BEATRIZSANTILLANES | CHAPTER 9 Flashcards

CHAPTER 9 VOCABULARY

1
Q

LAME DUCK

A

D: An executive or legislature during the period just before the end of a term of office, when its power and influence are considered to be diminished.

S: The president nominated a lame duck to head commision.

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2
Q

JURISDICTION

A

D: Authority vested in a particular court to hear and decide the issues in a particular case.

S: Since the crime took place in China, the Chinese government has jurisdiction of the case.

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3
Q

ORIGINAL JURISDICTION

A

D: The jurisdiction of courts that hear a case first, usually in a trial. These courts determine the facts of a case.

S: The court has original jurisdiction over a small number of cases.

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4
Q

APPELLATE JURISDICTION

A

D: The power vested in particular courts to review and/or revise the decision of a lower court.

S: Congress may limit the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court even in constitutional cases.

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5
Q

FEDERALIST NO. 78

A

D: A Federalist Papers essay authored by Alexander Hamilton that covers the role of the federal judiciary, including the power of judicial review.

S: In the Federalist No. 78 Alexander Hamilton said that the Judiciary branch was the weakest branch.

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6
Q

JUDICIARY ACT OF 1789

A

D: Legislative act that established the basic three-tiered structure of the federal court system.

S: With the Judiciary Act of 1789, the Supreme Court was established with six members.

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7
Q

JOHN JAY

A

D: A member of the Founding generation who was the first Chief Justice of the United States. A diplomat and a co-author of The Federalist Papers.

S: John Jay was a founding one of the founding fathers.

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8
Q

WHISKEY REBELLION

A

D: A civil insurrection in 1974 that was put down by military force by President George Washington, thereby confirming the power of the new national government.

S: He had fought in the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania and then entered the army.

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9
Q

CHISHOLM V. GEORGIA (1793)

A

D: A Supreme Court case that allowed U.S. citizens to bring a lawsuit against states in which they did not reside; overturned by the Eleventh Amendment in 1789.

S: The Chisholm v. Georgia was a 4 to 1 decision.

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10
Q

ELEVENTH AMENDMENT

A

D: An amendment adopted in 1789 protecting states from being sued in federal court by a citizen of a different state or country.

S: The eleventh amendment serves as a protection for the states.

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11
Q

JOHN MARSHALL

A

D: The longest-serving Supreme Court chief justice, Marshall served from 1801 to 1835. Marshall’s decision in Marbury v. Madison (1803) established the principle of judicial review in the United States.

S: John Marshall is a major aspect of the United States history.

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12
Q

JUDICIAL REVIEW

A

D: Power of the courts to review acts of other branches of government and the states.

S: During the judicial review, former cases were cited to help the judge make a decision.

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13
Q

MARBURY V. MADISON (1803)

A

D: Case in which the Supreme Court first asserted the power of judicial review by finding that part of the congressional statute extending the Court’s original jurisdiction was unconstitutional.

S: A writ of mandamus was written in the Marbury v. Madison case.

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14
Q

TRIAL COURT

A

D: Court of original jurisdiction where cases begin.

S: I cannot accept the reasoning that led the trial court to its decision.

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15
Q

APPELLATE COURT

A

D: Court that generally reviews only findings of law made by lower courts.

S: The appellate court affirmed the judgement of the lower court.

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16
Q

CONSTITUTIONAL (OR ARTICLE III) COURTS

A

D: Federal courts specifically created by the U.S. Constitution or by Congress pursuant to its authority in Article III.

S: Constitutional courts were created by the Judiciary Act of 1789.

17
Q

LEGISLATIVE COURTS

A

D: Courts established by Congress for specialized purposes, such as the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims.

S: Examples of legislative courts are the Court of Claims and U.S. Tax Court.

18
Q

BRIEF

A

D: A document containing the legal written arguments in a case filed with a court by a party prior to a hearing or trial.

S: He discovered that the agreement, far from being in accordance with the papal Brief, was in direct opposition to it.

