the supreme court in action chapter 16, theme c. figure 16.2: the jurisdiction of the federal courts

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The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C

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Page 1: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

The Supreme Court in Action

Chapter 16, Theme C

Page 2: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Page 3: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

The Supreme Court in Action

• Most cases arrive through a writ of certiorari or cert. Rule of 4 applies to get cert! Do not have to give reason-See recent exception!

• Lawyers then submit briefs that set forth the facts of the case, summarizes the lower court decision, gives the argument of that side of the case, and discusses other issues. Many interest groups “lobby” the court with amicus briefs.

• Oral arguments are given by lawyers after briefs are submitted. Each side has 30 minutes.

• Example: Oral Arguments before Court on Snyder v. Phelps

Page 4: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

The Supreme Court in Action

• Conference held on Fridays.• The Chief Justice speaks first, then in

order of seniority. Purpose?• The least tenured votes first, then in

reverse order of seniority. Purpose?• No one is ever allowed in the conference

room except Justices. Purpose?• After voting, the opinion writing is

assigned. Who does this & how?

Page 5: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Kinds of Court Opinions

• Per curiam: brief and unsigned

• Opinion of the court: majority opinion

• Concurring opinion: agrees with the ruling of the majority opinion, but modifies the supportive reasoning

• Dissenting opinion: minority opinion

• See example of TX v. Johnson case.

Page 6: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Why Opinions are important

• Generally follow policy of stare decisis.– Advantages? Consistency, control of cases– Disadvantages? Lower Cts. Set precedents,

predictability

• Opinions give rationale of Court’s thinking• When they “break with a precedent” the

new opinion is a guide to the lower courts.• Dissenting opinions may be used as a

precedent in reversing prior decisions.

Page 7: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Example

• Get into groups of 3-5 (Need an odd number).

• Choose a chief justice.

• Read the cases in order on the Symbaloo board.

• Discuss the case in conference.

• Write opinions.

• Do whole class discussion. Read opinions.

Page 8: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Basic Biographical Information

• Review the bios of the nine Supreme Court Justices

• Try and determine if the Justice is conservative or liberal…what factor makes it the most obvious?

• Other factors?

Page 9: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Chief Justice John Roberts

• Harvard Law

• Law clerk for Rehnquist

• Associate Counsel to Reagan

• US Court of Appeals for D.C.

• Nominated Chief Justice by Pres. Bush 2005

Page 10: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Antonin Scalia• Harvard Law

• Law Professor UVA, Georgetown, Stanford

• U.S. Court of Appeals for D.C.

• Nominated Associate Justice by Pres. Reagan in 1986

Page 11: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Anthony Kennedy• Harvard Law

• Chaired the Committee on Pacific Territories

• U.S. Court of Appeals Ninth Circuit

• Nominated Associate Justice by Pres. Reagan 1988

Page 12: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Clarence Thomas• Yale Law• Asst. Attorney General of Missouri • Asst. Sec. for Civil Rights, U.S. Dept. of

Ed.• Chairman EEO Commission• Nominated Associate Justice by Pres.

Bush 1991

Page 13: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Ruth Bader Ginsberg• Harvard and Cornell Law School• Law Professor at Rutgers, Columbia• 1971 - Launched the Women’s Rights

Project of the ACLU• ACLU General Counsel and Board of

Directors• Nominated Associate Justice by Pres.

Clinton in 1993

Page 14: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Stephen Breyer• Harvard Law

• Assistant Special Prosecutor of the Watergate Special Prosecution Force

• U.S. Court of Appeals First Circuit

• Nominated Associate Justice by Pres. Clinton 1994

Page 15: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Samuel Alito• Yale Law

• U.S. Attorney New Jersey

• U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

• Nominated Associate Justice by Pres. Bush 2006

Page 16: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Sonia Sotomayor• Yale Law

• Professor of Law at NYU School of Law and Columbia Law School

• U.S. Court of Appeals Second Circuit

• Nominated Associate Justice by Pres. Obama in 2009.

Page 17: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Elena Kagan• Harvard Law

• Professor at University of Chicago Law School, Dean of Harvard Law

• Asst. White House Counsel to Clinton

• Solicitor General of the US

• Nominated Associate Justice by Pres. Obama 2010

Page 18: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Assignment• Research at least 5 rulings from last term

and compile a paragraph explaining whether your assigned justice is a judicial activist or strict constructionist.

• Use Symbaloo board link to Oyez.• http://www.oyez.org/cases/2012• Finish chapter 16. Take notes on activism

pros/cons, checks on judiciary, & reforms.• Due Tuesday!

Page 19: The Supreme Court in Action Chapter 16, Theme C. Figure 16.2: The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts

Sources:

• http://www.abanet.org/publiced/preview/scprimer.pdf

• http://www.supremecourtus.gov/about/biographiescurrent.pdf

• http://supreme.lp.findlaw.com/supreme_court/justices/presjustices.html

• http://www.wikipedia.org/