Solution Manual for Constitutional Law: Governmental Powers and Individual Freedoms, 3rd Edition
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Chapter 2
Dividing Governmental Power
CHAPTER OVERVIEW
Even though the framers wanted to increase the national governmentโs authority from
its weak position under the Articles of Confederation, they did not want to centralize all
governmental authority into one hand or into a small number of hands. Instead, they
controlled authority through structure. First, they created a federation. Second, they further
divided federal authority into three departments or branches. These authority divisions are not
absolute, however. The federal and state governments often share jurisdiction, and the three
branches of the federal government check each other. These additional features of the U.S.
government are intended to protect the people against tyranny.
The precise relationship between the federal and state governments is continually
being redefined. The social, economic, and political circumstances of each
case determine the legal outcome of any jurisdictional conflicts. The Supreme Court
has vacillated between the dual and hierarchical federalism perspectives since the
Constitution was enacted. There is no question, however, that the federal government
has experienced enormous growth and increases in authority during the past two hundred
years. Some of this can be attributed to population growth and the globalization
of economic, travel, political, and social aspects of the world. Other factors, such as
internal politics, have also contributed to the current federal scheme. As you will learn
later, there was a shift on the Supreme Court during the Rehnquist years favoring
limited federal authority and reinforcing state authority. The Roberts Court appears
to be shifting its focus from the traditional state versus federal power questions that
interested the Rehnquist Court to more complex federal preemption, legislative and
administrative, of state laws.
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES
At the end of this chapter you should be able to:
โข
Define federalism and separation of powers, identify the major sources of state and
federal authorities explicit in the Constitution, and explain why the division of powers
architecture was important to the framers.
โข
Distinguish dual, hierarchical, and cooperative federalism, and from the last chapter,
identify the various times the Supreme Court has favored dual or hierarchical
federalism.
โข
List ten or more examples of checks and balances among the three federal branches
that are explicit in the Constitution.
โข
Identify the most significant forms of federal and state laws.
โข
Demonstrate comfort and familiarity with the style and format of judicial opinions.
โข
Brief a judicial opinion with little outside assistance. You should be successful in
identifying the relevant facts. You should be successful in identifying the legal issue
and analyzing the courtโs rationale in at least 33 percent of your briefs.
LECTURE OUTLINE
2.1 Federalism
2.1(a) Dual, Hierarchical, and Cooperative Federalism
2.1(b) State and National Powers Compared
2.2 Separation of Powers
โข Teaching tip: When explaining to students how the separation of powers works, it is
important to remind them that the reason behind separation of powers is so that one
branch of government does not ever have all the power. Each branch is never allowed
to perform the duties of the other branch, which is why there is a vice-president, a
majority rule for Congress and the Court. This prevents the other branches from
having to step in if someone is injured or unable to perform their duty.
2.3 Checks and Balances
โข Teaching tip: I have found the easiest way to help students understand the idea of
why we have checks and balances is to give some examples. Even though we have
separation of powers, there are exceptions such as: The President can veto a law, but
remember that Congress can override that veto with 2/3 majority vote; The President
can appoint Judges, but the Senate must approve them; Supreme Court Judges have
life terms, but may be impeached, and Congress may pass laws, but the President can
veto them.
2.4 Forms of State and Federal Law
2.5 Modern Challenges
LIST OF CHANGES/TRANSITION GUIDE
The law has been updated throughout the text
ADDITIONAL ASSIGNMENTS AND CLASS ACTIVITIES
1. With a diagram or a short essay, discuss the idea of โseparation of powersโ and if it is
truly separate. Why or why not?
2. Brief a case that is listed in this chapter. Make sure you use the IRAC (Issue, Rule of
Law, Analysis, Conclusion) format. You should keep case briefs to one page.
ANSWERS TO END OF CHAPTER ASSIGNMENTS
Review Questions
1. Federalism refers to the division of governmental power between two sovereigns, the
federal and state governments. Separation of powers refers to the division of power into
three branches, legislative, executive, and judicial.
2. To prevent tyranny.
3. Federal: coin money; provide for national defense; negotiate and make treaties;
diplomacy; regulating interstate and foreign commerce; establishing a post office; taxing
imports and exports; regulating naturalization of citizenship; regulating immigration and
emigration; bankruptcy; etc.
State: police powers; licensing of most trades and professions; regulating intrastate
commerce; providing education
Concurrent: taxing; eminent domain; crimes; constructing roads; borrowing money and
establishing banks
4. Many possible answers, such as presidential veto, 2/3 vote overrides of presidential
vetoes, Senate confirmation of presidential nominations of officers, Senate approval of
treaties, etc.
5. Legislative: to make laws; Executive: to enforce laws; Judicial: to resolve disputes,
interpret the law, and administer justice. Today, through judicial review, courts also
preserve the balance of powers and protect individual rights.
Constitutional Law in Action
1. Constitution in Your Community: Answers will vary depending on the jurisdiction. But
students should be able to identify the constitutional or statutory authority for the zoning
board within their community.
2. Going Federal: Students should demonstrate an understanding of the primary cases on
the preemption doctrine and make an effective argument for/against the regulation of the
construction industry.
3. Moot Court: Students should be able to identify some of the basic factual features of the
debt debate and make coherent arguments as to whether the U.S. system of divided
government was designed to achieve deliberate policy making or more efficient responses
to social problems.
