Chapter 8

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Chapter 8
THE FEDERAL COURT AND THE
JUDICIAL BRANCH
Section 1
The
Federal Court System
The American court system

Judicial Independence is the cornerstone of our
nations Judicial system because safe guards the
rule of law and protects it from all other entities.

No person is above the law and all people are
entitled to equal justice
American court system

A big reason for the new Constitution was the manner in which
the courts worked

Under the Articles of Confederation there were no Federal
Courts only State Courts

Each state court may have a different interpretation of a law
and therefor people would not know which law to truly follow
American court system

It was very confusing with many state courts and no centralized
federal court.

With the Constitution there was created a Federal Court that was
alongside each state courts and answered directly to the
Constitution.

State courts answered to state constitutions

The majority of cases in the United States go to the State Courts
American court system jurisdiction

Jurisdiction says what type of cases a certain court has the authority to hear.

A few examples of Jurisdiction are as Exclusive Jurisdiction (sole right to hear a
case) or Concurrent Jurisdiction (cases that fall under both state and federal
cases)

Concurrent Jurisdiction generally is involved when a case involves people from
multiple states and the money exceeds $75,000 in a case.

American court system jurisdiction

When you have a case a Plaintiff (person making the legal
complaint in court) files a case in either Federal or State
Court against the Defendant (person the complaint is
against in the court).

The 1st court that a case is heard in has Original
Jurisdiction over the case.

After a case is heard if the defendant or plaintiff do not like
the result the court’s ruling they have the ability to appeal
it to a higher court that has appellate jurisdiction over the
matters.
Structure of the federal court
system

The Constitution does not go into great detail of the structure of the
Courts system

Article III, Section 1 states simply that “the judicial power of the
United States shall be vested in one supreme court, and in such
inferior courts, as the Congress may from time to time ordain and
establish.”
Structure of the federal court
system

In the 1st session of Congress it passed the Judiciary Act of 1789
which laid out the details of the Supreme Court and a 3 tiered
structure for the Federal Courts

The 3 tiers were as follows :

District Courts

Circuit Courts

Supreme Court
District Courts

District Courts are spread all throughout the country and hear the
majority of cases.

District Courts have original jurisdiction over the vast majority of
criminal and civil court cases

There is 94 Federal Judicial districts. There has to be atleast 1 court in
every states
Court of appeals

Circuit Courts are a layer of courts above District Courts

They were called Circuit because originally the Judges would travel
around from place to place having court

Circuit Courts are now primarily called the Court of Appeals
because they generally hear appeals from district court cases

The United States has 12 different circuits in which they have a court
of appeals in each circuit
The Supreme Court

The Supreme Court is the top Court in the Federal Court system

The Supreme Court is mainly an appellate court there are only a few specific instances
where the Supreme Court has original jurisdiction as listed in the Constitution “cases
involving Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, and anything in which the
State shall be a party”

Originally the Court had 1 Chief Justice and 5 Associate Justices. In 1869 they changed
it to 1 Chief Justice and 8 Associate Justices

The court receives about 8,000 requests for cases a year it chooses which cases it will
see and on average sees about 100 cases a year.
Appointing Federal Judges

The President nominates Federal Judges and then the Senate must approve this

When nominating a Federal Judge a President takes 4 factors into consideration:

Legal expertise- Most Judges are trained, experienced lawyers

Party Affiliation- Presidents generally prefer Judges from their political party so they will
share the same political views as he does.

Judges Judicial Philosophy- Generally this falls back on Judicial restraint (Interpret the
Constitution as it was intended, more conservative) as opposed to Judicial Activism
(The Judge can adapt the original meaning in the constitution to make the ruling fit to
contemporary realities.)

Approval of the Senate - Presidents consult and respect the decision of Senators on
nominations because they have the power to block any nomination from happening .
Checks and balances

The Judicial Branch has a big role in the nations checks and balances system by
way of Judicial Review (determining if any action is Constitutional or
Unconstitutional.

Judicial Review was established in 1803 in the Marbury v. Madison Case

While Judges may have life terms Congress can Impeach a Judge

The other check is that Congress can make an unconstitutional item constitutional
by way of making an amendment

Judges have lifetime terms so they will be free to do their job with no political
agenda

They also may not have their pay reduced during their term for the same reasons
Section 2
LOWER
FEDERAL COURTS
Federal district courts

District Courts are the lowest tier on the court system

There are 94 federal court districts

Cases involving residents of different states or cases between the
United States and a foreign government

Civil offenses or cases that involve Civil Rights

Criminal offenses which can be anything seen as criminal

In a serious criminal case the case goes before a grand jury and
they decide whther it is worthy of filing criminal charges before it
goes to the courts

Bankruptcy is a federal case as well that deals with when a person
cannot pay what they owe to a person
Federal district courts

Judges are the primary person in any case and they preside over the trial

Magistrate judges oversee early hearings of a criminal case during routine
matters of the case and they may hear all misdemeanor cases (minor
offenses.)

