Chapter 9 Flashcards
“friend of the court”; briefs that may be sent to support the position of one side or another
amicus curiae
those cases that cannot be resolved under common law precedent
cases of equity
deals with contract issues and tort cases such as negligence and slander and defines the legal rights of individuals
civil laws
based on the legal concept of stare decis, or judicial precedent
common law
courts that were formed to carry out the direction in the constitution so that the courts would exercise their judicial power
constitutional courts
cases that derive from criminal laws passed by the federal and state governments
criminal law
decision that established the precedent that the Supreme Court could rule a state law unconstitutional
Fletcher v Peck
case established the principle that Congress has sole authority over interstate commerce
Gibbons v Ogden
a philosophy of judicial review that results in decisions that overturn precedent
judicial activism
a court that maintains the status quo or mirrors what the other branches of government have established as current policy
judicial restraint
key Senate committee that is responsible for recommending presidential judicial appointments to the full Senate for approval
judiciary committee
John Marshall’s tenure as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, whose leadership resulted in landmark decisions that shifted power to the judiciary and federal government
Marshall Court
case that established the principle that the federal government was supreme over the state
McCulloch v Maryland
cases heard by the Supreme Court that do not come on appeal and that “affect ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, and those in which a State shall be a party”
original jurisdiction
includes constitutional law and administrative law
public law