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THE JUDICIAL BRANCH: STRUCTURE AND PROCESS

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THE JUDICIAL BRANCH: STRUCTURE AND PROCESS Topic #12 Judicial Review as a Byproduct Because it is exercised by ordinary courts (rather than by a special ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE JUDICIAL BRANCH: STRUCTURE AND PROCESS


1
THE JUDICIAL BRANCHSTRUCTURE AND PROCESS
  • Topic 12

2
Judicial Review as a Byproduct
  • Because it is exercised by ordinary courts
    (rather than by a special constitutional
    court), judicial review in the U.S. does not
    operate in the following fashion
  • Congress passes a law,
  • the President signs the law,
  • the Supreme Court reviews the law in the manner
    of a constitutional court, and then (if it is
    judged to be constitutional)
  • the law goes into effect.
  • Rather, as was illustrated by the case of Marbury
    v. Madison, it operates in the following fashion
  • Congress passes a law (e.g., the Judiciary Act),
  • the President signs the law, and
  • the law goes into effect.
  • The law may subsequently produce a legal case
    (Party A v. Party B) and, in deciding the case
    (e.g., whether someone can be convicted for
    violating the law), courts may have to decide
    whether the law is constitutional.
  • So U.S. courts exercise judicial review as a
    byproduct of deciding concrete cases that come
    before them.
  • However, it is also true that concrete cases may
    be contrived deliberately to test the
    constitutionality of laws.

3
The Federal Compromise Produces a Dual Court
System
4
The Federal Court System
  • Not only the size but also the structure of the
    U.S. court system (particularly at its
    intermediate level) has changed since the
    original Judiciary Act of 1789,
  • as a result of many amendments to the Judiciary
    Act.
  • The size of the Supreme Court has been fixed at
    nine since 1869.
  • The old Circuit Courts have been replaced by U.S.
    Courts of Appeal
  • However, the geographical jurisdictions of these
    intermediate Courts of Appeal are still referred
    to as circuits.
  • In each circuit, appeals Court judges normally
    sit in panels of three.
  • Larger states now contain several U.S. District
    Courts, and
  • each District Court has several judges.
  • A U.S. Attorney is assigned to each Federal
    District Court.

5
(No Transcript)
6
The Federal Court System (cont.)
  • The allocation of original vs. appellate
    jurisdiction in todays federal courts
  • District courts 100 original
  • Courts of Appeal 100 appellate
  • Supreme Court 99.9 appellate, 0.1 original
  • State court cases that raise federal questions
    they may be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
  • As previously noted, state court systems
    typically follow the same three-tiered structure
    as the federal system.

7
The Dual Court System (Resulting from the Federal
Compromise)
8
Types and Names of Cases
  • Original criminal cases (prosecution vs.
    defendant)
  • United States v. John Doe
  • The People State, Commonwealth, etc. v. John
    Doe
  • Original civil cases (plaintiff vs. defendant)
  • Marbury v. Madison
  • Maryland v. McCulloch
  • Plaintiffs and defendants may be either
    governments or private parties
  • Cases appealed to higher court (appellant vs.
    other party)
  • loser v. winner at lower level
  • John Doe v. United States (or state)
  • McCulloch v. Maryland (Topic 17)

9
Appealing Cases to Higher Courts
  • While the SC is primarily an appeals court, it
    can review only a tiny fraction of the cases that
    it might review.
  • Most cases are resolved at the trial (district)
    court level.
  • Most criminal cases are resolved by plea bargain,
    so there is no trial and no appeal.
  • Most criminal defendants who go to trial are
    convicted, but often the case is pretty
    open-and-shut, so there is little basis for
    appeal.
  • If there is a trial and the defendant is found to
    be not guilty, the prosecution cannot appeal.
  • Many civil cases are settled out-of-court before
    trial.
  • But if a civil case goes to trial, the loosing
    party can usually appeal and often does so.
  • Appeals from Federal District Courts to the Court
    of Appeals are fairly automatic if requested.
  • But appeals from the (federal) Courts of Appeal
    or from state Supreme Courts to the SC are rarely
    automatic.

