Chapter 15.4 The Federal Judiciary Article III Short “Judgment”

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Federal Courts Chapter 16.
Advertisements

Vocabulary Chapter 8- Judicial Branch
THE JUDICIAL SYSTEM Chapter 18. The Judicial System  Articles of Confederation did not set up a national judicial system  Major weakness of the Articles.
Article III of the Constitution
Chapter 18 – The Judicial Branch
Judicial Branch.
THE JUDICIARY.
The judicial branch.
The Federal Courts Agenda Quiz Overview of the Judicial Court System
The Federal Courts Chapter 16. Levels of Federal Courts.
Get out your notebook and textbook!. Chapter 18: The Federal Court System.
The Judicial Branch Unit 6. The creation of The Federal Court System The Constitution granted: The Supreme Court Appellate jurisdiction The Supreme Court.
The Federal Court System According to the Constitution, Congress has the power to create inferior courts (all federal courts, other than the Supreme Court.)
The Supreme Court. Composition of the Court Judiciary Act of 1789 Six justices, including 1 Chief Justice Changed 6 times since Current number is 9 justices,
The Judiciary Chapter 10- The Judiciary. Federal Judiciary Act of 1789 O Established the basic 3 step federal court system. 3. Supreme Court 2. Appellate.
Chapter 12 The Judiciary. Common Law Tradition  Common law = judge-made law; originated in England; derived from prevailing customs  Precedent = court.
The Judicial Branch Chapter 16 The Role of the Courts.
Judicial Branch Chapter 11: The Federal Court System.
 Write down as many words associated with courts and trials as you possibly can? BELL RINGER.
Federal Court System. Federal Courts Creation of Federal Courts –No national court system under Articles of Confederation –Article III established Supreme.
UNIT 4: SECTION 1 JUDICIAL BRANCH: ROLES, RESPONSIBILITIES, AND POWERS Essential Questions: How are Supreme Court justices appointed and confirmed by the.
Chapter 18 The Federal Court System. National Judiciary The Judicial power of the United States shall be vested in one Supreme Court, and in such inferior.
 US has dual court system  Federal Courts & State Courts  Supreme Court is top dog of all US courts  Under Articles of Confederation there were no.
Judicial Branch preAP. Jurisdiction Jurisdiction –the authority to hear certain cases. The United States is a DUAL system: State courts have jurisdiction.
Chapter 16 The Federal Courts. Article III: The Judicial Branch Job under Separation of Powers: Job under Separation of Powers: Interpret the Law Marbury.
1 Ch The National Judiciary Article III, Section 1 “The judicial power of the United States shall be vested in one Supreme Court, and in such inferior.
The Judicial Branch Jurisdiction – The right of a court to hear a case. Types of Jurisdiction:Types of Jurisdiction: 1. Original – right to hear a case.
Magruder’s American Government
Chapter 16. The Nature of the Judicial System Introduction: Two types of cases: Criminal Law: The government charges an individual with violating one.
Chapter 14 The Judiciary. Structure of the Federal Courts Supreme Court Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces 12 Courts of Appeals 94 US District Courts.
The Function of the Supreme Court
The Judicial System Chapter 15.
Chapter 10- The Judiciary
Judicial Branch.
The Judicial Branch.
The Federal Court System
The judicial branch.
The United States Court System
The Federal Courts Chapter 16.
The Federal Courts Chapter 19.
The Federal Judicial System: Applying the Law
Read now… This half of the room read this article…
The Federal Courts Chapter 10.
The Federal Court System Chapter 11
The Federal Court System
Chapter 18 Judicial Branch.
Chapter 14 The US Supreme Court.
The Federal Court System
The Court System.
Judicial Branch.
The Court System Appeals.
The Judiciary Chapter 14.
The Role of the Courts.
The Federal Courts.
The Federal Court System
The Federal Judiciary Chapter 10.
The Federal Courts.
Judicial Branch.
Unit 2: Interactions Among Branches of Government
The Federal Courts Chapter 16.
The Federal Courts Chapter 16.
Chapter 10 The Judicial Branch.
The Judicial Branch Article III US Constitution
Primary function is to resolve disputes over the meaning of
Agenda: Monday 10/17 Collect Reading Assignment
The Federal Courts Chapter 16.
The Supreme Court Chapter 18.
Judicial Branch #1 The Supreme Court.
The Federal Courts Chapter 16.
The United States Court System
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 15.4 The Federal Judiciary Article III Short “Judgment”

Article III Outline the cases to be decided by the Judicial Branch 2 types of jurisdiction

1 Cases involving: the “C” Federal law Disputes with foreign governments

2 Civil cases involving different states People or the states

Judicial Review Not in “C” The power to declare acts unconstitutional 1803 Marbury v Madison (established) Most important check on other branches

U.S. District Courts Where Federal Cases Begin 94 federal district courts 89 in US 5 in DC, PR & territories Original jurisdiction

US Appeals Court Where appeals end 13 appellate courts Page 277 Judged sit in panels of 3 to hear cases Review district court case for errors

Example Affirmative Action 1978 Bakke case 1992 Hopwood case 2003 Grutter case

Special Courts Tax law Trade law military tribunals

Federal Judges President appoints Senate confirms No qualifications in the “C’

Who? President chooses someone Submits nomination to Senate Senate Judiciary Committee approves (or not) Senate approves (or not)

Reality Senatorial Courtesy Unwritten “rule” Senator can block a nomination to a court in his home state Blue slip policy = opposition

Term For Life “During good behavior” Congress can fix terms for special court judges Removal = impeachment 7 of 13 impeached have been removed

15.5 The Supreme Court Court of Last Resort Now = 9 justices (6 M / 3 F) As of 2017: Total = 113 justices 109 male 4 female

Selection President nominates Senate Confirms Very involved Background check Judicial temperament Confirmation hearing

cases Several thousand cases / year Court hears 100-150 / year Has both original and appellate jurisdiction

how Few original jurisdiction cases Most come from appeals from lower courts Most common = writ of certiorari Writ = legal document “cert” = SC orders a case from lower court be brought for review 4 of the 9 must agree to hear case

?? What happens if it is denied? Lower court ruling stands If accepted……case is added to the docket

Then what? Both sides prepare legal briefs Amicus curiae brief can be filed by interest groups (importance to many) Oral Arguments are heard from both sides

Decision time Justices meet twice a week in conference to discuss cases Cases decided by majority vote Decisions uphold or overturn a lower court decision

Overturn? Case is sent back to lower court for further action Ex: new trial

Stare decisis Every decision serves a precedent for future cases Lower courts must honor decision “stand by things decided” Consistency

sometimes Court will overturn a previous ruling Make a new precedent EX: salute the flag…..don’t have to salute the flag

opinions Majority opinion = legal document stating reason for decision Dissenting opinion = reason why disagree with majority decision Concurring opinion = agree with majority but for different reason

Judicial Activism Court has the right and obligation to use its power of judicial review to overturn bad precedents and promote socially desired goals Liberal view Defender of civil and women's rights

Judicial Restraint Judicial review should be used sparingly, especially in controversial issues Conservative view Elected Representitives make social decisions not judges (unelected)

Check Who nominates a federal judge? Who confirms a federal judge? What is the term for a federal judge? How many federal districts are there? How many SC justices are there now? What is the term for a SC justice? The SC has both ___ & ____ jurisdiction