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The Judiciary
Roots of the Federal Judiciary
• not much time spent on Article III
• Framers saw little threat of tyranny by
  judiciary
• life tenure for federal judges
• checks and balances
• Constitution was silent on judicial review
• judicial review: power of the courts to
  review acts of other branches of
  government and the states
The Judiciary Act of 1789
• Congress spent entire second half of its
  first session deliberating Judiciary Act
• Judiciary Act of 1789: Established the
  basic three-tiered structure of the federal
  court system
The Marshall Court: Marbury v.
Madison (1803) and Judicial Review
• Authority of the Court was unsettled question
• Marbury v. Madison (1803): Case in which the
  Supreme Court first asserted the power of
  judicial review by finding that the congressional
  statute extending the Court's original jurisdiction
  was unconstitutional
• brilliant move: initially denied power to the Court,
  but established implied power of judicial review
• Let’s take a look at the facts.
The American Legal System
• Dual system: federal courts and state
  courts
• Pyramid: trial courts, appellate courts,
  court of last resort
• trial court: Court of original jurisdiction
  where cases begin
• appellate court: Court that generally
  reviews only findings of law made by lower
  courts
Jurisdiction
• jurisdiction: Authority vested in a particular
  court to hear and decide the issues on any
  particular case
• original jurisdiction: The jurisdiction of courts
  that hear a case first, usually in a trial. These
  courts determine the facts of a case
• appellate jurisdiction: The power vested in
  particular courts to review and/or revise the
  decision of a lower court
Criminal and Civil Law
• criminal law: Codes of behavior related to the
  protection of property and individual safety
• Society is the victim, so the government
  prosecutes on behalf of injured party
• civil law: Codes of behavior related to business
  and contractual relationships between groups
  and individuals
• No threat to society, so injured party must take
  action against other party
• Four elements in each case: plaintiff, defendant,
  judge, jury
The Federal Court System
• district courts, courts of appeals and the
  Supreme Court
• constitutional courts: Federal courts
  specifically created by the
  U.S.Constitution or by Congress pursuant
  to its authority in Article III.
• legislative courts: Courts established by
  Congress for specialized purposes, such
  as the Court of Military Appeals
District Courts
• federal trial courts of original jurisdiction
• 94 federal district courts
• hear three types of cases
  – federal government is a party
  – federal question based on a claim under the
    Constitution, a treaty or a federal statute
  – civil suits in which citizens from different
    states and amount more than $75,000
The Courts of Appeals
• intermediate appellate courts in the federal system
• no original jurisdiction
• no automatic right of appeal after decision
• brief: A document containing the legal written arguments
  in a case filed with a court by a party prior to a hearing or
  trial
• precedent: A prior judicial decision that serves as a rule
  for settling subsequent cases of a similar nature
• stare decisis: In court rulings, a reliance on past
  decisions or precedents to formulate decisions in new
  cases
The Supreme Court
• reviews cases from U.S. courts of appeals
  and state supreme courts
• final interpreter of the U.S. Constitution
• eight associate justices and one chief
  justice (since 1869)
• Constitution silent on number of justices
How Federal Court Judges Are
           Selected
• political process
• nominated by President and confirmed by the
  U.S. Senate
• put philosophical stamp on court system
• from nominating President’s party
• senatorial courtesy: Process by which presidents
  generally defer selection of district court judges
  to the choice of senators of their own party who
  represent the state where the vacancy occurs
Who Are Federal Judges?
• most have held political office
• increasing number have judicial
  experience
Appointments to the U.S.
         Supreme Court
• importance means greater opposition to
  nominations
Nomination Criteria
• Competence
   – at least some judicial or governmental experience
• Ideology or Policy Preferences
   – nominees should share President’s policy preferences
• Rewards
   – friends and party members
• Pursuit of Political Support from Various Groups
   – campaign promises (ex. Reagan, Sandra Day O’Connor)
• Religion
   – Protestant, Catholic, Jewish
• Race, Ethnicity, and Gender
   – Few minorities or women have served
The Supreme Court Confirmation
          Process
• Investigation
  – FBI background check
  – Senate Judiciary Committee investigation
• Lobbying By Interest Groups
  – greater involvement of interest groups in the process
• The Senate Judiciary Committee Hearings and
  Senate Vote
  – Committee recommends to full Senate
  – Simple majority vote
The Supreme Court Today
• widespread lack of interest in the court
  system
• Court tradition of privacy and tradition
• No televised proceedings
Deciding to Hear a Case
• 2007-2008 9,600 cases filed, 75 heard, 74
  decisions
  – important issues of law or substantial federal question
• Writs of Certiorari and the Rule of Four
  – writ of certiorari: A request for the Court to order up
    the records from a lower court to review the case
  – Rule of Four: At least four justices of the Supreme
    Court must vote to consider a case before it can be
    heard
• The Role of Clerks
  – first pass of petitions
  – young and ideological
How Does a Case Survive the
           Process?
