Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAshley Willis Stone Modified over 9 years ago
1
4 th period--Law in Society Mrs. Baker—Instructor 9.13.12
2
How to determine a court’s jurisdiction How to explain the structure of the federal court system How to explain the role of the US Supreme Court How to explain the structure of the state court system How to describe the difference between a juvenile, who is unruly and delinquent.
3
The court system is broken into 2 parts Federal court system Hear cases involving federal matters and matters involving diversity of citizenship. Diversity of Citizenship cases involving citizens of different states and in which the amount of money in dispute is more than $75,000. Admiralty cases(pertaining to the sea) Patent and copyright cases Bankruptcy cases Jurisdiction—the power and authority given to a court to hear a case and make a judgment.
4
Four types of federal courts listed: District courts have original jurisdiction over most federal court cases (hearing a case the first time it is heard). Most cases begin in a US district court (usually both civil and criminal cases) Court of Appeals appellate courts/intermediate courts are courts between the lower courts and the highest courts They hear appeals and review cases from lower courts. Intermediate courts have appellate jurisdiction meaning that any party to a suit may appeal to the federal court of appeals. Divided into 13 judicial circuits– with 1 district court and 1 court of appeals. 3 judges needed to make decision in a US court of appeals
5
Special courts have jurisdiction in cases including suits brought by citizens again the federal government, disagreements over taxes on imported goods and disputes between taxpayers and the IRS. Supreme Court (9 nine justices—appointed by the President) is the highest court in the land. It hears cases involving ambassadors, consuls or other public ministers and cases in which a state is a party. It also hears cases on the constitutionality of federal law.
6
State court system— Have their own rules Local Trial Courts have limited jurisdiction—they handle minor cases such as misdemeanors and civil cases involving small amounts of money. Traffic courts Police courts Municipal courts Juvenile courts Family disputes Small claims
7
General Trial Courts which has general jurisdiction and handle criminal and civil cases. County courts Superior courts Court of common pleas/circuit court
8
Special courts/probate courts handle specialized cases. Cases involving property of deceased persons Adoptions Domestic relations Juvenile cases
9
Domestic relations courts Handle divorces, annulment and dissolution (termination) proceedings
10
Juvenile Courts (special jurisdiction) Hear cases involving delinquent, unruly, abused or neglected children up to a certain age (have not right to a trial by jury or be released on bail). A delinquent child—a minor undera certain age (16-18 ) who has committed an adult crime. An unruly child—a minor who has done something inappropriate that is not considered an adult crime— violating curfew, skipping school, using tobacco, etc. A neglected or abused child—one who is homeless, destitute (poor or needy ), without adequate parental care.
11
Intermediate Appellate courts—hear cases of appeals from courts of general jurisdiction. Heard only if the parties believe they did not have a fair trial in the lower court or the judge did not properly interpret the laws. Supreme Courts—The highest court in most states. Decides matters of law appealed from lower courts Decides whether an error was made in the lower courts Choose what cases it hears.
13
4 th period--Law in Society Mrs. Baker—Instructor 9.13.12
14
Identify/know vocabulary words Complete Section 2.1 assessment, pg. 33 # 1-5. Complete article critique on any current event dealing with the law, government, etc. BOTH ASSIGNMENTS ARE DUE TODAY, 9/14/12 BOTH ASSIGNMENTS ARE DUE TODAY, 9/14/12
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.