19
Q

PRECEDENT

A

D: A prior judicial decision that serves as a rule for settling subsequent cases of a similar nature.

S: The description is so redolent of history as to be a constitutional precedent in itself.

20
Q

STARE DECISIS

A

D: In court rulings, a reliance on past decisions or precedents to formulate decisions in new cases.

S: But the Democrats’ loyalty to the principle of stare decisis is highly selective.

21
Q

SENATORIAL COURTESY

A

D: A process by which presidents generally allow senators from the state in which a judicial vacancy occurs to block a nomination by simply registering their objections.

S: The truth is, that on this occasion, had senatorial courtesy been on the job, it would have worked for a final vote.

22
Q

SANDRA DAY O’CONNOR

A

D: An Associate Justice of the Supreme Court from 1981-2005 who was appointed by President Ronald REagan as the first woman to serve on the Court.

S: Sandra Day O’Connor being the first woman to serve on the Court is a powerful move.

23
Q

ELENA KAGAN

A

D: An Associate Justice of the Supreme Courts, appointed by President Barack Obama in 2009 while she was serving as solicitor general in his administration.

S: On this matter of marriage existing for the purpose of procreation, Elena Kagan delivered the question of the day.

24
Q

WRIT OF CERTIORARI

A

D: A request for the Supreme Court to order up the records from a lower court to review the case.

S: They want the Supreme Court to overturn the decision and have submitted a petition for a writ of certiorari.

25
Q

RULE OF FOUR

A

D: At least four justices of the Supreme Court must vote to consider a case before it can be heard.

S: Under the rule of four, the petition for a writ of certiorari will be granted.

26
Q

SOLICITOR GENERAL

A

D: The fourth-ranking member of the Department of Justice; responsible for handling nearly all appeals on behalf of the U.S. government to the Supreme Court.

S: After more objections from the Attorney-General and Solicitor General, the Court held the witness’s testimony inadmissible.

27
Q

AMICUS CURIAE

A

D: “Friend of the court”; amici may file briefs or even appear to argue their interests orally before the court.

S: Appellate courts may also grant permission for an amicus curiae to submit a brief in support of a particular party or position.

28
Q

PLURALITY OPINION

A

D: A type of judicial opinion, the reasoning of which is agreed to by fewer than a majority of judges on a court; although it resolves the particular case, the opinion does not establish a binding precedent.

S: This was a plurality opinion, but on this point she commanded a majority of votes on the court.

29
Q

CONCURRING OPINION

A

D: A type of judicial opinion issued by a minority of judges on a court who agree with the outcome of a case, but wishes to express different legal reasoning.

S: It is interesting to note that a concurring opinion was filed.

30
Q

DISSENTING OPINION

A

D: A type of judicial opinion issued by a minority of judges on a court who disagree with the outcome of a case and wish to explain their legal reasoning.

S: While only the majority opinion is considered precedential, an outvoted judge can still publish a dissenting opinion.

31
Q

JUDICIAL RESTRAINT

A

D: A philosophy of judicial decision making that posits courts should allow the decisions of other branches of government to stand, even when they offend a judge’s own purposes.

S: Courts following these guidelines exercise judicial restraint.

32
Q

JUDICIAL ACTIVISM

A

D: A philosophy of judicial decisions making that posits judges should use their power broadly to further justice.

S: These statutory changes took place in a period of judicial activism in this area which had relaxed the law.

33
Q

STRICT CONSTRUCTIONIST

A

D: An approach to constitutional interpretation that emphasizes interpreting the Constitution as it was originally written and intended by the Framers.

S: The City has used strict constructionist criteria in deciding which large projects were included in analysis of reasonably projects.

34
Q

JUDICIAL IMPLEMENTATION

A

D: How and whether judicial decisions are translated into actual public policies affecting more than the immediate parties to a lawsuit.

S: The controversy between judicial activism and judicial restraint is still heavily debated.