• The Federal Government
   – Court accepts 70-80% of cases in which U.S. government is
     petitioning party
   – solicitor general: The fourth-ranking member of the Department
     of Justice, responsible for handling all appeals on behalf of the
     U.S. government to the Supreme Court.
   – amicus curiae: "Friend of the court"; amici may file briefs or
     even appear to argue their interests orally before the court
• Conflict Among the Courts of Appeals
   – Court desires consistency in the system
• Interest Group Participation
   – the more briefs filed, the better the chance the Court will take
     case
Hearing and Deciding the Case
• Oral Arguments
  – steeped in tradition, 10 AM start time
• The Conference and the Vote
  – closed door session, conference vote
• Writing Opinions
  – written opinion gives legal reasoning
  – serves as precedent
Judicial Philosophy, Original
       Intent, and Ideology
• judicial restraint: (a philosophy that) courts
  should allow the decisions of other branches of
  government to stand, even when they offend a
  judge's own sense of principles
• strict constructionist: An approach to
  constitutional interpretation that emphasizes the
  Framers' original intentions
• judicial activism: A philosophy of judicial
  decision making that argues judges should use
  their power broadly to further justice, especially
  in the areas of equality and personal liberty
Models of Judicial Decision
              Making
• Behavioral Characteristics
  – social background of justices affect decisions
• The Attitudinal Model
  – policy preferences (party, liberal versus conservative)
• The Strategic Model
  – chance of loss, needs of the court
• Public Opinion
  – could be swayed by public opinion on some issues
Toward Reform: Power, Policy
    Making, and the Court
• Policy Making
  – declare federal laws unconstitutional
  – overrule itself
• Implementing Court Decisions
  – courts must rely on other units of government
    to carry out their decisions
  – judicial implementation: How and whether
    judicial decision are translated into actual
    public policies affecting more than the
    immediate parties to a lawsuit

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Chapter 9 The Judiciary

  • 2. Roots of the Federal Judiciary • not much time spent on Article III • Framers saw little threat of tyranny by judiciary • life tenure for federal judges • checks and balances • Constitution was silent on judicial review • judicial review: power of the courts to review acts of other branches of government and the states
  • 3. The Judiciary Act of 1789 • Congress spent entire second half of its first session deliberating Judiciary Act • Judiciary Act of 1789: Established the basic three-tiered structure of the federal court system
  • 4. The Marshall Court: Marbury v. Madison (1803) and Judicial Review • Authority of the Court was unsettled question • Marbury v. Madison (1803): Case in which the Supreme Court first asserted the power of judicial review by finding that the congressional statute extending the Court's original jurisdiction was unconstitutional • brilliant move: initially denied power to the Court, but established implied power of judicial review
  • 5. • Let’s take a look at the facts.