The clerk in the court takes care of all judicial jobs (maintaining records,
handling money received, and overseeing jury recruitment)
Federal district courts

Each court has 1 district attorney which their job is to represent the United
States Government in all matters

The DA and assistant Da are employees of the US department of Justice

US attorneys are appointed by the president and serves a 4 year term

Public defenders are provided to people in court who cannot afford to hire
an attorney for themselves

Each court has a US Marshall who is responsible for protection at federal
courthouses and they transport prisoners, track down and arrest people,
and provide protection for witnesses
Federal court of appeals

The middle tier of federal courts is the court of appeals

There are 13 court of appeals in America

There job is to hear cases that are on appeal from district courts

These courts hear about 65,000 cases a year

Criminal cases are filed by a defendant who was found guilty the
federal government cannot appeal a “not guilty” charge

Civil cases either side can appeal the ruling

Appeals are rarely overturned only 9% were overturned in 2009
Federal court of appeals

Most appeals are heard by a randomly selected panel of 3 circuit
judges

No new evidence is allowed only briefs (written arguments) from the
original case

Generally this court is the final say in a case, sometimes they may
send the case back to the original court in order to hear other issues

1982 Congress created the Court of appeals for the federal circuit
Other federal courts

U.S. Court of International Trade- deals with import / export laws

U.S. Tax Court- Deals with tax issues with the IRS

U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims- Issues with military
veterans benefits or other matters with them.

U.S. Court of Federal Claims- Issues where claims against the
government for more than $10,000
Other federal courts

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Services- Court-martials are heard when a
military person breaks the military code in this court

National Security Courts- There are 2 courts in this branch that deal wit the
protection of US citizens.


Intelligence Surveillance Court- (1978) deals with government spying operations on
American soil

Alien Terrorist Removal Court- (1996) deals with removal of potential terrorists from the
country
Military Commissions- tries people suspected of being “enemy combatants” of the
United States. The case Hamdan v. Rumsfield (2006) tried the legality of this court
which forced the President and Congress to change the rules of this court
Section 3
The
Supreme Court
Highlights of Supreme Court History

Alexander Hamilton wrote extensively in The Federalist about the
federal Judiciary and the powers of the Supreme Court.

He stated the Judiciary branch was the “weakest of the 3” but he
saw the critical role the Judicial branch had in Judicial Review
Chief Justice John Marshall

In 1801 John Marshall was appointed Supreme Court Chief Justice

He was a Federalist and he served for 34 years

He made the Judicial Branch equal to the Executive and Legislative Branch

He dealt with the Marbury v. Madison in 1803 which asserted the Courts
powers of Judicial Review
Chief Justice John Marshall

The case dealt with out going President John Adams appointment
of William Marbury as Justice of the Peace

In coming President Thomas Jefferson ordered Secretary of State
James Madison not to deliver Marbury’s commission

Marshall ruled in favor of Jefferson

This declared the courts right to review material in Judicial Review
and declared parts of the Judiciary Act of 1789 Unconstitutional
Chief Justice John Marshall

He also ruled in McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) – this case made the
necessary and proper clause a powerful mechanism for the courts

Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) was another important case that helped
regulate interstate commerce
Dred Scott

Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) was an important case under Chief
Justice Roger Taney which ruled in favor of states rights and slavery
and denied Dred Scott and his wife the right to be free even though
they had lived in a free state for a time

This case was one issue that helped lead to the Civil War
Civil Rights

Following the Civil War the main rights dealt with in the courts were
Civil Rights of freed slaves and Economic regulations

They dealt with the 13th , 14th, and 15th Amendments (Civil War
amendments)

Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) the courts ruled in favor of Ferguson and
ruled people of different races could be separate but equal.

Meaning segregation was legal
Courts and the New Dea l

The court dealt with many cases from 1899-1937 and clashed with
Presidents on economic regulation as it viewed it as an assault on
property rights

The Court declared some of FDR’s New Deal programs
unconstitutional

In time FDR reshaped the courts to more of a liberal type of court
1950’s – Present

Chief Justice Earl Warren was the height of the liberal era and was
Judicial Activist

He served from 1953 – 1969 and was over the JFK assassination deal

Brown v. Board of Topeka, Kansas (1954) – desegregation of public
schools

Gideon v. Wainwright (1963) and Miranda v. Arizona (1966) –
expanded the rights of people accused of crimes

Tinker v. Des Moines (1969) – schools could not prevent students
from protesting the Vietnam War

The Warren Court halted prayers in schools
Choosing Supreme Court Justices

Presidents use the same criteria in choosing a Supreme Court Justice
as they do a Federal Judge

There are no formal requirements listed in the Constitution but all
have had extensive law backgrounds

After being nominated the candidate goes to a confirmation
hearing in front of the Senate Judiciary committee where they are
intensely scrutinized before being approved
Supreme Court Procedures

Their term begins each year on the 1st Monday in October and
remains in session until June or July

Each session is blocked into 2 week intervals

1st block they sit and listen to the proceedings and then the next
block they go behind closed doors and review the information to
make a ruling
Supreme Court Procedures

The Supreme Court hears very few cases most are appeals

A person asks the court to issue a writ of certiorari (a request to
review a lower courts results)

If this is denied the ruling of the lower court is final

If selected it goes on the courts docket (list of cases)

They read briefs of the cases and get statements from amicus
(friends of the court)

Each lawyer has 30 minutes to present their case to the court
Opinions

After hearing the arguments then going to a closed room and
discussing the case the court justices produce a formal written
opinion on the case

The opinion displays the reason for the courts decision

Majority opinion – signed by at least 5 of the 9 justices

Concurrent Opinion – agree with the conclusion of the case but
suggest different legal action on the case

Dissenting Opinion – opinion that is held by the minority of the
justices that does not agree with the ruling of the case.
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