Umass Amherst - Legal Studies 250 Midterm

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What is consistent with the legal frames proposed by Silbey and Ewick (2000)?

Americans embrace different views of the law and those views can change

Core of certainty/penumbra of doubt

Cases fall into two types of relationships to the rules that govern them, they are either in - The core of certainty (most cases fall here) - It's obvious that the rule applies - Penumbra of doubt (a small minority of cases) - it's not obvious that the rule applies.

Civil vs. criminal cases

Civil Goal: assess liability and damages, stop harmful conduct Parties: plaintiff vs. defendant Initiated by: the aggrieved party Evidence standard: preponderance of the evidence Verdict: liable or not liable Penalties: monetary compensation, stopping conduct (injunction) Criminal Goal: punish violations of the law Parties: state/prosecutor vs. defendant Initiated by: the state/prosecutor Evidence standard: beyond a reasonable doubt Verdict: guilty or not guilty

According to Harris and Sen (2019): ideology is

Closely related to race, class, and ethnicity

The power to tax and spend is an ____ power given to Congress. The power to create a bank is an ____ power given to Congress.

Enumerated/implied

If I had an attitude that I was "up against the law," what might that mean?

I have trouble playing by the law's rules I am likely to resist the law I have trouble maintaining distance from the law

Traditional natural law theory argues that we should not obey a law if that law is___________.

Immoral

Ewick and Silbey's legal frames

In the American culture law is both "God and gimmick", "sacred and profane" We are cynical yet optimistic and idealistic Precisely because we have these multiple frames of law and legality, law is able to maintain its dominance in our society and our lives

Gubernatorial Appointment

Judges are appointed by state's governor, which may or may not involve confirmation Typically appoint judges who share the governor's political party affiliation Patronage also at play Associated with more gender/racial diversity on the bench Positive: Diversifying Negative: Awarding people who have contributed money In line with appointing governor

Partisan Election

Judges run for election with party labels attached to them ~80% incumbency reelection rate Negative: Low voter turnout, less neutral

Judicial independence

Judicial Independence and Accountability at the Federal Level "The Judges, both of the supreme and inferior Courts, shall hold their Offices during good behavior, and shall, at stated Times, receive for their Services a Compensation which shall not be diminished during their Continuance in Office." (Article III, Section 1) Removal of federal judges: House impeachment and Senate conviction, OR resignation

What is NOT true regarding judicial attack ads?

Judicial attack ads have been a part of state judicial elections since the founding of the United States

According to Butler:

Jurors in marijuana cases should vote "not guilty"

Austin's command theory of law

The command theory of sovereign (ruler) Backed by force or the threat of it Who is habitually obeyed Who does not habitually obey anyone else

Judicial accountability vs. independence

The extent to which judges are accountable to citizens in a democracy while also recognizing they should be independent and not feel pressure from the public

According to Martin Luther King, Jr., what is NOT one of the steps that must be taken before a person or group can justly disobey the law?

The filing of a lawsuit in state and federal courts

What is legality?

The meanings, sources of authority, and cultural practices that are commonly recognized as legal, regardless of who applies them or for what ends Exists everywhere, used for many purposes

Standing

The right to make a legal claim (for an individual, business, or other entity) or seek judicial enforcement of a duty or right

What is TRUE about petit juries?

They must be made up of citizens.

According to HLA Hart, rules of ____ empower people to create new primary rules and rules of ____ help people to know what rules are valid.

change/recognition

Assumptions of Natural Law

Natural Law is unchanging over time and does not differ in different societies Every person has access to the standards of natural law by the use of reason Only human laws in accordance with the natural law deserve to be called "law"

Locke

Natural Rights All men have the inherent right to life, liberty, and property The government should be designed to protect those rights If it doesn't, the people have a right to overthrow it

What justifications did Martin Luther King, Jr. use to defend his participation in the march and protest action in Birmingham in his letter?

No gains in civil rights were ever made without non-violent action. He had been invited by a local organization to help. They had tried to negotiate for changes, but the other side didn't hold up its side of the bargain. They had delayed the planned march many times already.

State judicial selection processes

No single system Many states use multiple systems Each system balances accountability and independence

Precedent (Stare Decisis)

Part of the common law legal system Referring to the previous decisions in order to adjudicate the case at hand if circumstances are similar

What is law?