  • 6. The American Legal System • Dual system: federal courts and state courts • Pyramid: trial courts, appellate courts, court of last resort • trial court: Court of original jurisdiction where cases begin • appellate court: Court that generally reviews only findings of law made by lower courts
  • 7. Jurisdiction • jurisdiction: Authority vested in a particular court to hear and decide the issues on any particular case • original jurisdiction: The jurisdiction of courts that hear a case first, usually in a trial. These courts determine the facts of a case • appellate jurisdiction: The power vested in particular courts to review and/or revise the decision of a lower court
  • 8. Criminal and Civil Law • criminal law: Codes of behavior related to the protection of property and individual safety • Society is the victim, so the government prosecutes on behalf of injured party • civil law: Codes of behavior related to business and contractual relationships between groups and individuals • No threat to society, so injured party must take action against other party • Four elements in each case: plaintiff, defendant, judge, jury
  • 9. The Federal Court System • district courts, courts of appeals and the Supreme Court • constitutional courts: Federal courts specifically created by the U.S.Constitution or by Congress pursuant to its authority in Article III. • legislative courts: Courts established by Congress for specialized purposes, such as the Court of Military Appeals
  • 10. District Courts • federal trial courts of original jurisdiction • 94 federal district courts • hear three types of cases – federal government is a party – federal question based on a claim under the Constitution, a treaty or a federal statute – civil suits in which citizens from different states and amount more than $75,000
  • 11. The Courts of Appeals • intermediate appellate courts in the federal system • no original jurisdiction • no automatic right of appeal after decision • brief: A document containing the legal written arguments in a case filed with a court by a party prior to a hearing or trial • precedent: A prior judicial decision that serves as a rule for settling subsequent cases of a similar nature • stare decisis: In court rulings, a reliance on past decisions or precedents to formulate decisions in new cases
  • 12. The Supreme Court • reviews cases from U.S. courts of appeals and state supreme courts • final interpreter of the U.S. Constitution • eight associate justices and one chief justice (since 1869) • Constitution silent on number of justices
  • 13. How Federal Court Judges Are Selected • political process • nominated by President and confirmed by the U.S. Senate • put philosophical stamp on court system • from nominating President’s party • senatorial courtesy: Process by which presidents generally defer selection of district court judges to the choice of senators of their own party who represent the state where the vacancy occurs
  • 14. Who Are Federal Judges? • most have held political office • increasing number have judicial experience
  • 15. Appointments to the U.S. Supreme Court • importance means greater opposition to nominations
  • 16. Nomination Criteria • Competence – at least some judicial or governmental experience • Ideology or Policy Preferences – nominees should share President’s policy preferences • Rewards – friends and party members • Pursuit of Political Support from Various Groups – campaign promises (ex. Reagan, Sandra Day O’Connor) • Religion – Protestant, Catholic, Jewish • Race, Ethnicity, and Gender – Few minorities or women have served
  • 17. The Supreme Court Confirmation Process • Investigation – FBI background check – Senate Judiciary Committee investigation • Lobbying By Interest Groups – greater involvement of interest groups in the process • The Senate Judiciary Committee Hearings and Senate Vote – Committee recommends to full Senate – Simple majority vote
  • 18. The Supreme Court Today • widespread lack of interest in the court system • Court tradition of privacy and tradition • No televised proceedings
  • 19. Deciding to Hear a Case • 2007-2008 9,600 cases filed, 75 heard, 74 decisions – important issues of law or substantial federal question • Writs of Certiorari and the Rule of Four – writ of certiorari: A request for the Court to order up the records from a lower court to review the case – Rule of Four: At least four justices of the Supreme Court must vote to consider a case before it can be heard • The Role of Clerks – first pass of petitions – young and ideological
  • 20. How Does a Case Survive the Process? • The Federal Government – Court accepts 70-80% of cases in which U.S. government is petitioning party – solicitor general: The fourth-ranking member of the Department of Justice, responsible for handling all appeals on behalf of the U.S. government to the Supreme Court. – amicus curiae: "Friend of the court"; amici may file briefs or even appear to argue their interests orally before the court • Conflict Among the Courts of Appeals – Court desires consistency in the system • Interest Group Participation – the more briefs filed, the better the chance the Court will take case
  • 21. Hearing and Deciding the Case • Oral Arguments – steeped in tradition, 10 AM start time • The Conference and the Vote – closed door session, conference vote • Writing Opinions – written opinion gives legal reasoning – serves as precedent
  • 22. Judicial Philosophy, Original Intent, and Ideology • judicial restraint: (a philosophy that) courts should allow the decisions of other branches of government to stand, even when they offend a judge's own sense of principles • strict constructionist: An approach to constitutional interpretation that emphasizes the Framers' original intentions • judicial activism: A philosophy of judicial decision making that argues judges should use their power broadly to further justice, especially in the areas of equality and personal liberty
  • 23. Models of Judicial Decision Making • Behavioral Characteristics – social background of justices affect decisions • The Attitudinal Model – policy preferences (party, liberal versus conservative) • The Strategic Model – chance of loss, needs of the court • Public Opinion – could be swayed by public opinion on some issues
  • 24. Toward Reform: Power, Policy Making, and the Court • Policy Making – declare federal laws unconstitutional – overrule itself • Implementing Court Decisions – courts must rely on other units of government to carry out their decisions – judicial implementation: How and whether judicial decision are translated into actual public policies affecting more than the immediate parties to a lawsuit