Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Judical Pwrs Art. 3
- § 1- One supreme Crt; Congress sets
up inferior crts
- § 2-Judical Power over all cases and
controversies involving states, foreign
states, treaties, admiralty/maritime,
fed laws, constitution
Anmerkungen:
- 1. Arise under the Constituion, laws, or US treaties
2 Of Admirality and Maritime Jds
3. In which US is a party
4. Btwn 2 or more states
5. Btwn a state and citizens of anther state
6. Btwn citizens of different states
7. Btwn citizens of the same states claiming lands under grants of diff states8. Btwn a state or citizens thereof and foreign states, citizens or subjects
- Justiciability : dtrms which Cases/Controversies
the court hear and which they dismiss
- Advisory Opinion
- a.The Court will not give an opinion
whether a law is constitutional unless
it arises in a case or controversy
- b. The Court will not issue an
opinion that is outside the
context of a justiciable case or
controversy
- c. In these cases there is no actual dispute
between adverse parties involving the legal relations
of those parties and also the Court’s decision would
only be a non-binding recital of the views of the
Court
- d. The Court can always interpret the
Constitution If two parties are disputing over
the language from the Constitution, the Court
can always hear it
- Ripeness-Often arises when there
is not yet a case or controversy nor
sufficiently imminent injury to P
(controversy is speculative and
remote).
- Imminence
- Injunctive relief
- Factors for analyzing Ripness
Anmerkungen:
-
i. The
probability that the injury/harm will take place is imminent.
ii. Hardship
to a plaintiff if immediate review is denied.
iii. Fitness
of the issues
iv. Does the Court have
all the information that it needs to effectively decide the issue?
v. Is there any reason
the Court should wait for more information, or an actual prosecution before it
decides a case?
vi. Is there any reason
the Court should wait for an actual prosecution?
vii. Abbott Laboratories
v. Gardner
(1967): FDA rule requiring prescription drug advertisements and labels to state
the generic name of the drug; Court didn’t have to wait until actual violation,
all the information about the case was present
- Whether it is likely to happen again
- Mootness - At one point you
had a live controversy, but it’s
not anymore
Anmerkungen:
-
a. If events after the filing of the lawsuit end the plaintiff’s injury, the case must be dismissed as moot
b. A plaintiff must present a live controversy, an ongoing injury at all stages of the federal court proceedings
c. You must have current adversarial parties
d. Means that it’s too late, since any decision made will no longer affect the outcome
- (1) Voluntary cessation of an illegal
activity will not moot a case
Anmerkungen:
-
For this individual student, the case is moot but not other students who may run into the same problem. (this case is capable of repetition)
- (2) Capable of repetition yet
evading review
- (3) You can file as a class
action
- Political Question -allegations of constitutional
violations that the federal courts will not
adjudicat
- Baker v. Carr: 6 part test:
Court refuses case if any of the
6 conditions are met
- 1. Textually Demonstrable
Constitutional Commitment to
another branch (TDCC)
Anmerkungen:
-
• Analyzing TDCC: The House
refused to sit Powell in the Congress because he had diverted House funds. Powell sued arguing that the House could only
exclude him if he failed to meet the requirement in Art. I § 2 (age,
citizenship, and residence) and he met all of these. The House argues: Art. I § 5 says that “each
House shall be the Judge of the…qualifications of its own members” and this
gives the House a TDCC to determine the qualifications for membership. HELD:
This isn’t a Political Question, therefore it’s a justiciable case. Art. I § 5 was at most a grant to Congress of
the right to determine whether the qualifications in Art. I § 2 were met. By excluding him, they did something (imposed
an additional qualification) that wasn’t expressly given to Congress by the
Constitution; therefore the Court could here the case.
• If Congress had expelled
Powell pursuant to Art. I § 5 cl. 2 (you can expel a member for disorderly
behavior with 2/3 vote) then the Court would not here the case because of the
TDCC.
• But if you are Powell’s
lawyer and you want to get around the
TDCC argument, you look for some
ambiguity in the Constitutional Clause.
If you argue that the Court needs to interpret the meaning of “disorderly behavior”, then all the Court
is doing is interpreting the Constitution (something which is within their
traditional role)
TDCC- Senate Impeachment Clause: Art. I § 3 cl. 6 state “Senate shall have the sole Power to try all
Impeachments.” The Senate has the sole
power; there’s a TDCC so the Court must stay out. (it would disturb the separation of powers
otherwise—impeachment is the only way to remove a judge)
- 2. Lack of Standards for
resolving issue
- 3. Unsuitable policy determination
- 4. Separation of powers-lack
of respect for other branches
- 5. Political decisions already made
(comes up on foreign emergencies)
- 6. Multifarious pronouncements by
various departments on one
question
- • Goldwater says there’s
a 3 part test:
- 1. Has text committed
resolution to other branches?
- 2. Would Court have to move
beyond judicial expertise?
