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Supreme Court of the United States - Jurisdiction and Court Powers

Understand the Supreme Court's original and appellate jurisdiction, the functions of circuit justices, and the doctrine of separate sovereigns.
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Over which specific disputes does the Supreme Court hold original and exclusive jurisdiction?
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Summary

Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court Understanding the Supreme Court's Authority The Supreme Court's jurisdiction—its authority to hear cases—falls into two main categories: original jurisdiction and appellate jurisdiction. Understanding what types of cases the Court can hear is fundamental to comprehending its role in the American legal system. Original Jurisdiction Original jurisdiction means the Supreme Court can be the first court to hear a case, rather than reviewing decisions from lower courts. The Supreme Court's original jurisdiction is limited and specified by the Constitution. Exclusive Original Jurisdiction: The Court has exclusive original jurisdiction (meaning only the Supreme Court can hear these cases) over disputes between two or more states. For example, if State A sues State B over a border disagreement or water rights, that case goes directly to the Supreme Court without passing through lower courts first. Non-Exclusive Original Jurisdiction: The Court also has original jurisdiction, but not exclusive jurisdiction (meaning other courts can also hear these cases), over: Cases involving ambassadors and other public ministers Cases involving consuls Controversies between the United States and a state Actions brought by a state against citizens of another state or against aliens This distinction is important: when jurisdiction is non-exclusive, parties might choose to start in a lower court instead, but they could also go directly to the Supreme Court. Gatekeeping Power: Critically, the Supreme Court exercises discretionary control over its original-jurisdiction docket. This means even when it could hear an original case, it doesn't have to. The Court can decline to hear cases that fall within its original jurisdiction if it believes they're not appropriate for direct review. Appellate Jurisdiction Appellate jurisdiction is the Court's authority to review decisions from lower courts. This is the primary way cases reach the Supreme Court. The Court reviews appeals from several sources: United States Courts of Appeals (the 13 circuit courts) United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces Supreme Courts of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands District of Columbia Court of Appeals Final judgments of state supreme courts involving federal law or constitutional issues That last point is crucial: the Supreme Court can review state court decisions, but only when those cases involve federal law or constitutional matters. The Court won't review purely state law issues decided by state courts. The Mootness Doctrine: When Courts Won't Decide Cases The General Rule A fundamental principle of judicial authority is that courts can only decide actual, ongoing disputes—not hypothetical questions. This is called the mootness doctrine: the Supreme Court cannot decide moot cases and does not issue advisory opinions. A case becomes moot when the dispute is no longer alive and the court can no longer provide meaningful relief. For instance, imagine a student sues a university challenging an expulsion, but the student graduates before the case reaches the Supreme Court. The case may be moot because the student can no longer attend classes anyway. The mootness doctrine serves an important constitutional purpose: it prevents courts from issuing abstract legal opinions about hypothetical situations. Courts are meant to resolve real disputes, not answer what-if questions. Exceptions to Mootness However, there are important exceptions where the Supreme Court will decide cases even if they appear moot: "Capable of Repetition Yet Evading Review": This exception applies when a situation is likely to happen again but will typically be over before a court can fully review it. The classic example is Roe v. Wade, the abortion rights case. A pregnancy lasts approximately nine months, which is often shorter than the time needed for a case to reach the Supreme Court and be decided. If the Court applied strict mootness rules, no case about abortion rights could ever be decided before the pregnancy ended. Therefore, the Court recognized that cases involving pregnancy can be decided even if the particular pregnancy at issue has ended, because the legal question is important and will arise repeatedly. "Voluntary Cessation of Unlawful Conduct": If a defendant voluntarily stops the challenged conduct (at least temporarily), the case might appear moot. However, if there's a serious likelihood the unlawful conduct will recur, the Court will still hear the case. The key here is that a party shouldn't be able to evade review simply by promising to behave differently while the case is pending, then return to the unlawful conduct once the case is dismissed. How the Supreme Court Operates Opinion Assignment and Writing When the Supreme Court decides a case, one justice writes the majority opinion—the official statement of the law that represents the Court's holding. Who gets to assign this important writing task depends on how the justices voted: If the Chief Justice is in the majority: The Chief Justice decides which justice (including possibly the Chief Justice themselves) will write the majority opinion. If the Chief Justice is not in the majority: The most senior justice in the majority assigns the opinion to another justice in the majority. This assignment power is significant because the justice who writes the opinion shapes how the Court's reasoning is presented and can influence how that decision is understood and applied by lower courts. The Circuit Justice System What is a Circuit Justice? Each of the thirteen United States Courts of Appeals is assigned a "circuit justice"—a Supreme Court justice who serves as a liaison to that circuit court. Circuit justices handle certain procedural applications and may issue "in-chambers opinions" (brief written explanations of their decisions on emergency matters like stays pending certiorari). Historical Context: Circuit Riding <extrainfo> Under the Judiciary Act of 