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Precedent
A legal norm established in court cases that is then applied to future cases dealing with the same legal questions.
Standing
Legitimate justification for bringing a civil case to court.
Jurisdiction
The sphere of a court’s legal authority to hear and decide cases.
Appeals Courts
The intermediate level of federal courts that hear appeals from district courts. More generally, an appeals court is any court with appellate jurisdiction.
Senatorial Courtesy
A norm in the nomination of district court judges in which the president consults with his or her party’s senators from the relevant state in choosing the nominee.
Writ of certiorari
The most common way for a case to reach the Supreme Court, in which at least four of the nine justices agree to hear a case that has reached them via an appeal from the losing party in a lower court’s ruling.
Judicial Activism
The idea that the Supreme Court should assert its interpretation of the law even if it overrules the elected executive and legislative branches of government.
Mootness
The irrelevance of a case by the time it is received by a federal court, causing the Court to decline to hear the case.
Cert Pool
A system initiated in the Supreme Court in the 1970s in which law clerks screen cases that come to the Supreme Court and recommend to the justices which cases should be heard.
Solicitor General
A presidential appointee in the Justice Department who conducts all litigation on behalf of the federal government before the Supreme Court and supervises litigation in the federal appellate courts.
Amicus curiae
Latin for “friend of the court,” referring to an interested group or person who shares relevant information about a case to help the Court reach a decision.
Oral arguments
Spoken presentations made in person by the lawyers of each party to a judge or an appellate court outlining the legal reasons their side should prevail.
Majority opinion
A court ruling on which more than half of the members agree. The ruling will present the decision of the court and explain the reasoning behind the decision.
Judicial Restraint
The idea that the Supreme Court should defer to the democratically elected executive and legislative branches of government rather than contradicting existing laws.
Statutory interpretation
The various methods and tests used by the courts for determining the meaning of a law and applying it to specific situations. Congress may overturn the courts’ interpretation by writing a new law; thus, it also engages in statutory interpretation.
Plaintiff
The person or party who brings a case to court.
Defendant
The person or party against whom a case is brought.
Plea bargaining
Negotiating an agreement between a plaintiff and a defendant to settle a case before it goes to trial or the verdict is decided. In a civil case, this usually involves an admission of guilt and an agreement on monetary damages; in a criminal case, this often involves an admission of guilt in return for a reduced charge or sentence.
Class action lawsuit
A case brought by a group of individuals on behalf of themselves and others in the general public who are in similar circumstances.
Common Law
Law based on the precedent of previous court rulings rather than on legislation. It is used in all federal courts and 49 of the 50 state courts.
Concurring opinion
An opinion of the court that agrees with the majority decision, but disagrees on at least part of the rationale for the decision.
Dissenting opinion
An opinion of the court that disagrees with the majority decision in a case.
Strict construction
A way of interpreting the Constitution based on its language alone.
Tinker v. Des Moines
The 1969 Supreme Court ruling that wearing an armband in a public school was protected by the First Amendment as a form of speech.
Original intent
The theory that justices should surmise the intentions of the Founders when the language of the Constitution is unclear
Living constitution
A way of interpreting the Constitution that takes into account evolving national attitudes and circumstances rather than the text alone.
Attitudinalist approach
A way of understanding decisions of the Supreme Court based on the political ideologies of the justices.
Judiciary Act of 1789
The law in which Congress laid out the organization of the federal judiciary. The law refined and clarified federal court jurisdiction and set the original number of justices at six. It also created the Office of the Attorney General and established the lower federal courts.
District Courts
Lower-level trial courts of the federal judicial system that handle most U.S. federal cases.
Appellate Jurisdiction
The authority of a court to hear appeals from lower courts and change or uphold the decision.
Judicial Review
The Supreme Court’s power to strike down a law or an executive branch action that it finds unconstitutional.
Original Jurisdiction
The authority of a court to handle a case first, as in the Supreme Court’s authority to initially hear disputes between two states. However, original jurisdiction for the Supreme Court is not exclusive; it may assign such a case to a lower court.
Constitutional Interpretation
The process of determining whether a piece of legislation or governmental action is supported by the Constitution.