The Judicial Branch The Federal Courts and the Supreme Court.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 18 Review. Cases that are only heard in federal court 1.Original Jurisdiction 2.Appellate Jurisdiction 3.Exclusive Jurisdiction 4.Precedent.
Advertisements

Article III of the Constitution
Chapter 18 – The Judicial Branch
Chapter 18 The Federal Court System
THE JUDICIARY.
The Supreme Court/ The Supreme Court at Work
The judicial branch.
The Federal Court System
Get out your notebook and textbook!. Chapter 18: The Federal Court System.
Supreme Court. Members 9 justices Serve for life Lead by the Chief Justice Appointed by the President, approved by the Senate.
Part B: Notes: Chapter 18 “The Federal Court System”
The Judiciary. Jurisdiction Original jurisdiction: where the case is heard first, usually in a trial. Appellate jurisdiction: cases brought on appeal.
The Judicial Branch Unit 6. The creation of The Federal Court System The Constitution granted: The Supreme Court Appellate jurisdiction The Supreme Court.
The Judiciary  Article III  Courts decide arguments about the meaning of laws, how they are applied, and whether they break the rules of the Constitution.
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 JUDICIAL SYSTEM Chapter 18. The Judicial System  Two types of cases:  Criminal Law: Government charges an individual with violating one or more.
The Court System. The US Federal Court System The Current Supreme Court The court has final authority on cases involving the constitution, acts of Congress,
The Judicial Branch Chapter 7.
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,
Institutions Unit IVD Judicial Branch. American Legal System Criminal Law Cases Criminal Law Cases An individual violating a specific law An individual.
The Judicial Branch Chapter 16 The Role of the Courts.
The Federal Court System Chapter 18. Section 1: The National Judiciary The Creation of a National Judiciary Articles of Confederation  no national courts.
Judicial Branch Chapter 11: The Federal Court System.
Chapter 14: The National Judiciary. Creation Called for by Alexander Hamilton in Federalist Paper #22. Article III, Section I: The judicial Power of the.
 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.
Instructions for using this template. Remember this is Jeopardy, so where I have written “Answer” this is the prompt the students will see, and where.
1 CHAPTER 18 The Federal Court System Creation Article III Supreme Court Congress may create inferior courts Dual Courts Federal State.
The Judicial Branch. United States v other nations Only in the U.S. do judges play such a large role in policy-making. Judicial Review- the right of federal.
Institutions Unit IVD Judicial Branch. American Legal System Criminal Law Cases Criminal Law Cases An individual violating a specific law An individual.
Chapter 8 NOTES The Federal Court System In The United States.
The Judicial Branch Article III of the Constitution.
Government Judicial Branch. Section 1 Common Law Tradition Common Law: judge made law that originated in England. Decisions were based on customs and.
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.
The Judicial Branch Article III. Purpose Interpret Laws Interpret Laws Determine if laws and actions are constitutional Determine if laws and actions.
Judicial Branch preAP. Jurisdiction Jurisdiction –the authority to hear certain cases. The United States is a DUAL system: State courts have jurisdiction.
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.
Mr. Kallusingh.  Article III of the constitution created the federal court system, because before this issues were handled at the state level  There.
The National Judiciary 18.1 Laws are a dead letter without courts to expound and define their true meaning and operation.
THE JUDICIAL BRANCH The Federal Court System established in Article III established in Article III.
The Judicial Branch “The judicial Power of the United States shall be vested in one supreme Court, and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from.
Chapter 18 The Judicial Branch: The Federal Court System.
Magruder’s American Government
Judiciary. Criminal v. Civil Criminal Cases – A law has been broken. Civil Cases – Usually involve two people suing each other for money or other reasons.
The Judicial Branch. Dual Court System State Courts District and Circuit Appeals Supreme Federal Courts Supreme Court “lesser courts” State courts can.
Unit 8 Judiciary.
The Judicial Branch.
U.S. Court System Judicial Branch Ch. 18
The Federal Court System
Do Now What is Judicial Review?.
JUDICIAL BRANCH Ch. 18.
Judicial Branch Interpret the Laws.
The Judical Branch The federal Court System
The United States Court System
The Supreme Court.
The Federal Judicial System: Applying the Law
Chapter 18 “The Federal Court System”
The Federal Court System
I. The National Judiciary
The Federal Court System
The Court System.
State v. Federal Courts Where will my case go?.
The Federal Court System
The Federal Court System (ch.18)
Judicial Branch.
Unit V Judicial Branch.
The Judicial Branch Article III US Constitution
How should we handle conflict?
The United States Court System
Presentation transcript:

