Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The National Judiciary (18.1). Dual Court System Federal courts – 120+ federal courts in U.S. State courts – Each state has its own court system.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The National Judiciary (18.1). Dual Court System Federal courts – 120+ federal courts in U.S. State courts – Each state has its own court system."— Presentation transcript:

1 The National Judiciary (18.1)

2 Dual Court System Federal courts – 120+ federal courts in U.S. State courts – Each state has its own court system

3 Federal Court System

4 Constitutional Courts U.S. Supreme Court Courts of Appeals U.S. Court of International Trade Constitutional courts exercise the broad judicial powers granted by the Constitution

5 Special Courts Various U.S. courts for: – Armed forces – Veterans claims – Federal claims – Tax issues – Territorial courts – D.C. courts Hear cases relating to Congress’ expressed powers

6 Federal Jurisdiction

7 Jurisdiction  authority of a court to hear a case Federal courts can hear cases depending on the: – Subject matter – Parties involved

8 Subject Matter Interpretation/application of a provision of the Constitution, federal statute/treaty Question of admiralty law – Collision @ sea – Crime committed on a ship Question of maritime law – Contract to deliver supplies at the docks

9 Parties Involved U.S. or 1 of U.S. officers/agencies – http://www.sfexaminer.com/politics/white- house/obama-sues-arizona-over-illegal- immigrant-crackdown http://www.sfexaminer.com/politics/white- house/obama-sues-arizona-over-illegal- immigrant-crackdown Ambassador/consul/official representative of a foreign govt. 1 of the states suing another or resident of 1 state/foreign country

10 Parties Involved Citizen of 1 state suing citizen in another state U.S. citizen suing foreign govt. or 1 of its citizens Citizen of 1 state suing citizen in same state – Both claim land under grants of diff. states

11 Types of Federal Jurisdiction Exclusive – Cases can only be heard in federal courts Concurrent – Cases can be heard in federal and/or state courts Original – Location of legal issue determines which court hears case first Appellate – Court hears case of appeal

12 Appointment of Judges P, w/S approval, appoints federal judges Typically, Republican P choose Republican judges; Democratic P choose Democratic judges Level of judicial activism/restraint – Activism: Judge should use position to promote his/her political views – Restraint: Judges defer to actions of executive & legislative branches, except in cases of unconstitutionality

13 Should federal judges be allowed to “legislate” from the bench? Why or why not?

14 Terms/Pay of Judges Constitutional courts: federal judges appointed for life Can only be removed through the impeachment process – 13 judges have been impeached – 7 judges have been convicted – http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Alc ee_Hastings_corruption_scandal http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Alc ee_Hastings_corruption_scandal

15 Terms/Pay of Judges Special courts: federal judges serve either: – 15-yr. terms – 4-yr. terms Assoc. S.C. justices: $208,100 Chief S.C. justice: $217,400 Serve 10 yrs. & retire at 70: full salary for life Serve 15 yrs. & retire at 65: full salary for life


Download ppt "The National Judiciary (18.1). Dual Court System Federal courts – 120+ federal courts in U.S. State courts – Each state has its own court system."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google