Chapter 14: The Courts Flashcards

1
Q

Judiciary Act of 1789

A
  • created 6 justices that would meet twice a year
  • created system of federal courts (13 district courts and 3 circuit courts)
  • district courts each had 1 judge, but circuit courts had 2 court justices and 1 district judge
  • section 25 expanding to cases involving conflicts between state and federal law, treaties, or constitution
  • Writs of mandamus (section 13)
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2
Q

writs of mandamus

A

gave court ability to uses orders to a lower court, gov official, or gov agency to perform acts required by law

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3
Q

Midnight Judges Act

A

reduced the # of judges on the supreme court from 6 to 5, preventing Jefferson from nominating 2 judges

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4
Q

longest serving justice of all time

A

John Marshall

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5
Q

Marbury v. Madison

A
  • judicial review (power to strike down a law or executive branch action that it finds unconstitutional
  • section 13 is unconstitutional since it expanded the original jurisdiction of the supreme court
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6
Q

district courts

A
  • workhorses of the federal system (94 districts w/ at least 1 per state)
  • 678 judges handle more than 250,000 cases per year
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7
Q

appeals courts

A
  • hear appeals form district courts

- currently have 11 courts w/ 179 appeals judges and 92 senior judges (MO is 8th district)

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8
Q

supreme court

A

the “court of the last resort” for cases coming from both state and federal courts
-9 justices (has been up to 10 and down to 5)

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9
Q

4 was a case can make it to supreme court:

A

original jurisdiction
cases of appeal
writ of certification
writ of certiorari

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10
Q

original jurisdiction

A

cases involving foreign ambassadors, foreign countries, or cases in which a state is a party

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11
Q

cases of appeal

A

cases in which congress hasn’t determined that they require the court’s attention (not often)

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12
Q

writ of certification

A

cases where an appeals court asks the court for instructions on a point of law never before decided (least common)

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13
Q

writ of certiorari

A

at least 4 of 9 justices agree to hear a case that has reached them via appeal from the losing party in a lower court’s ruling (most common)

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14
Q

court cannot offer advisory opinions on:

A

collusion
standing
mootness
ripeness

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15
Q

collusion

A

the litigants in the case cannot want the same outcome and cannot be testing the law w/o an actual dispute between two parties

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16
Q

standing

A

the litigant must have a personal stake in the outcome; the court ha a lot of discretion in this instance

17
Q

mootness

A

the irrelevance of a case by the time it is received by a federal court, causing the court to decline to hear the case (ex. death penalty)

18
Q

ripeness

A

a criterion that federal courts use to decide whether a case is ready to be heard; a case’s ripeness is based on whether its central issue or controversy has actually taken place

19
Q

Rule 10 says a case is more likely to be heard when:

A
  • there is conflict between appeals court opinions
  • there is a conflict between a federal appeals court and a state supreme court
  • a lower court decision has departed form the accepted and usual course of judicial proceedings
  • the case often involves a substantial federal question that has not yet been addressed by the court
  • a state supreme court or appeals court ruling conflicts w/ supreme court precedent
20
Q

cert pool

A

law clerks screen cases that com ego the supreme court and recommend to the justices which cases should be heard

21
Q

stare decisis

A

the court adheres to the precedent established in previously decided cases (let the decision stand)

22
Q

strict construction

A

justices defer to the original intent of the constitution, meaning when making a decision they consider what the founders meant when writing the text

23
Q

living constitution

A

justices argue strict constructionism can make a nation the prisoner of its past (if bound by text alone. frozen in time)

24
Q

attitudinalist approach

A

most important political factor is justices’ ideology

25
Q

judicial activism

A

the court should assert its interpretation of the law even if it overrules the elected executive and legislative branches of government

26
Q

judicial restraint

A

court should defer to the democratically elected branches of government rathe than contradicting existing laws

27
Q

Lee Epstein

A

2 competing models when it comes to supreme court decisions:
legal model
extralegal model

28
Q

legal model

A

views judges as constrained decision makers who will base there opinions on precedent and will adhere to the doctrine of the state decisis

29
Q

extralegal model

A

makes a distinction between law in books and law in action, behooving judges to adopt the latter

30
Q

solicitor general

A

a presidential appointee in the department of justice who conducts all litigation on behalf of the federal gov before the supreme court supervises litigation in the federal appellate courts

31
Q

partisan election

A

justices run for election and list their partisanship on the ballot

32
Q

nonpartisan elections

A

justices run of election but no part labels are listed on the ballot

33
Q

appointment

A

justices are appointed by either the governor, judicial selection committee, or the state legislature

34
Q

retention elections

A

justices are appointed, then there is a vote at a later date in which the justice is either retained or removed