Parts of legality that are employed by or attributed to formal institutions or its actors Exists in familiar places, used for particular purposes

When a state prevents a town or city from making laws in a particular issue area (for example, minimum wage laws), this is called:

Preemption

Hart's primary and secondary rules

Primary rules Rules that apply directly to citizens, often command to abstain from behavior Secondary rules Rules that govern the creation, amendment, and repeal of primary rules

What is true regarding the contemporary U.S. Supreme Court's public approval?

Public approval of the Court is at an historic low

According to Harris and Sen (2019): characteristics, such as ____, ______, and ______ can sometimes predict judicial decision making in limited kinds of cases

Race, ethnicity, and gender

State lawmaking

"Case or controversy" AND advisory opinions (MA. SJC only) Most criminal cases Most contract, probate (wills), tort (personal injury), and family (divorce, adoption, custody, etc.) cases Questions regarding state law and state constitutions

Federal lawmaking

"Case or controversy" requirement Any case regarding the constitutionality of the law Disputes between two or more states, or between citizens of two or more states Bankruptcy Admiralty law Cases involving U.S. laws and treaties Cases involving ambassadors and public ministers

8 Procedural Justices

1) Laws should be universal/general - Rules are always the same, it doesn't matter who you are or who you know 2) Laws should be transparent and promulgated - Need to know how laws are made - Need to be able to find laws 3) Laws should be understandable and clear 4) Laws are relatively stable throughout time 5) Laws should be administered as they are written 6) Laws should not be retroactive - Taking efforts from a date in the past - For example, criminalizing actions that were legal when committed 7) Laws should not contradict each other 8) Laws should not be impossible to comply with

Jurisdiction

A court's power to decide a case or issue Original (trial courts): The court can hear and decide the case first before any appellate review occurs Appellate (appeals courts): hear and review appeals from legal cases that have already been heard and ruled on in lower courts, made up of other judges, not a jury

Preemption

A legal doctrine that allows a higher level of government to limit or even. eliminate the power of a lower level of government to regulate a specific issue.

In the Letter from a Birmingham Jail, what was Martin Luther King, Jr. responding to?

A letter by white clergymen.

Example of legislature making law

Cannabis Power to regulate interstate commerce: 1970: Controlled Substances Act - Schedule I drug Banking regulations prevent banks from dealing with marijuana dispensary owners, even in states where it is legal

You should be able to make natural law arguments to support or oppose contemporary legal issues/debates.

Contemporary issues that invoke Natural Law argument Death penalty → violations of natural law Christian conservative legal movement Freedom of Church and State Prayer at school Abortion LGBTQ marriage

Hart argues that most cases fall into the ____ where it is clear that the law applies, while only a small number fall into the ____ where it is less clear

Core of certainty/Penumbra of doubt

What are some examples of proposals to reform the Supreme Court?

Create term limits for judges Increase the size of the Supreme Court Have judges participate in retention elections Create a mandatory retirement age for judges

According to Harris and Sen (2019), there is strong evidence that judges in the U.S.:

Decide cases consistent with their ideological preferences

The number of jury trials in the US has ____ in the past 20 years.

Decreased

Critiques of Austin

Difficulty distinguishing who/what is sovereign in a democracy Even in a monarchy, habitual obedience is not guaranteed Can't account for laws that regulate conduct between private individuals (contracts, wills, etc.) Just because you can command it, enforce it, have habitual obedience, and be above it doesn't mean it is a legitimate law

Example of courts making law

Double Jeopardy Double Jeopardy (Fifth Amendment) prohibits anyone from being prosecuted twice for substantially the same crime Gamble vs. United States (2019) Supreme Court authorized two prosecutions for the same crime, one in federal court and one in state court

Types of Administrative agencies

Executive agencies - Headed by Secretary - Appointed by President - All 15 together make up the President's Cabinet Independent agencies - Headed by commissions - Appointed by the President to fixed

True or false? Currently, all federal judges must be confirmed with 60 or more votes in the Senate.

False

True or false? During the jury selection process, peremptory challenges require the judge's approval.

False

True or false? In Fuller's story of King Rex, Rex writes a legal code that all of his subjects respect and follow.

False

True or false? Marijuana is legal in all 50 states.

False

True or false? In a retention election, two people run against each other for a judgeship.

False, judges run unopposed for office after they have served their initial appointments. The voter is asked simply to retain or reject the judge.