- 3. Prudential considerations
(desire to avoid deciding major
controversial issues)
- Standing- whether the plaintiff is the
proper party to bring a matter to the court
for adjudication
Anmerkungen:
-
COURT CREATED PRUDENTIAL LIMITATIONS:
(1) No third party standing
(2) No generalized grievances
(taxpayers can’t litigate merely on their status as
federal taxpayers)
- Injury in Fact- someone who
has been hurt
- (or) Plaintiff must allege and prove that he
has been or will be imminently injured
Anmerkungen:
-
Imminence
is a matter of perception by the individual judges/court and how they define
this (broadly or narrowly) will determine whether there is standing or not
- Causation –depends on the
certainty of redressability (whether
what court does can redress the
injury—also relates to mootness)
Anmerkungen:
- 1.
Plaintiff
must allege proof that the defendant caused the injury so that a favorable court decision is likely to remedy the harm
a.
The core of Article III is a prohibition against the Supreme Court issuing advisory opinions à if the decision will
have no effect than it is simply an advisory opinion
Defendant must actually be the cause of the harm
plaintiff suffered
- No 3rd party standing
- EXCEPTIONS to “no 3rd party standing rule”:
(1) If you have a sufficiently close relationship
with someone else
Anmerkungen:
-
Congress confers the third-party standing
b. Associational standing
i. An association may
litigate on the behalf of its own members in a situation where there is no injury to the association itself but the members themselves would have standing, and as long as individual participation (members must not all have separate claims) by the members is not necessary
- Exceptions: If you have an obstacle that
prevents the third party’s appearing in court.
(Ex. Women who are afraid to litigate their
abortion rights)
- No generalized ggrievances
Anmerkungen:
- 1. Plaintiff must not be suing solely as a citizen or as a tax payer objecting to the actions of the state or federal government
2. Must be litigating something that affects you personally
3. Exception to where tax-payer standing is permitted:
a. Government expenditure of money pursuant to a federal statute has violated the Establishment Clause of the 1st Amendment
- 3. Plaintiff seeking injunctive or
declaratory relief must show a likelihood
of future harm
- Warth v. Seldin (1975) plaintiff must
generally allege a specific “case or
controversy” between herself and the
defendant in order to have standing.
Anmerkungen:
- Plaintiffs claimed that a local zoning ordinance excluded persons of low and moderate income from living in a certain community. Defendants responded by claiming that Plaintiffs lacked standing to bring suit.
- §2 Clause 2-Supreme Court has
original JD over Ambs, pub officials,
state parties
Anmerkungen:
- all Cases affecting
1 Ambassadors
2. All other Public ministers and consuls
3 cases in which a state is a party
Supreme ct has appellate jd in all other cases both as to law and fact , with such exceptions, and under such regulations as the congress shall make, mccardle case.
- Marbury v. Madison (1803)-
Established Judicial review
Anmerkungen:
- William Marbury (Marbury) requested the Supreme Court of the United States (Supreme Court) to issue a Writ of Mandamus ordering the President, Thomas Jefferson (Jefferson) to appoint him Justice of the Peace.
- Marbury has the right to his
commission.
Anmerkungen:
- Chermerinsky p42: Appt is made when the commission was signed by press and commission was complete when Sec of State affixes US seal to it.
- Judicial Remedies agst
Exec: specific duties no
Political Matters
Anmerkungen:
- Chemerinsky p42: ct drew distinction 4 when judiciary could afford relief: Judiciary could provide remedies against the exec when there is a specific duty to a particular person, but not when it is a political matter left to exec discretion
- Judicial Rev (inc mandamus) only
appropriate for ministerial acts where
exec had to perform duties and not
political acts w/in discretion of the exec
Anmerkungen:
- Established pwr to rvw constitutionality
of exec actions
Anmerkungen:
- Chemerinsky p43: Some matters such as whether to veto a bill or who to appoint 4 an office are entirely w/in the president;s discretion and can't be judicially reviewed. But where the exec has a legal duty to act or refrain from acting the fed judiciary can provide a remedy inc writ of mandamus.
- Ct declared it had Orig jd over this case
Chem p43-44
- Fed cts = limited JD: congress can't
enlargen orig JD Chem: p44-45
- Constitution imposes limits gov
powers. chem p 45
- Sup ct has power to decide
constitutionality of laws
- Judges have to take an oath of office that
would be violated if they enforced uncon
laws
- Constitution is the supreme law of
the land
- Ex Parte McCardle
Anmerkungen:
- McCardle, a newspaper editor arrested for writing articles critical of Reconstruction, petitioned the Supreme Court of the United States (United States) for a writ of habeas corpus. McCardle argued the Military Reconstruction Act (the Act) and his prosecution were unconstitutional.
- Court no longer had JD over
McCardle Case
Anmerkungen:
- Congress, by repealing the United State Supreme Court’s (Supreme Court) appellate review of writs of habeas corpus, effectively took jurisdiction over McCardle’s case away from the Supreme Court.
- United States v. Klein (1871)- 1870
statue = Unconstitutional
Anmerkungen:
- The Respondent, Klein (Respondent), brought suit in the United States Court of Claims, seeking compensation for property taken during the Civil War. The Respondent now argues for affirmation on appeal.
- Congress has power to limit the
appellate jurisdiction of the federal
courts
- Congress is not allowed to tell courts
how to rule on cases
- § 2 clause 3-Trial juries 4 all
crimes xcpt impchmnt.
Anmerkungen:
- Trials take place in state where crime was committed. If Crime wasn't committed in a state Congress picks location of trial