Federal Judicial Power Flashcards
Overarching federal judiciary power
- As defined by Article III of the Constitution
- All cases and controversies must be justiciable
- No advisory opinions
Requirements for Jusiticiability
- Standing
- Ripeness
- Mootness
- And not a political Question
Requirements for Standing
- Injury in fact
- Causation and Redressability
- No Third Party Standing (exception)
- No Generalized Grievances
Injury (standing)
- Plaintiff must allege and prove that he or she has been injured or will imminently be injured
- cannot be mere idelogical objection
- must be personally suffered
- Those seeking injunctive or declaratory relief must show a likelihood for future harm
Causation & Redressability (standing)
Must allege and prove the defendant caused the injury so a favorable court decision is likely to remedy the harm
If no effect, would be an advisory opinion
Third Party Standing (Standing)
Plaintiff may not assert the claims of others not before the court–> must be personally suffered injuries.
Exceptions to third party standing
- If there is a close relationship between the plaintiff and the injured party which allows the third party to be adequately represented
- Doctor-Patient relationship
- not non-custodial parent
- If the party is unlikely to assert their own rights (e.g. jurors being systematically excluded from juries
- Organization may sure for its members if
- the members would have standing individually
- interests are germane to the organizations purpose
- neither the claim nor releif requires participation of individual members
Bar against generalized grievances
A plainitff cannot sue solely as a citizen or taxpayer interested in having the government follow the law without having suffered personal injury
Exceptions to the bar against generalized grievances
- RELIGION Taxpayers may challenge government expendistures pursuant to federal statutes as violating the establishment clause
- no standing to challenge law granting tax credits to person who contribute to organizations that attend private schools b/c does not involve transfer of government funds
- POWERS RESERVED TO THE STATES: Standing as a citizen to allege that a federal action violates the 10th Amendment by interfering w/ the powers reserved to the states as long as the person can show injury in fact and redressability
Ripeness
- Whether a federal court may grant preenforcement review of a statute or regulation
- The hardship that will be suffered without pre-enforcement review
- Fitness of the issues and the record for judicial review.
Mootness
If events after the filing of a lawsuit ends the Plaintiff’s injury, the case must be dismissed as moot because a plaintiff must present a live controversey, though a non-frivilous money suit may keep the suit alive.
Exceptions to Mootness
- The wrong is capable of repetition but evades review because of its inherently limited time duration
- Voluntary cessation (but could be used again once the controversey is dismissed)
- Class Action suits (as long as someone in the suit was injured)
Political Questions Doctrine
- Constiutional Violations that federal courts will not adjudicate:
- Guarantee clause: guarantee to each state a republican form of government
- Foreign Policy: Challenges to the President’s conduct of foreign policy
- IMpeachment and Removal Process
- Partisan Gerrymandering
How cases reach the Supreme Court
- must meet all justiciability requirements
- Almost all Come by writ of certiori
- All cases from state court
- must have had a final judgment of highest state court
- Cannot be an independent and adequate ground of decision
- All cases from US Court of Appeals
- All cases from state court
- Mandatory for the court to hear appeals of decisions made by a panel of three-federal district court judges
- Original and exclusive jurisdiction over disputes between state governments (mandatory for them to take the case)
Independent and Adequate State Ground of Decision
SCOTUS cannot review a state court decision that rests on an independant or adequate ground of decision
If rests on two grounds, one state and one federal, SCOTUS CANNOT hear it if the reversal of federal law will not change the result in the case.