Supremacy Clause

Federal law takes precedent over state law Federal legislation sets minimum standards, states (and localities) can do more Example: minimum wage laws

This organization worked closely with the Trump Administration on the appointment of federal judges.

Federalist Society

Conservative Christian Legal Movement

Focused on training young lawyers to promote movement goals, which have a strong basis in natural law theory Ex. Reproductive freedom, prayer in schools, LGBTQ+ rights

According to John Austin's command theory of law, law is the command of a sovereign, backed by ____, and the sovereign is both habitually obeyed and does not habitually obey anyone else.

Force

How courts make laws

Gap-filling when the law is unclear Statutory interpretation Judicial review of decisions made by other parts of the government (laws, administrative agencies rules, executive orders, etc.) Setting precedents

Judicial review

How courts make decisions Judicial review of decisions made by other parts of the government (laws, administrative agencies rules, executive orders, etc.)

The case Safford Unified School District v. Redding is an example of how ______________ can matter in judicial decisionmaking.

Gender

A "runaway" jury describes the situation when a jury:

Gives an excessively large amount of damages in a civil case and make use of their right to act independently, and don't pay attention to the instructions of the court and prosecutor.

What judicial selection types is most likely to increase racial diversity on the bench?

Gubernatorial appointment

Pig-keeping in New York City

Hartog's Central Question: Did pig owners have a right to keep their pigs on the streets in the first half of the 19th century? Positivist Response: Not after People v. Harriet Legal Consciousness Response: It depends on who you ask Pigs remained on New York City streets until 1850 Laws were passed by the Common Council after 1819 and cases were decided by courts that assumed a right to keep pigs on streets in many areas and circumstances Pig keepers who kept their pigs on the streets didn't see themselves as breaking the law

In the movie Judgment at Nuremberg, what was the character Feldenstein convicted of and executed for doing?

Having a relationship with a German girl as a Jewish man

Early in the film, Judgement at Nuremberg, why does Ernst Janning challenge the authority of the tribunal to try him and the other judges?

He claims the American judges did not have the authority to try him and he can only be tried under German law

Rulemaking

How administrative agencies make laws How courts make laws Gap-filling when the law is unclear Statutory interpretation Judicial review of decisions made by other parts of the government (laws, administrative agencies rules, executive orders, etc.) Setting precedents

Is vs. Ought Dilemma

Just because something "is" doesn't mean it "ought" to be Just because a woman can bear children, doesn't mean she ought to Just because we can discover natural law, doesn't mean we ought to obey it

According to Martin Luther King, Jr., a _____ law is one that uplifts the human personality and creates feelings of superiority, a _____ law is one that degrades the human personality and creates feelings of inferiority.

Just/unjust

Fuller

Law as a system of governed by procedural principles Law is found in procedures The "Inner Morality" of Law Law is "the enterprise of subjecting human conduct to the governance of rules" The law guides human behavior toward some larger purpose, like justice

Aquinas

Law as the codification of transcendent moral principles, and is found in rules A just man-made law is... One that cultivates the common good Made by a lawmaker who has not exceeded his or her authority One whose burdens are imposed fairly on citizens "An unjust law is not law"

Natural Law

Law is always derived from some supra-human source, like God's will or morality

Assumptions of legal positivism

Law is known through the systematic observation of a given society The question of what law is is distinct from the question of what law ought to be A morally neutral description of law is possible and desirable

You should be able to make positive law arguments to support or oppose contemporary legal issues/debates.

Legal positivism (written law) Nuremberg trials (Nazi argument) Pro-abortion laws Hurting people in self-defense against the law LGBTQ+ marriage laws Drinking age laws Separation of church and state

Brett Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court was controversial because:

Limited release of documents from his time as counsel for the George W. Bush White House Sexual assault allegations from his time in high school and college Law review article he had written about whether sitting presidents should be indicted

Local lawmaking

Local governments can make local laws Local governments have the power to tax to provide services Examples: sewer, education, law enforcement

How legislatures make laws

Must cite enumerated or implied power to make a law Enumerated Powers (Article I of the Constitution) - To tax - To spend To regulate commerce among the states Powers implied by the Constitution To make laws that are "necessary and proper" to execute enumerated powers

Which of the following is a criticism of traditional natural law theory?

