of Courts

• Federal courts ( 1% )– Trial (District) court ( 94 )– Appellate (Circuit) court ( 13 )– Specialized Courts (Claims, Tax) (5)– Supreme court ( 1 )

• State courts ( 99% )– Local court ( 1964 )– County court ( 451 )– District court ( 396 )– Court of Appeals ( 13 )– Supreme court ( 2 )

Page 5: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

16-3Geographic Boundaries of Federal District Courts and Circuit Courts of Appeals

Page 6: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Federal Jurisdiction and Status

• Original versus Appellate– Jurisdiction is the authority of a court to

hear a case.

• Diversity of citizenship - participants from different states.

• Standing to sue - sufficient “stake” in the matter

• Justifiable controversy

Page 7: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Litigation Flow

Page 8: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

The Lower Federal Courts

• Courts of original jurisdiction

• Ninety-four district courts

• Over 300,000 cases

• 655 judges

Page 9: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

The Appellate Courts

• Appellate jurisdiction

• 51,000 cases annually

• 10% reviewed

• United States divided into twelve appellate circuits with 13 courts.

• Six to twenty judges per Court of Appeals - usually sit a panel of three.

Page 10: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

What the Courts Do

• Interpret Constitutionality of laws

• Interpret Statues - national and state for legislative intent.

• Fact Determination - District Courts

• Clarification of political boundaries

• Education and Value Application

• Legitimization of policy - civil rights

Page 11: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

U.S. Supreme Court

Page 12: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Supreme CourtOriginal Jurisdiction

• Case between U.S. and a State

• Case between States

• Case involving a Foreign Ambassador

• Case between a State and Citizen of another State

• Case between a State and a Foreign Country

Page 13: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

The Supreme Court

• Original and appellate jurisdiction

• 7,000 - 8,000 cases reviewed annually

• One chief justice and eight associate justices

Page 14: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

16-5

The Number of Supreme Court Opinions

Page 15: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

How Judges Are Appointed

• Appointed by the president

• Confirmed by a simple majority of the Senate

• Senatorial courtesy

Page 16: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

16-7

Gender and Ethnicity or Race of Appointees to the U.S. Courts of Appeals, by Administration

Page 17: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Judicial 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.

Page 18: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Judicial Review of Acts of Congress

• Judicial review is the power of the courts to review the constitutionality of governmental actions.— Chief Justice John Marshall

— Marbury v. Madison (1803)

Page 19: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Judicial Review of State Actions

• Supremacy clause provides that the Constitution is the supreme law of the land.

• Supreme Courts uses supremacy clause to declare acts of the states unconstitutional.

• For example,— Brown v. Board of Education (segregation)— Roe v. Wade (abortion statutes)— Loving v. Virginia (interracial marriages)— Lawrence v. Texas (same sex sodomy law)

Page 20: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

How Cases Reach the Supreme Court

• Constitutional jurisdiction

• Writ of habeas corpus– court order that requires an individual in

custody be brought before the court showing reason for detention.

• Writ of certiorari– decision by at least four justices to review

a lower court decision.

Page 21: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Controlling the Flow of Cases

• The Solicitor General– screen agency appeals before submission to

court– top government lawyer where government is

involved

• The FBI– provides data support for cases

• Law clerks– research and assist justices in writing decisions

Page 22: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Lobbying the Court

• Specific case selection to achieve goal

• Bring multiple cases at appellate level in different districts

• Congressional legislation to facilitate litigation

• Use of amicus curiae

Page 23: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Decision -Making Process

Page 24: Chapter 12 The Judiciary Cases and the Law: Types of Law Common law - Rule of Precedent Constitutional law Statutory law Administrative law Case law.

Explaining Supreme Court Decisions

• Judicial activism– going beyond Constitution considering societal

implications

• Judicial restraint– strict Constitutional interpretation

• Political ideology– liberals tend to be activists– conservatives tend to be restraintists– this is not absolutely true


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