US Gov Judicial Branch
appeals court
a court whose jurisdiction is to review decisions of lower courts or agencies; not a new trial, checking for trial errors
constitutional court
a federal court authorized by Article III of the Constitution that keeps judges in office during good behavior and prevents their salaries from being reduced. They are the Supreme Court (created by the Constitution) and appellate and district courts created by Congress.
inferior courts
The lower federal courts, beneath the Supreme Court
precedent
a ruling that is used as the basis for a judicial decision in a later, similar case
dissenting opinion
an opinion disagreeing with the majority decision in a Supreme Court ruling; may be looked at in the future
concurring opinion
an opinion that agrees with the majority in a Supreme Court ruling but differs on the reasoning
concurrent jurisdiction
authority for both state and federal courts to hear and decide cases
exclusive jurisdiction
authority of only federal courts to hear and decide cases
treason
levying war against the US; adhering to the enemy; giving aid and comfort to the enemy
court in conference
meeting of the full Court to discuss cases heard in oral arguments; Chief Justice presides
judicial activism
A philosophy of judicial decision making that argues judges should use their power broadly to further justice, especially in the areas of equality and personal liberty.
special courts
Federal courts that hear matters of specialized or limited jurisdiction; ex. Tax Court, Territorial Courts, courts of the District of Columbia
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court
John Roberts
U.S. Magistrates
Judges appointed by U.S. District Court judges to conduct pretrial hearings and trials for minor civil and criminal offenses in Federal Court; 8 year terms
stare decisis
Let the decision stand; decisions are based on precedents from previous cases
majority opinion
Officially called the Opinion of the Court; announces the Court's decision in a case and sets out the reasoning upon which it is based
writ of certiorari
Order by the Supreme Court directing a lower court to send up the records of a case for review
appellate jurisdiction
The authority of a court to review decisions made by lower courts
Supreme Court jurisdiction
cases involving officials of other nations and cases involving states
federal court jurisdiction
deal with cases involving US laws, treaties with foreign nations, or interpretations of the Constitution, ambassadors, maritime laws, between states
briefs
documents setting out the arguments in legal cases, prepared by attorneys and presented to courts
rule of 4
four or more justices must vote to hear a case, then the case will be heard (granted certiorari)
Supreme Court
highest Federal court
Court of Appeals
highest court in Maryland
Solicitor General
the Justice Department officer who argues the government's cases before the Supreme Court; decides what cases the fed gov wants the Supreme Court to review and what it's position will be
jurisdiction
the authority of a court to hear a case
original jurisdiction
the authority to hear cases for the first time
trial court
the first court to hear a criminal or civil case; consider evidence and make judgments based on facts, law and precedent
judicial restraint
the philosophy that the Supreme Court should avoid taking the initiative on social and political questions; use the original intent of the framers; use of precedents
30 minutes
time limit for oral arguments before the Supreme Court
Federal District Court
trial court of the federal court system; most cases heard here