1789, Supreme Court justices were required to physically travel throughout the country to "ride circuit," sitting alongside local judges to hear cases. This was an exhausting practice—imagine traveling by horseback across America! Circuit riding continued well into the 1800s but was eventually eliminated as travel became easier and the Court's caseload grew. While circuit riding is no longer required, the circuit justice system preserves the historical connection between Supreme Court justices and the circuit courts. </extrainfo> The Doctrine of Separate Sovereigns What It Is and Why It Matters The doctrine of separate sovereigns is one of the most potentially confusing aspects of criminal jurisdiction. It allows something that might seem to violate the Constitution: a criminal defendant can be prosecuted in both state court and federal court for conduct arising from the same incident. The Constitutional Basis This doctrine rests on the principle that state and federal governments are distinct, independent sovereigns with their own separate authority. When you commit an act that violates both state law and federal law, you've technically committed two separate crimes against two separate governments—even though the underlying conduct is identical. A Concrete Example Imagine a defendant is arrested for drug trafficking. The state prosecutes them under state drug statutes, and they might be convicted and imprisoned in state court. After that conviction, the federal government can separately prosecute the same person under federal drug statutes for the identical conduct. Both prosecutions can proceed, and both can result in convictions and prison sentences. The Double Jeopardy Question This raises an obvious constitutional concern: the Fifth Amendment protects against double jeopardy—being tried twice for the "same offense." Doesn't this doctrine violate that protection? The Supreme Court has held that it does not, because the Court interprets the double jeopardy clause as protecting against double jeopardy by the same sovereign. Since state and federal governments are separate sovereigns, prosecution in both courts doesn't violate double jeopardy protection. <extrainfo> This is a genuinely controversial interpretation. Critics argue that punishing a defendant twice for the same underlying conduct seems fundamentally unfair and contrary to the spirit of double jeopardy protection, regardless of how many "sovereigns" are involved. However, this is the current law. </extrainfo> Statutory Authority Jurisdictional Statutes The Supreme Court's jurisdiction is not granted only by the Constitution—Congress has enacted statutes that define and limit what the Court can review: 28 United States Code Section 1257 governs the Supreme Court's jurisdiction over state law issues. This statute specifies how state court decisions can reach the Supreme Court. 28 United States Code Section 1253 provides the Supreme Court's authority to review final judgments of lower federal courts. These statutes are the legal foundation for much of the Court's appellate jurisdiction and reflect the principle that Congress has significant authority to structure federal court jurisdiction.
Flashcards
Over which specific disputes does the Supreme Court hold original and exclusive jurisdiction?
Disputes between two or more states.
What are the categories of cases where the Supreme Court holds original but not exclusive jurisdiction?
Cases involving ambassadors, public ministers, and consuls Controversies between the United States and a state Actions by a state against citizens of another state or against aliens
Which courts' appeals or judgments are reviewed by the Supreme Court under its appellate jurisdiction?
United States Courts of Appeals United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces Supreme Courts of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands District of Columbia Court of Appeals Final judgments of state supreme courts (involving federal or constitutional issues)
According to the Constitution, in which two general types of cases does the Supreme Court have original jurisdiction?
Cases involving states and foreign diplomats.
What are the two primary restrictions on the Supreme Court regarding the types of cases or opinions it can issue?
The Court cannot decide moot cases The Court does not issue advisory opinions
What are the two recognized exceptions to the mootness doctrine?
“Capable of repetition yet evading review” “Voluntary cessation of unlawful conduct”
Who assigns the writing of the majority opinion when the Chief Justice is in the majority?
The Chief Justice.
Who assigns the majority opinion if the Chief Justice is not in the majority?
The most senior justice in the majority.
How many United States Courts of Appeals are assigned a "circuit justice" from the Supreme Court?
Thirteen.
What historical practice required Supreme Court justices to travel and hear cases with local judges under the Judiciary Act of 1789?
“Riding circuit”.
What procedural applications are handled by modern circuit justices?
Stays pending certiorari Extensions of time In‑chambers orders
What is the term for a brief rationale written by a circuit justice when granting or denying an application?
In‑chambers opinion.
What does the doctrine of separate sovereigns allow regarding criminal prosecution?
A defendant can be prosecuted in both state and federal court for the same offense.
What is the legal principle underlying the doctrine of separate sovereigns?
State and federal governments are distinct sovereigns with independent authority.
What is the primary criticism directed at the separate sovereigns doctrine?
It is argued to violate the protection against double jeopardy.
Which statute governs the Supreme Court’s jurisdiction over issues of state law?
$28$ U.S.C. $\S 1257$.
Which statute provides the Supreme Court the authority to review final judgments from lower federal courts?
$28$ U.S.C. $\S 1253$.

Quiz

What type of jurisdiction does the Supreme Court have over disputes between two or more states?
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Key Concepts
Supreme Court Jurisdiction
Original jurisdiction of the U.S. Supreme Court
Appellate jurisdiction of the U.S. Supreme Court
28 U.S.C. § 1257
Judicial Processes
Mootness doctrine
Opinion assignment in the Supreme Court
Circuit justice system
Judicial circuit riding
In‑chambers opinion
Legal Doctrines
Doctrine of separate sovereigns
Double jeopardy clause
28 U.S.C. § 1253