What is the source of the judicial powers of the federal government?
Article III, Section 1 of the US Constitution establishes the that judicial power of the United States shall be in ‘one Supreme Court and such inferior courts as the Congress from time to time ordain and establish.”
Article III courts are independent of Congress, the president and politics. There are specialized courts established under article I, they are separate and not necessarily so privileged.
What is the scope of US Judicial Power?
Art III Sec 2 of the Constitution states that the jurisdiction of the federal courts are limited to specific cases and controversies. There are 7 enumerated jurisdictional areas:
When it comes to the scope of federal judicial powers, there are 7 enumerated jurisdictional areas. Are there any un-enumerated powers?
yes, the judiciary has the power to review an act of another branch of the government or a state court and declare it unconstitutional (as est. in Marburg and Hunter’s Lessee).
The federal judiciary also has the power under the supremacy clause to review state actions (like court decisions, statutes and exec orders) in order to make sure that they conform with the Constitution, laws and treaties of the US under Fletcher v Peck.
What are the limitations on the federal judicial powers?
The Eleventh Amendment is a jurisdictional bar that prohibits citizens of one state from suing another state in federal court. It immunizes the state from suits for money damages or equitable relief when the sate is a defendant in an action brought by a citizen of another state or a foreign country. Although state officials may be enjoined from violating federal law, the Eleventh amendment bars suits against state officials for violating STATE law.
The Supreme Court has also expanded the scope of the Eleventh Amend to preclude citizens from suing their own state in federal court AND federal law actions brought against a state govt without the state’s consent in its own courts as violation of sovereign immunity.
What actions are NOT barred by either the Eleventh Amend or the Sovereign Immunity Doctrine?
A suit brought by a citizen against a state in the courts or another state. (Nevada v hall)
what are the exceptions to the general Eleventh Amend rule?
what actions are not barred by the Eleventh Amend?
What is the original Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court?
The Supreme Court has original and appellate jurisdiction.
Original: Art III Sec 2 gives the SC original Jed over “all cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls and those in which a state shall be a party.” (Marbury) Congress may not expand or limit this jdx, though it may grant concurrent original jdx to lower federal courts.
What is the Appellate Jdx of the Supreme Court?
Art III Sec 2 of the Constitution provides that ‘in all other cases [than original] before mentioned, the SC shall have appellate jdx…with such exceptions, and under such regulations as the Congress shall make.”
What are the two ways to establish appellate jdx in the Supreme Court?
What are the limitations to the Supreme Court’s appellate jdx?
Congress has some power to limit the Supreme Court’s appellate jdx under Ex Parte McCardle. However, there are limits because to deny access or jdx would undermine the Constitution’s scheme of checks and balances.
Also, the SC may not review a final state-court judgment that rests upon adequate and independent state grounds (or could, but it would be advisory). The state-law grounds only applies if the ruling is adequate (fully resolved) and independent (not incorporate a federal standard by reference). If there is any question, the SC may review, resolve the federal issue and then remand back to the state court so they can resolve the state issue.
What makes a case justiciable in federal court?
Standing, Timing and other issues of justifiability may dictate whether a case may be heard in federal court
what is standing in the context of the jurisdiction of the federal courts?
Art. III Sec 2 restricts the jdx of the federal courts to ‘cases’ and ‘controversies.’ A federal court cannot decide a case unless the plaintiff has standing, or a concrete interest in the outcome, to bring it.
Note: congress cannot abolish the standing requirement and allow citizen suits, but it can establish new interests, the injury of which can establish standing.
What is the general rule on standing in bringing a case to a federal court?
To have standing, a Plaintiff bears the burden of establishing three elements:
The above three basics are the Art. III requirements. In addition to the Art III requirements, the federal judiciary has also established a prudential standing requirement: that a plaintiff is also the ‘proper’ party to invoke a judicial resolution. Whether or not a P is the proper party depends on large part on whether the P’s grievance comes within the ‘zone of interests’ protected or regulated by the law/constitutional protection in question.
What is the definition of causation for purposes of standing?
The injury must be caused by the defendant’s violation of a constitutional or other federal right.
Further, the injury must be fairly traceable to the challenged action (kind of same as above)
What is the definition of redressibility in context of standing?
The relief requested must prevent or redress the injury. Further, it must be likely, as opposed to speculative, that a favorable court decision will redress a discrete injury suffered by the P.
What is the definition of injury in fact for purposes of standing/federal jurisdiction?
An injury must be
Notes:
Must be individualized. It can be shared by many, but not by all/generalized.
The injury need not be physical or economic. General harm to the environment does not confer standing, but harmful affects to recreation or even mere esthetic interests does.
Future injuries must be actual and imminent, and can only be redressed by injunction, not damages.
In the context of standing to bring a case before a fed court, what status does the taxpayer have?
Usually a taxpayer does not have the standing to file a federal lawsuit just because he/she believes that the government has allocated funds in an improper way. However, he or she may litigate their tax bill.
ALSO: a taxpayer has standing when the taxpayer challenges governmental expenditures as violating the establishment clause.
What are the exceptions to the general rule that a taxpayer doesn’t have standing?
In the context of standing to file a federal lawsuit, what is the general rule and exceptions on third-party standing?
A litigant generally has no standing to bring a suite based on legal claims of a third party. There are a few notable exceptions:
The court may refuse to hear any case on prudential-standing grounds; third party standing is one kind of prudential/discretionary consideration.
In the context of third-party standing to bring a federal suit, when does an organization have standing
Organizational standing exists when it has suffered an injury In addition, an organization may bring an action on behalf of its members (even if the org has not suffered an injury itself) if:
(Hunt v State apple advertising community)
When damages are sought, generally neither the claim asserted nor the relief requested can require the participation of individual members in the lawsuit. But note that the damages limitation is not constitutionally mandated and can be waived by congress.
In the context of third-party standing to bring a suit in federal court, when does a parent have standing?
A parent generally has standing to bring an action on behalf of the parent’s minor child. However, after a divorce, the right may be limited to only one parent.
Further, when the right to bring such a action is based on family-law rights that are in dispute, the federal courts should not entertain an action if prosecution of the lawsuit would have an adverse effect on the child. (Non-custodial parent couldn’t bring a suite on behalf of daughter in face of co-parent’s opposition EVEN WHEN they had joint legal custody.
In the context of standing to bring a federal suit, when does an assignee have standing to enforcer he rights of an assignor?
An assignee of a claim has standing to enforce the rights of the assignor, even with the assignee is contractually obligated to return any litigant proceeds to the assignor (like for collection), provided the assignment was for ordinary business purposes and was in good faith.
In the context of standing to bring a federal claim, do mere ‘citizens’ have standing?
No. Citizens do not have standing to assert a claim to enforce a constitutional provision merely because they are citizens. A citizen may bring an action against the gov’t to compel adherence to a specific federal statute, but the P must still have directly suffered an injury in fact.