Class 2 - Legal Reasoning & The Constituion

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Case

"a civil or criminal proceeding, action, suit, or controversy at law or equity" decided by a court

How to apply Stare Decisis

1) Find an earlier case(s) with similar facts 2) derive a rule of law 3) apply that rule to the case at hand

Statutory Interpretation (4) PPPL

1) Plain Meaning of language 2) Legislative history of rule 3) General Public Purpose to be achieved 4) Prior Interpretations

Examples of powers shared (2)

1) create and collect taxes 2) take private property

Examples of exclusive powers of state government (HALG)

1) establish local governments 2) issue licenses (driver, marriage) 3) provide for public health and safety 4) ratify amendment (done by Fed also)

Benefits of Stare Decisis (2)

1) predictability to decisional law by relying on a prior decision 2) consistency among judicial decisions

Examples of exclusive power of federal government (TWIM)

1) print money 2) declare war 3) enter into treaties 4) regulate interstate commerce

What are the 2 fundamental principles of the Constitution?

1) separation of powers among 3 branches of government 2) system of checks and balances

How is Supreme Court not limited in its power? (3)

1. Appointed by other branches; can stay until death 2. Continue to find unconstitutional 3. Calm Group

How is U.S Supreme Court limited in its power? (4)

1. can't enforce laws 2. Congress can create a new law 3. Jurisdiction (power to hear new cases) 4. Can change # of justices

President's roles (2)

1. head of state 2. commander-in-chief of armed forces

president's responsibilities (2)

1. implement/enforce laws written by Congress 2. Appoints heads of federal agencies and cabinet

Number of members/justices on Supreme Court

9

2nd Step to Legal Reasoning

Case Law Reasoning

What happens under the doctrine of judicial review?

Courts declare actions of other governmental bodies unconstitutional

What categories is law divided into?

Criminal and civil law

What is always the question in a criminal trial?

Did the person commit a crime?

The U.S. Constitution establishes a government based on what?

Federalism

Components of Legal Reasoning (IRFAC)

Issue, Rule, Facts, Analysis, Conclusion

What do prior interpretations entail in statutory interpretation?

Looking at prior cases and administrative decisions interpreting a statute

When does federal government only have power to pass a law? Give examples.

Only if it finds specific provision in the Constitution granting it to authority. Ex: Commerce, spending, and taxing clause

Parts of Legislative branch (Upper and Lower)

Upper: Senate Lower: Congress

Can precedent be overturned and how?

Yes, but must distinguish case by finding differences in facts

The defendant is either:

acquitted (found guilty) or found guilty and sentences w/ fine/jail

Who is the plaintiff?

charging someone with a crime

What does civil law settle?

disagreements b/n people

Legislative branch function

enact laws

Case Law Reasoning

find cases/principles that make cases similar/different

When do you use legislative history for statutory interpretation and what's the procedure?

i) Refer to it when language is unclear. ii) This involves an examination of investigative committee reports, legislative hearings, and press announcements.

criminal laws

laws that make certain actions a crime

State's power

police power - power to regulate for public health, safety, morals and welfare

What does the general public purpose rule entail in statutory interpretation?

the court should focus on the mischief or evil that the legislature intended to eradicate and interpret the statute to have that effect.

The judge/jury decides what?

the facts and remedy/solution

Civil Law

wide range of subjects: property, divorce, contracts, wills


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