150 likes | 324 Views
I. Powers of the Federal Courts. Supposed to balance the other two branchesReally had no power until Chief Justice John Marshall was appointed chief justice in 1801A. Jurisdiction of the CourtsEach state has its own courts system1. Federal Court JurisdictionJurisdiction: authority to hear certa
E N D
1. Chapter 11 The Federal Court System
2. I. Powers of the Federal Courts Supposed to balance the other two branches
Really had no power until Chief Justice John Marshall was appointed chief justice in 1801
A. Jurisdiction of the Courts
Each state has its own courts system
1. Federal Court Jurisdiction
Jurisdiction: authority to hear certain cases
Some overlap from state courts
They hear cases on U.S. laws, treaties, or interpretations of the Constitution
There are also special situations they hear cases on
3. A. Jurisdiction of the Courts cont. 2. Concurrent Jurisdiction
Both federal and state courts have jurisdiction
3. Original and Appellate Jurisdiction
Trial court where the case is originally heard is the original jurisdiction
Appellate jurisdiction: appeals for previously heard cases
4. B. Developing Supreme Court Power The court has developed from custom, usage, and history
1. Early Precedents
Justice may not seek out cases
Litigants have to bring them a case
2. Marbury v. Madison
1801, Adams’ midnight judges appointments were challenged
Established judicial review
Power to review acts of Congress
3. John Marshall’s Influence
The court established its power under his guidance
Gained power over state laws, contracts, interstate commerce, and tax laws
Federal govt. grew more powerful
4. States’ Rights Era and the Scott Case
Marshall died 1835, replaced by Roger Taney
Jackson appointed seven justices who supported states’ rights
Dred Scott case 1857
5. C. Due Process 14th Amendment guaranteed citizenship to all
Due process clause of it was routinely challenged
State may not deprive any person of life, liberty, or property w/o due process of law
1. Slaughterhouse Cases
1873, courts ruled the rights did not extend protection, simply protected them
2. Plessy v. Ferguson
1898, upheld segregation
3. The Court and Business
Upheld several monopolies in the late 19th century
Changed during the progressive era
4. Protecting Civil Liberties
Modern court has protected individuals
1954, Brown v. Board of Education
6. II. Lower Federal Courts Judiciary Act of 1789 est. many of the lower courts
A. Constitutional Courts
Est. in Article III
Federal district courts, federal court of appeals, and U.S. court of international trade
1. Federal District Courts
Trial courts
94 districts today
550 judges
For criminal and civil federal cases
Grand juries may issue indictments for this
16 to 23 people
Petit juries hear the actual trial
6 to 12 people
7. A. Constitutional Courts cont. 2. Officers of the Court
Each has prosecutors, magistrates, judges, and U.S. marshals
3. Federal Court of Appeals
Created in 1891 to lighten the case load of the Supreme Court
13 U.S. courts of appeals
Divided into 12 judicial circuits
1 appellate court in each region
13th is a special national court
Usually a panel of three judges hears cases
Can uphold a case, reverse it, or send it back to lower courts
4. Court of International Trade
Customs Court
Deals with tariffs
Based in NYC
8. B. Legislative Courts Help Congress exercise its power
1. U.S. Court of Federal Claims
Claims against the govt.
2. U.S. Tax Court
Dispute the IRS or Treasury Dept.
3. U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
Military’s highest appeals court
4. Territorial Courts
Virgin Islands, Guam, Puerto Rico, etc.
5. Courts of the District of Columbia
6. The Court of Veteran Appeals
7. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court
For wiretaps and other spy related cases
9. C. Selection of Federal Judged Presidential appointment and Senate approval
Serve for life
1. Party Affiliation
Presidents favor their own party, usually
2. Judicial Philosophy
A means to perpetuate the President’s political views
3. Senatorial Courtesy
Pres. Submits nominees to the Senators from that state
If one disapproves, the nomination is withdrawn
4. Background of Federal Judges
Almost all of them have legal training from top schools
Recently, more women and minorities are gaining seats
10. III. The Supreme Court The court of last resort in all federal law
9 justices serve for life
Decisions are binding to lower courts
Hears mainly appeals from lower courts
Until 1891, justices still had to ride the circuit
Traveling to hold court in regions
All cases are heard in Washington today
11. A. Supreme Court Jurisdiction Has both original and appellate jurisdiction
Hears original cases involving:
Representatives of foreign govts.
Cases where a state is a party
Small case load
Appellate cases fill the docket
Hears cases that involve the Constitution
Also oversees acts of Congress and treaties
12. B. Supreme Court Justices Nine justices
One chief justice and eight associate justices
Congress has the power to change the number
FDR tried to “pack” the court during the New Deal
Paid $208,000 per year
Congress sets their wages and cannot reduce them
Congress may impeach justices and remove them
Justice Samuel Chase was impeached in 1804 and acquitted
13. B. Supreme Court Justices cont. 1. Duties of the Justices
Not described in the Constitution
Developed from laws, tradition, and specific needs
Main duty: hear and rule on cases
Deciding which cases to hear
Deciding the cases
Expressing their explanation in the Court’s opinion
Each justice oversee a federal district
Special situations
Justice Robert Jackson presided over the Nuremburg Trials
Justice Earl Warren investigated the Kennedy assassination
14. B. Supreme Court Justices cont. 2. Law Clerks
Assist the justices with their tasks
3. Background of the Justices
No Constitutional requirements
6 were born outside the U.S.
There have been 104 justices
102 men, 2 women
Most were judges before
William Howard Taft served after his presidency
Does not represent the general population demographics
Ex. Two African Americans
15. C. Appointing Justices Appointed by the President and approved by the Senate
One of Washington’s choices was rejected
25% of nominees were rejected in the 19th century
More supportive now
Rejected two of Nixon’s and one of Reagan’s
Clarence Thomas faced great scrutiny
Some justices had different political ideas than the president thought
Ike and Earl Warren
Attorney General and the Justice Dept. help the Pres.
16. C. Appointing Justices cont. 1. The Role of the American Bar Assoc. (ABA)
Largest national organization of attorneys
Consult with the president for nominations
Rate nominees’ qualifications
2. The Role of Other Interest Groups
Labor Unions, Natl. Org. for Women, or other groups can oppose candidates
Roe v. Wade has big influence
3. The Role of the Justices
Chief justices are often active in the selection process
Write letters of recommendation