chapter 11 federal court system. alexander hamilton, federalist 22 “laws are a dead letters...
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CHAPTER 11FEDERAL COURT SYSTEM
Alexander Hamilton, Federalist 22“Laws are a dead letters without courts to expound and define their true meaning and operation”
Article III, Section I“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.”
Article I, Section 8, Clause 9Congress has the expressed power “to constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court.”
DUAL COURT SYSTEM (Federalism)1) National Judiciary
(Federal Court System):
100+ courts
a. Supreme Court
b. Constitutional courts
c. Legislative (Special) courts
2) State Judiciary:
1000s of courts
State courts hear most cases (about 98% of criminal cases in U.S.)
Federal vs. State Courts
FEDERAL COURTSInferior courts (lower than Supreme Court).
TWO TYPES:
1) CONSTITUTIONAL COURTS Hear more cases than “special” courts Created out of Article III power Include 94 District Courts, 12 Circuit Courts of
Appeals, US Court of Appeals for Federal Circuit, US Court of International Trade
AKA “Regular Courts”, “Article III Courts”
FEDERAL COURTS CONTINUED 2) SPECIAL COURTS *Created by Congress to deal with cases arising out of
one of Congress’ expressed powers.
Narrower in focus than “regular” courts.
*AKA “Legislative Courts” or “Article I Courts”
*Includes: US Tax Court; Territorial Courts;
Courts of the District of Columbia;
US Court of Federal Claims;
US Court of Appeals for Armed Forces; US Court of Appeals for Veterans
Claims
Special Courts, continuedUS Court of Federal Claims (you suing the federal
government)
Territorial Courts (land owned by U.S. like Guam)
Courts of the District of Columbia (court for people in D.C.)
US Tax Court (civil cases involving IRS)
US Court of Appeals for Armed Forces (military has own set of laws, so they need their own court – appeals from JAG)
US Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (if a veteran loses a service, this is where they appeal their case – like Agent Orange cases)
JURISDICTIONDefinition of Jurisdiction: A court’s authority to hear a case.
Example: Break a federal law, go to a federal court (robbing a bank).
Example: Break a state law, go to a state court (speeding).
Types of Jurisdiction
1) Exclusive Jurisdiction - cases that can only be heard in Federal Courts.
Federal Crimes
Examples: cases involving foreign ambassadors, bank robbery, counterfeiting, kidnapping, presidential assassination, killing a police officer, destroying a mailbox, etc.
Types of Jurisdiction(Exclusive Jurisdiction continued)
Cases that involve Federal laws or acts of Congress
Example: violations of patents and copyrights.
Types Of Jurisdiction, continued2) Concurrent Jurisdiction – cases can be
tried in either federal or state court.
Common type:“Diverse Citizenship” –dispute involving citizens of different states.
Federal District Courts may hear these if over $75,000 is involved.Defendant can have the trial moved from the Plaintiff’s state to a federal district court. (Example: Property dispute between people
from different states.)
CHRONOLOGY of Jurisdiction1) Original jurisdiction - court where case is 1st
heard. (District Courts are “point of entry”)
2) Appellate jurisdiction – court where case is heard 2nd or more times (on appeal from lower court.)
JurisdictionOf the Federal Courts –
1. U.S Supreme court has original and appellate
2. U.S Appeals courts have appellate
3. U.S District courts have original
US Supreme Court
9 JusticesD.C.
Fewest cases (80-150/year)
Original and appellate
US Courts of Appeals12 Circuit Courts
3 judge panelAppellate jurisdiction
US District Courts94 Courts Most cases
Original Jurisdiction Judge and jury
Jury types: grand – indicts petit - determines guilt or innocence
APPOINTING JUDGESSupreme Court appointment process:
Article II, Section II, Clause II says that “the President shall nominate and by and with the advice and consent of the Senate shall appoint…Judges of the Supreme Court.”
Appointing Judges, Continued Senator(s) of President’s party from state that
needs federal judge(s) will be asked to recommend candidates.
Senatorial Courtesy – President will typically appoint senator’s 1st choice. A nomination opposed by the affected state’s senators will not be confirmed by the Senate.
TERM and SALARYTerm on Constitutional Courts – LIFE Until judge resigns, retires, or dies Can be removed through impeachment (13 impeached, 7
of them removed)
Salary is set by Congress and can not be decreased during their term in office.
(A Supreme Court Justice’s salary is comparable to U.S. Senators,
Representatives, and the Vice President.)
Court Officers Clerks, bailiffs, court reporters,
stenographers, probation officers, others
US Magistrates – officers of the court who are appointed to 8-year terms to handle arrest warrants, set bail, and generally reduce the workload for the judges
Court OfficersUS Attorney for each Federal District President nominates and Senate approves They are the government’s prosecutors (lawyers) Work with the FBI, bring to trial people charged
with federal crimes Represent government in all civil actions brought by
or against the government in their district 4-year term The United States is the prosecutor in federal
criminal cases--if I break a federal law, it would be U.S. v Flinchum
Court Officers, continuedU.S. Marshall Sent by magistrate to arrest persons for
breaking a federal law or to deliver a warrant for breaking a federal law
Protects the court Deals with riots, mobs, terrorists, etc. 4-year term
Layout of Courtroom
THE INFERIOR COURTSCourts below the Supreme Court
DISTRICT COURTS Approximately 632 judges Handle about 300,000 cases a year Created by Congress in the Judiciary Act
of 1789 Currently 94 district courts
Federal Judicial Districts Include at least one district in each State, the
District of Columbia and Puerto Rico Larger, more populous states are divided into
2 or more districts 2 judges assigned to each district (at least) Cases tried in district courts usually heard by
1 judge
DISTRICT COURT JURISDICTION Original jurisdiction Principal trial courts in the federal court
system Criminal cases – when a defendant is tried for
committing some action that Congress has declared by law to be a federal crime
Civil cases – noncriminal matter: bankruptcy, terms of contract, etc.
District Court Cases Bank robbery Mail fraud Counterfeiting Tax evasion Bankruptcy Civil rights
Court of Appeals Created by Congress in 1892 Relieves the Supreme Court of burden of hearing all
appeals Currently 12 courts of appeals (regional circuits) 179 circuit judges KY is 6st Circuit Our district includes MI, OH, TN
U.S. COURTS OF APPEALS
D.CAndFederalCircuit Make 13
Appellate Court Jurisdiction Hear cases on appeals from lower federal courts.
May uphold, overrule, or modify lower court decisions. (about 55,000 cases a year)
Also hear appeals from several federal regulatory
agencies like the Federal Trade Commission or the National Labor Relations Board.
There is no trial—judges look for errors in procedure or law.
Court of International Trade
Created in 1890
9 judges (Panels of 3)
Civil cases arising out of tariff and other trade-related laws
Trials often held at major port cities