The Judicial Branch The Federal Courts and the Supreme Court

Constitution Establishes Court Art. III, Sect. 1 Creates Supreme Court and National Judiciary

Sources of US Law Common law from England US Constitution Statutes - laws established by legislatures Case Law- judicial interpretations of common law, constitutional law, statutory, and administrative law

Dual Court System 1.National judiciary (100 courts) 2.State courts (thousands) Two types of court cases: 1.Criminal: fraud, bribery, violent crimes 2.Civil – property money and contracts

Two Kinds of Federal Courts 1.Constitutional courts- Supreme Court, court of appeals, district courts (94) 2.Legislative courts - US court of appeals for Armed Forces, Vets. Claims, Federal claims, Tax court, territorial court, D.C. courts

Federal Court Jurisdiction Jurisdiction is the authority of a court to hear a case. This is determined by the subject matter, parties involved 1.Original jurisdiction - the court where case is first heard 2.Appellate - hears cases on appeal

Selection of Judges Municipal and State Court judges are usually elected. President appoints Federal Court judges with advice and consent of Senate Art. 2 Sect. 2 Politics - usually from same party as President

Terms and Pay For life (until retire, resign, or dies) Removed only through impeachment Congress sets judges pay; retirement is very generous

Supreme Court Judicial Review- having the final say regarding the Constitution, an act of Congress or treaty 1.Chief Justice John Marshall established judicial review in Marbury v. Madison (1803)

Supreme Court Cases- original jurisdiction 1.disputes involving 2 or more states 2.cases involving ambassadors

How Cases Get to SC Most cases: Federal District Courts --> Federal appeals court -->Supreme Court Certificate - lower court asks for help from Supreme Court Supreme Court may remand a case, which means it sends the case back allowing the lower court ruling to stand However if four justices agree to hear the case it goes before the Supreme Court. Rule of 4

How Cases Get to SC Supreme Court reviews the case record. This is called the Writ of Certiorari (to be made more certain) The court is petitioned to hear 7,500 cases per year but only are heard by Supreme Court

Operation of Supreme Court 1.Oral arguments 2.Briefs - written arguments from solicitor general (chief lawyer of country) 3.Court in conference - after arguments are heard the court meets in private to discuss and debate

Court Opinions 1.Unanimous Opinion- all justices agree 2.Majority opinion - majority of justices agree 3.Concurring opinions - other justices write opinion of support 4.Dissenting Opinion - disagreeing opinion and reasons

Supreme Court options Court may reverse decision of lower court. Court may affirm decision of lower court.

Strict vs. Broad Constuctionism Strict Constructionism - judges who believe that decisions should be made with strict adherence to original constitutional principles. Sometimes they are called “originalists.” or conservative judges. Broad constructionism- judges who look at historical context and purpose of the law. (e.g. The Warren Court on Civil Rights), not just the letter of the law.

Judicial Restraint vs Judicial Activism Judicial activism refers to judges taking strong positions on the constitutionality of laws made by the legislature. Judicial restraint refers to judges often who believe they should not intervene in laws made by elected representatives.

Conservative and Liberal Judges Although judicial activism and broad constructivist rulings are often associated with liberal judges (e.g. Warren Court), increasingly it is being argued that strict constructionist judges may also be judicial activists. (e.g. the Rehnquist Court) and current conservative Supreme Court Justices who seek to overturn legislative rulings they disagree with.