10
Two Routes to Review by the SC
  • Prior to 1925, many cases could be appealed to
    the SC, whose caseload therefore became
    overwhelming.
  • As a result of an amendment to the Judiciary Act
    in 1925, only a few types of cases now qualify
    for a (more or less) automatic review by the SC.
  • e.g., when a lower court has declared a federal
    law to be unconstitutional.
  • Such cases constitute only about 10 of the SC
    case load (10 cases a year).
  • In other cases, the losing party may petition the
    SC for a writ of certiorari, by explaining why
    the SC should review the case
  • If the petition is granted, the SC issues the
    writ to the lower court, ordering it to send up
    the case material for review.
  • About 7,500 such petitions are filed with the SC
    each year, but the SC grants petitions in only
    about 100 or fewer cases a year.
  • Nevertheless, such cases make up about 90 of the
    SCs case load.

11
The Writ of Certiorari (cont.)
  • The SC can use the petition for writ certiorari
    procedure to screen cases for its consideration
    and thereby it can largely control its own
    agenda, i.e.,
  • the SC can pick and choose the cases it will take
    for review.
  • The SC uses the rule of four (4/9 rule) in
    deciding whether grant cert.
  • The SC court is especially likely to grant cert
  • if the case raises important and/or unresolved
    legal issues, or
  • if the lower court(s) have ruled in a way that
    appears to be contrary to precedent and prior SC
    decisions, or
  • if lower courts are following a SC precedent that
    members of the SC now want to reconsider and
    perhaps overrule.
  • Justices who vote to grant cert
  • are rather likely to support the appellant and
    reverse the lower court decision if SC takes the
    case, but
  • there is no guarantee they will so decide.

12
Supreme Court Decision Making
  • Both parties submit written briefs, stating the
    legal arguments that support their positions.
  • Amicus curiae (friend of the court) briefs may
    also be submitted (by the U.S., advocacy groups,
    etc.).
  • Oral argument is scheduled.
  • Time is very limited, usually no more than one
    hour for each side.
  • And justices commonly interrupt the lawyers with
    questions.
  • If the United States is a party in the case, it
    is usually represented by the Solicitor-General.
  • Oral argument is open to the public and the
    press.
  • But it is not open to radio or television (not
    even C-SPAN).
  • Complete transcripts of oral argument are made
    available and recently tape recordings have also
    been released.

13
SC Decision Making The Conference
  • Following oral argument, SC members discuss a
    case and then vote in the SC Conference.
  • Only the justices themselves attend the
    Conference (no clerks, etc.)
  • Conference proceedings are kept totally secret.
  • The conference process remained a mystery until
    about 40 years ago.
  • Justice William Brennan, How the SC Arrives at
    Decisions, NY Times Magazine
  • In its appellate role, SC must either affirm or
    reverse the lower court decision.
  • The Chief Justice first presents his views and
    tentative conclusions, followed by the Associate
    Justices in order of seniority.

14
SC Decision Making The Conference (cont.)
  • Justices then vote in reverse seniority, with the
    Chief Justice casting the final vote.
  • SC decisions are governed by simple majority rule
    (5/9).
  • In the event of a tie (resulting from a vacancy,
    illness, or recusal), the lower court decision is
    affirmed.
  • With a few exceptions (per curium decisions), a
    SC decision is accompanied by a SC opinion
    justifying the decision is written and signed by
    one or more of the justices (e.g., Marbury v.
    Madison).
  • If the Chief votes with the majority, the Chief
    writes the opinion or assigns the task to some
    other justice in the majority.
  • If the Chief votes with the minority, the most
    senior Associate Justice in the majority writes
    the opinion or assigns the task to some other
    justice in the majority.
  • The Chief, who votes last in an open roll call,
    may have a strategic incentive to vote with the
    majority (if the vote is other than 4-4), so as
    to control the writing of the opinion.

15
SC Decision Making The Conference (cont.)
  • The draft opinion is circulated among the
    justices for comments, criticisms, and
    suggestions (especially from the justices in the
    majority).
  • As a result, the draft is usually revised and
    sometimes completely rewritten.
  • Occasionally Justices may switch their votes,
    possibly reversing the previous tentative
    decision and requiring a new written opinion.
  • When the SCs opinion is largely complete,
    justices in the majority and minority may decide
    to write concurring or dissenting opinions,
    respectively.
  • Such opinions do not have the force of law and
    often are written in a less legalistic style than
    the opinion of the Court.
  • The SC then announces its decision and releases
    its opinions (usually for a number of cases
    simultaneously).
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