Review for Test Constitutional Convention New Jersey vs. Virginia Plan Great Compromise 3/5 Compromise Preamble of Constitution Article 1- Legislative.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Judicial Branch. Origins of the Supreme Court Constitutional Origin. Article III, §1, of the Constitution provides that [t]he judi-cial Power of the.
Advertisements

Strengthening the Judicial Branch SOL: VUS.5e.  Born in Midland, Virginia  Veteran of the Revolutionary War.  He endured the harsh winter at.
The Supreme Court. Constitutional Origin Article III, §1, “The judicial Power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme Court, and in such.
The Justices of the Supreme Court. Chief Justice John Roberts Born 1955 Lawyer Judge Legal Counsel to President Reagan Appointed by George W. Bush in.
The Supreme Court and Constitutional Interpretation Shan Sivalingam UW Law School – Street Law May 2007.
Supreme Court Top of the Judicial Branch in the Federal Government. Final say in all matters dealing with the United States Constitution.
John Marshall and the United States Supreme Court
The Judicial Branch Est. by Article III Of the US Constitution.
The Judiciary Chapter 12. Interpretation of Judicial language Stare Decisis: “to stand on decided cases” Appellate Court: A court reviewing a case originally.
April 8  Movie  Separation of Powers and Checks and Balances review  Notes/discussion over the Judicial Branch  Chapter 18 Vocab. and crossword puzzle.
SUPREME COURT CASES. THE CASE William Marbury, one of Adam’s “midnight appointments” was denied his job as a judge.
The Judicial Branch Lower Courts, Supreme Court. Judicial Branch The Constitution establishes a Supreme Court – the top of the American judicial system.
THE JUDICIAL BRANCH The Federal Court System established in Article III established in Article III.
Marbury v. Madison (1803) Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) McCulloch v. Maryland (1824)
THE FEDERAL COURT SYSTEM Chapter 5 – The Judicial Branch
 Interprets the laws  Determines if they are constitutional or not.
Judicial Branch. JOB Interprets the laws Interprets the laws Determines if law is constitutional (judicial review) Determines if law is constitutional.
The Supreme Court (The Judicial Branch) What’s the big deal?
JOHN MARSHALL’S GREATEST HITS Marbury v. Madison1803 Fletcher v. Peck1810 McCulloch v. Maryland1819 Gibbons v. Ogden1824.
Federalism Chapter 3. Federalism Key Terms (3): 1.Bill of attainder 2.Cooperative federalism 3.Dual federalism 4.Extradition clause 5.Full faith and credit.
Courts The point of the courts is to provide a place where we can argue about matters relating to the law. The point of lawyers is to help people argue.
Federal Courts. The American Court Structure  Dual court system: 1. set of state and local courts 2. Federal courts Judiciary Act of 1789 established.
Supreme Court at Work Unit 6: Judicial Branch Ms. Ramos.
 We make sure the laws are obeyed by all citizens.  The name of the people are the president and the vise president.
THE JUDICIAL BRANCH THE ROLE OF THE JUDICIAL BRANCH To interpret and define law This involves hearing individual cases and deciding how the law should.
The Judicial Branch Federal Courts. Objectives Know the length of terms of judges Know the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, Federal Courts, and State.
Branches of Government: The Judicial Branch. The Supreme Court Building 
Unit 4: GROWTH OF THE YOUNG NATION Topic 3: The Marshall Court (Judicial Nationalism)
The Marshall Court.
Judicial Interpretation of the Constitution The strength and path of the court were found with Chief Justice John Marshall 4 th Chief Justice 1801 – 1835.
Government Judicial Branch. Section 1 Common Law Tradition Common Law: judge made law that originated in England. Decisions were based on customs and.
Federal Court System. Powers of Federal Courts U.S. has a dual court system (Federal & State) State courts have jurisdiction over state laws Federal courts.
The Marshall Courts. Purpose of the Judicial Branch  Interpret the Law –Set Legal Precedents –Determine if laws passed by Congress or Presidential Actions.
Terms Review III The United States Government. This gives Congress the power to pass legislation that is “necessary and proper” for doing its job.
The Judicial Branch Lower Courts, Supreme Court. Judicial Branch The Constitution establishes a Supreme Court – the top of the American judicial system.
Lower Courts, Supreme Court.  The Constitution establishes a Supreme Court – the top of the American judicial system.  Article III of the Constitution.
THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT A new term of the Supreme Court opens on the first Monday in October.
Constitutional Law Class 3 January 12, 2006 THE POLITICAL QUESTION DOCTRINE Spring 2007 Professor Fischer Office: Room fischerATlaw.edu.
Section 3. The Court Decisions are final Intended to be as powerful as the other two branches Chief Justice & 8 associate justices – Appointed for life.
The United States Supreme Court Article 3 of the US Constitution The U.S.S.C. interprets the Constitution and the Law How did the Supreme Court under.
Article III The Judicial Branch.
Supreme Court Justices (2013)
Implied Powers of the National Government
Unit 4: GROWTH OF THE YOUNG NATION
The United States Supreme Court
Executive Separation of Powers: 3 Branches of Judicial Government
Unit 2 – Branches of Government & Federal Power
Executive Separation of Powers: 3 Branches of Judicial Government
The Judicial Branch.
VUS5e John Marshall How did Chief Justice John Marshall, a Virginian, contribute to the growth of the U.S. Supreme Court’s importance in relation to the.
The Supreme Court and Constitutional Interpretation
U.S. Supreme Court.
The United States Supreme Court Article 3 of the US Constitution
The United States Supreme Court Article 3 of the US Constitution
The Marshall Court 6.3.
Marbury vs. Madison and other landmark cases
Unit 4: GROWTH OF THE YOUNG NATION
Reviewing Marshall Court Decisions
Why was the case “Marbury vs. Madison” significant?
Growth of the Supreme Court
The Federalists in Power and the Emergence of a Two-Party System
The Three Branches of Government
Defining the Powers of the National Government
The power of Judicial Review
Supreme Court Cases of the early Republic
The United States Supreme Court Article 3 of the US Constitution
The United States Government
Powers of the Supreme Court
Do Now (Background Essay)
How is power distributed in Federalism?
Presentation transcript:

Review for Test Constitutional Convention New Jersey vs. Virginia Plan Great Compromise 3/5 Compromise Preamble of Constitution Article 1- Legislative Branch Article 2- Executive Branch Article 3- Judicial Branch Unwritten Constitution John Marshall Elastic Clause

Aim: What are the powers of the Judicial Branch?

Ruth Bader Ginsberg - Carter Stephan Breyer - Clinton David Souter - Bush Sr. Clarence Thomas - Bush Sr. Antonin Scalia - Reagan John Paul Stevens -Ford John Roberts - G.W. Bush Anthony Kennedy - Reagan Samuel Alito - G.W. Bush

Judicial Branch Decide cases affecting ambassadors Decide controversies between states Decide controversies to which the United states shall be a party Decide Controversies between a state and its citizens and foreign states, citizens, or subjects Power in all cases in law and equity

John Marshall Chief Justice Federalist His court's decisions Strengthened the power of the Central Government

Marbury v. Madison (1803) Established Judicial Review –Power of the Supreme Court to declare laws unconstitutional

The Unwritten Constitution Not written in the Constitution Based on Tradition and customs Political parties Judicial Review Cabinet

McCulloch v Maryland The state of Maryland attempted to tax a federal bank. At issue in this case was the supremacy of the federal government v States Rights. The Court nullified Maryland’s state law & established the supremacy of the federal government.

Gibbons v Ogden At issue in this case was whether or not the State of New York had the legal authority to grant one steamship company a contract on an interstate waterway. The Court clarified Federal authority over interstate commerce when it nullified New York State’s law. Federal law is Supreme over State Law.

THE SUPREME COURT UNDER JOHN MARSHALL McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) –States could not tax national institutions - Federal law supreme over state law Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) –Reinforced congressional control over interstate commerce & national law over state law –Federal law supreme over state law

Conclusion How did the Supreme Court under Chief Justice John Marshall’s leadership change American Government? –T–The Marshall court established the power of Judicial Review (Unwritten Constitution) –S–Strengthened the Supreme Court –S–Strengthened the power of the Federal Government over the States (Federal Supremacy)

Elastic Clause This gives Congress the ability to exercise power or create laws not specifically mentioned in the Constitution. This can only be used when Congress feels that it is “necessary or proper”