Morality is not the same in all times, places and cultures.

Throughout the world:

Most judges are term limited in some way, or have mandatory retirement ages

Intersectionality

Multiple overlapping identities can compound the injustices people experience Examples Black women, LGBTQ+ person with a disability, impoverished elderly man

Sources of Natural Law

Religious texts and divine revelation

Appointment of Amy Coney Barrett

Republicans refused to consider the appointment of Merrick Garland in 2016 based on the newly created "McConnell Rule" Scalia died almost 9 months before 2016 election Ginsburg died less than 2 months before 2020 election Republicans abandoned the rule to get Barrett on the Court Democrats tried to block Barrett's confirmation by denying quorum in Senate Judiciary Committee Barrett was confirmed by a 52-48 vote

The Supreme Court makes law by:

Reviewing the actions of other branches of government

How Administrative Agencies Make Laws

Rule Making Administrative Procedure Act (1946) Notice and comment period (30-60 days) Careful consideration of all comments Justification of decision with reasoned analysis Publish the final rule at least 30 days before it takes effect NO "arbitrary and capricious rules

Harts types of secondary rules

Rules of change - empower people to create new primary rules Rules of adjudication - Empower people to decide whether a primary rule has been broken Rules of recognition - Criteria to help officials decide which rules are part of a legal system and which are not

In their debate over the woman who informed on her husband in Nazi Germany, Lon Fuller says that the German court should have taken the natural law position and __________________, while HLA Hart says that the court should have taken the legal positivist solution and either ________________ or __________________.

Sent her to prison—she behaved immorally and should have known what she was doing was wrong Let her go—the law at the time said she did nothing wrong Passed a retroactive law and then punish her—even though this is bad for the legal system, it would give a legal basis for punishing her

Criticisms of Natural Law theory

Skepticism about the existence of universal moral principles or standards and our capacity to acquire them in a way that is not clouded by self-interest

Most criminal cases in the U.S. are heard by:

State courts

Traditional natural law theory says that you can see the morality of law in the ____ of the laws. Modern natural law theory says that you can see the morality of law in the ____ used to make the laws.

Substance/procedure

Federal judicial selection of judges process

Supreme Court Constitutional process President Nominates, Senate Confirms, Life Tenure, Maximizes Independence

Implied powers

To make laws that are "necessary and proper" to execute enumerated powers

Enumerated powers

To tax To spend To regulate commerce among the states

Which of the following is consistent with scientific jury selection (aka trial consulting)?

Trial consultants try to find a sympathetic jury It is done primarily by social scientists There are a variety of means to perform trial consulting

True or False? Most federal judges first get their judgeships through appointments.

True

True or false? A federal judge can only be removed through impeachment (and conviction), retirement, resignation, or death.

True

True or false? The agency in charge of fisheries monitoring requires that commercial fishing boats must pay to host a federal monitor on their boats:

True

True or false?You can be prosecuted for the same crime under both state law and federal law.

True

Umpire vs. activist

Umpire: judges just apply the rules Activist: judges exhibit empathy, allow their personal experiences to shape their decisions

Example of administrative agencies making law

Vaping Congress authorized the FDA to regulate "tobacco products" FDA conducts hearings weighing the benefits of vaping devices for smoking cessation for adults versus their potential harm to young people Recently denied applications for almost 1 million flavored vaping products

What is an example of Congress passing a law using its power to spend?

Withholding federal highway money from states to get them to make seatbelts mandatory.

"With the Law" is referring to when people

View law as a game of skill, deceit, manipulation, and resources, high accessibility to ordinary people Empowerment - The "haves" (those with a great deal of resources) - People who take pleasure in playing the game Disempowerment - The belief that you will lose if you do not have the resources keeps people from accessing or using the law in the first place

"Against the Law" is referring to when people

View the law as a product of unequal power, arbitrary and capricious, and an oppressive force, low accessibility to ordinary people Empowerment - Masquerading - Feelings of claiming rights and a sense of justice Disempowerment - People engage this way because they have few resources and little faith that they can stand before the law and receive a fair outcome

"Before the Law" is referring to when people

View the law as majestic, removed from ordinary life, authoritative and predictable, with low accessibility to ordinary people Empowerment - Rita Michael's divorce story Disempowerment - Beliefs about when it is appropriate to use law means that people will not use it or will vilify those who use it inappropriately


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