In: Accounting
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The Processes of the U.S. Legal System
Because the United States was not
founded as a single nation but began as a loosely united group of
13 separate colonies, each of which declared independence from the
British Crown, the American legal system is divided between federal
and state law and has more layers than those in many other nations.
The struggle between the states and the fledgling national
government over power and legal jurisdiction was intense, as the
country forged a system of federal government, and there still are
conflicts: witness the previously mentioned debate over states’
rights. But when the Constitution was drafted and finally ratified,
it included a "supremacy clause" in Article VI that stated, "This
Constitution...shall be the supreme Law of the Land...." This
established the principle that "where the federal Constitution
speaks, no state may contradict it”
Each branch of government—the executive, the legislative, and the
judicial—plays a role in the legal system and each has its own
powers, in a system of checks and balances that acts as a safeguard
against any one branch having too much power.
The judicial system in the United States consists of the federal
court system and the state court systems.
The federal court system
The federal judiciary hears cases involving questions of federal law and disputes between citizens of different states. One of the early, and most important, federal cases was Marbury v. Madison in 1803, wherein the Supreme Court interpreted its powers delegated by the Constitution as including the authority to decide whether a statute violated the Constitution and declare that statute invalid (Bureau, p. 9). Courts on the federal level include the 94 U.S. District Courts, the 13 U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals, and the United States Supreme Court. Other federal courts include the Article III courts, the U.S. Court of Claims, which hears cases against the government, and the U.S. Court of International Trade; and special courts created by Congress: magistrate judges, bankruptcy courts, the U.S. Military Court of Appeals, the U.S. Tax Court, and the U.S. Court of Veterans' Appeals.
The Supreme Court
"The United States Supreme Court consists of the Chief Justice of the United States and eight associate justices. At its discretion, and within certain guidelines established by Congress, the Supreme Court each year hears a limited number of the cases it is asked to decide. Those cases may begin in the federal or state courts, and they usually involve important questions about the Constitution or federal law"
The state court system
State court systems vary from state to state, but most consist of trial courts of limited jurisdiction and trial courts of general jurisdiction; intermediate appellate courts; and the highest state courts. Most state court judges are elected or are appointed for a certain term . The jurisdiction of state courts extends to cases that do not specifically fall within the jurisdiction of the federal courts. Examples of cases heard in state courts include issues involving family law, probate, traffic regulation, real property, contract law, tort and personal injury, and state criminal offenses.