Judicial Power Flashcards

1
Q

Which Article do Federal Judicial Power come from?

A

Article 3

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2
Q

Federal courts can only hear a matter if there is:

A

A “case or controversy” aka Justiciability

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3
Q

In federal court, standing requires

A

a concrete stake in the outcome

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4
Q

List (4), RASP

Whether there is justiciability/ “case or controversy” depends on?

A
  1. R: Ripeness/mootness
  2. A: No advisory opinion - opinion issued by ct that advises on the constitutionality or interpretation of a law
  3. S: Standing
  4. P: Not a political question - issue constitutionally committed to another branch of gov’t
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5
Q

list (2)

What is a political question

A

involves an issue that the Constitution has

  1. committed to another branch of the government -OR-
  2. the issue is inherently incapable of judicial resolution and enforcement.
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6
Q

What are advisory opinions

A

Court’s non-binding opinion on a legal question from legislators, govt officials, or another court.

ex: Parties seek AOs to gauge odds of winning a potential lawsuit to avoid $$$.

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7
Q

Can federal courts issue advisory opinions?

A

Federal courts cannot issue advisory opinions

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8
Q

List (2)

When a decision is said to be an advisory opinion this means that?

A
  1. decision lacks an actual dispute btwn adverse parties -OR-
  2. decision lacks any legally binding effect on the parties
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9
Q

What is ripeness?

A

The “readiness” of a case for litigation

Think: the facts of the case have ripened in order to need judicial intervention

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10
Q

Are pre-enforcement (law/policy not yet enforced) review of laws or policies ripe for SCOTUS?

A

NO

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11
Q

List (2)

How can a P establish ripeness before law/policy enforced?

A
  1. The issue is fit for a judicial decision
  2. The P will face substantial hardship in absence of review
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12
Q

If the facts of the case continue to injure the P, then the case is:

A

NOT moot and thus passes step 2 for judicial review

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13
Q

list (3)

Exceptions to mootness (claim not moot)

A
  1. Controversy/Injury capable of repetition but evades review
    1. prego woman challenges abortion restriction delivers her baby → not moot b/c injury/pregnancy can happen again)
  2. D voluntarily stop offending practice but free to resume
    1. strip club owner retires because city sought to shut club down but owner could reopen after case is dismissed
  3. Class actions where the classes controversy is moot but one member’s action still viable
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14
Q

Standing is about:

A

WHO can bring a lawsuit

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15
Q

“RIC”

To establish standing, P needs:

A

Concrete, direct, and personal stake by establishing

  1. Redressability - Favourable decision remedies the injury
  2. Injury in fact (suffered an injury)
  3. Causation
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16
Q

Standing; list (2)

How is injury in fact shown?

A
  1. particularized injury - an injury that will affect P in a personal and individual way
  2. concrete injury - injury that actually exists (not hypothetical)
17
Q

Standing; list (2)

What types of cases are not viable injuries

A
  1. A citizen suing to force the gov’t to obey the law
  2. A taxpayer suing the gov’t on how it spends tax dollars
18
Q

List (3)

exceptions to standing

A
  1. Challenging tax liability - person has standing to challenge their tax bill
  2. 10th A - may** have standing to show that a federal action violates 10th A, need to show **redressable injury in fact
  3. Congressional spending - challenge only congressional/legislative spending measures on a 1st A Establish Clause basis
19
Q

Standing + 💡TIP

When must injury occur

A

Already occurred or will imminently occur

💡 TIP: in a suit for pre-enforcement relief, see if there is likelihood of future harm

20
Q

What is causation

A

Injury is fairly traceable to D

21
Q

What is redressability?

A

Favourable decision remedies the injury

22
Q

One of the requirements for standing in federal court is that a decision in the plaintiff’s favor will eliminate the harm to the plaintiff.

This concept is known as

A

redressability

23
Q

Sovereign immunity

A

private party barred from bringing suit against a state in federal and state courts/agencies

24
Q

Exceptions (5); WALE. BASC

States can be sued if:

A
  1. Waiver - consent to be sued
  2. Action against local gov’ts + entities
  3. Bankruptcy
  4. Against state officials
  5. Congress waives a state’s immunity
25
Q

Adequate and independent state grounds

A

If a state ct decisions rests on state and federal law, and SC reversal of fed law does not change the outcome, the SC cannot hear the case

26
Q

list (2)

Standing to assert rights of others (third parties)

A

Claimant with standing can assert rights on behalf of a 3rd party when

  1. difficult for 3rd party to assert their own rights -OR-
  2. close relationship btwn claimant and 3rd party such that injury suffered by 3rd party results in an indirect violation of the claimant’s rights
27
Q

list (3)

When does an organization have standing

A
  1. injury in fact to the organization’s members
  2. member’s injury related to organization’s purpose -AND-
  3. individual member participation in lawsuit NOT required