Constitutional Law - Federal Power and Federalism Flashcards
The four components of standing are
(1) injury
(2) Causation and redressability
(3) Third party standing
(4) No generalized grievances
The injury component of standing requires that
(1) plaintiffs only assert injuries they have personally suffered
(2) plaintiffs seeking injunctive or declaratory relief must show a likelihood of future harm
The causation and redressability component of standing requires that
the plaintiff allege and prove that the defendant CAUSED the injury so that a favorable court decision is likely to REMEDY the injury
Under third party standing doctrine, there is generally no
third party standing.
The three exceptions to third party standing are
(1) close relationship between P and the injured party (doctor-patient)
(2) the injured third party is unlikely to be able to assert his or her own rights
(3) an organization may sue for its members in some circumstances
An organization has standing to sue on behalf of its members if
(1) the members would have standing to sue
(2) the interests are germane to the organization’s purpose
(3) neither the claim nor the relief requires participation of individual members
Under the “no generalized grievances” rule, a plaintiff
cannot sue sole as a “citizen” or “taxpayer” interested in having the government follow the law.
The exception to the “no generalized grievances” rule for standing is that
taxpayers have standing to challenge government expenditures pursuant to federal (or state and local) statutes as violating the Establishment Clause
The four components of the “case or controversy” requirement are
(1) standing
(2) ripeness
(3) mootness
(4) political question doctrine
Ripeness arises when P asks
a federal court to grant PRE-enforcement review of a statute or regulation.
Ripeness is analyzed by balancing
(1) the hardship that P will suffer without pre-enforcement review
(2) the fitness of the issues and the record for judicial review
A case must be dismissed as “moot” if
events after the filing of a lawsuit end the plaintiff’s injury.
The three exceptions to the mootness component are
(1) wrong capable of repetition but avoiding review
(2) voluntary cessation: D halts the offending conduct but is free to resume it at any time
(3) class action suits
The four “political questions” that courts will not adjudicate are cases involving
(1) the “republic form of government clause”
(2) challenges to the President’s conduct of foreign policy
(3) challenges to the impeachment and removal process
(4) challenges to partisan gerrymandering
The four ways that cases get to SCOTUS are
(1) writ from final judgment by state supreme court
(2) writ from an appeal from US CoA
(3) appeal from decisions by three-judge federal district court panels
(4) original jurisdiction for suits between state governments
Under the “independent state grounds” rule, if
a state court decision rests on two grounds, one state law and one federal law, and SCOTUS’ reversal of the federal law ground will not change the result, SCOTUS cannot hear the case.
The principle of sovereign immunity bars
(1) suits against states in federal court (11th amendment)
(2) suits against states in state courts or federal agencies
The four exceptions to sovereign immunity are
(1) waiver
(2) states can be sued pursuant to federal laws adopted under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment
(3) federal government may sue state governments
(4) bankruptcy proceedings
The rules regarding suits against state officers are that
(1) state officers may be sued for injunctive relief
(1) states officers may be sued for money damages to be paid out of their own pockets
State officers may not be sued if
the state treasury will be paying retroactive damages.
Under abstention,
federal courts may not enjoin pending state court proceedings except in cases of proven harassment or prosecutions taken in bad faith.
The six sources of Congressional power are
(1) Express or implied power
(2) Necessary and proper clause
(3) taxing/spending power
(4) commerce power
(5) Section 5 of the 14th amendment
(2) Badges of slavery under the 13th amendment
Under express/implied powers, Congress can legislate for
MILD - [M]ilitary bases, [I]ndian reservations, Federal [L]ands and territories, Washington [D].C.
Under the taxing/spending power, Congress may
tax and spend for the general welfare.