Chapter 3
The Judiciary: Its Role and Jurisdiction
CHAPTER OVERVIEW
Although the framers intended for most cases to remain in the state courts, they
also determined that a national judiciary was necessary to protect the newly formed
national government from the states and, to a lesser degree, to protect individuals
from the excesses of governments. The latter function has increased in importance as
a result of the expansion of federal jurisdiction, particularly in the area of civil rights.
Today, federal courts play an important role in checking states and state officials and
generally in preserving individual liberties.
The power of the federal courts is not, however, unbounded. Several formal
institutional and informal limits exist to control the power of federal courts. In addition,
even though federal jurisdiction has grown significantly in the past one hundred
years, most judicial authority continues to reside in the states.
Article III mandates the existence of only one federal court: the Supreme Court.
But Article III grants Congress the power to establish other courts. The first Congress
did this, and the federal judiciary has grown continuously since that time. Today, the
Supreme Court sits at the judicial apex, with the courts of appeals directly below it. Below
the appellate courts are the nationโs district courts. They are the federal trial courts. All
district, appellate, and Supreme Court judges and justices are empowered under Article III.
This means that they must undergo the presidential confirmation and senatorial confirmation
process. Once sworn, an Article III judge receives the benefit of lifetime tenure and no
reduction in salary.
District courts have original jurisdiction over two classes of cases: diversity
and federal question. Having only limited jurisdiction, these courts may not
freely entertain state-law claims. The courts of appeals hear appeals from district courts
and some administrative agencies and possess general appellate powers. The Supreme
Court, pursuant to Article III, possesses both original and appellate jurisdiction.
The high courtโs original jurisdiction is limited to a narrow class of cases, such as
those involving states. The Supreme Court most often acts as appellate court, hearing
cases through appeal or certiorari. Appeals must be heard, whereas certiorari is discretionary.
Although the power of the federal judiciary is significant, especially in regard
to constitutional interpretation, it is limited in many respects. Most cases continue to
be litigated in state courts, and the federal courts themselves have created a number
of limitations (e.g., abstention) on their power. Congress exercises considerable power
over federal courts through its powers to create lower federal courts and to define
judicial jurisdiction. Congress may not enlarge the judicial power beyond that provided
for in Article III; thus, only genuine controversies may be heard.
Interpretation of the Constitution, legislation, and agency rules is a function
all judges perform. There are as many methods of interpretation as there are judges.
Regardless, most constructions can be classified as primarily originalist, modernist,
literalist, or normative. The Constitution is silent as to whether the framersโ intentions
are to be followed, and there is no other concrete evidence in the matter. In
reality, most judges treat the Constitution as a living document, while adhering to the
plain-meaning rule or original intent when the outcome is clear and obvious.
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES
At the end of this chapter you should be able to:
โข
Outline the structure of the federal court system, as defined by the Constitution and
statute.
โข
Explain the appointment and removal processes for federal judges, both Article III
and other; discuss the formal and informal constraints on judges and courts; and
explain the role and responsibilities of courts in the United States.
โข
Explain the jurisdictions of federal and state courts, including the application of
federal and state laws by both.
โข
Explain the jurisdiction of federal courts in detail, including the various limitations on
federal judicial jurisdiction.
โข
Identify, compare, and contrast the four primary methods of interpreting the
Constitution.
โข
Identify and explain three canons of construction.
โข
Define and explain stare decisis and its application by the Supreme Court and lower
courts.
โข
Identify and discuss a contemporary issue concerning federal court jurisdiction.
โข
Demonstrate comfort with reading judicial opinions.
โข
Brief a judicial opinion with little outside assistance. You should be successful in
identifying the relevant facts. You should be successful in identifying the legal issue
and analyzing the courtโs rationale in at least 33 percent of your briefs.
โข
Apply, with assistance, what you have learned to a new set of facts that are given to
you.
LECTURE OUTLINE
3.1 The Federal Court System
3.2 Federal Judges
3.3 Formal and Informal Controls on the Federal Judiciary
3.3(a) Formal Constraints
3.3(b) Informal Constraints
3.4 The Role of the Federal Judiciary
3.5 Federal Judicial Jurisdiction
3.5(a) Case-or-Controversy Requirement
Nashville, Cincinnati, St. Louis
3.5(b) Federal Question and Diversity Jurisdiction
Grable & Sons v. Darue Engineering
โข Teaching tip: When explaining diversity jurisdiction for federal court, I always say to
imagine that you are on vacation and you are far away from home and involved in a
massive accident. You are not at fault and have a valid lawsuit against the person who
hit you who is from a totally different state far away. Now, it would simply not be
practical for you to have to file suit in their state for your lawsuit. If the amount in
controversy is met, you would be able to bring the lawsuit in federal court for your
convenience since it satisfies the diversity of citizenship requirement.
3.5(c) Pendent Jurisdiction, Removal, and Other Practice Issues
3.5(d) Supreme Court Jurisdiction
Ex Parte McCardle
United States v. Klein
3.5(e) Lower Courtsโ Jurisdictions
3.6 Limitations on Federal Judicial Power
3.6(a) Ripeness and Mootness
3.6(b) Standing
Sierra Club v. Morton
Allen v. Wright
Hein v. Freedom From Religion Foundation, Inc.
Elk Grove Unified School District v. Newdow
Hollingsworth v. Perry
Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus
3.6(c) Political Questions
Tenet v. Doe
Nixon v. United States
3.6(d) Abstention
3.6(e) Sovereign Immunity and the Eleventh Amendment
Atascadero State Hospital v. Scanlon
Coleman v. Court of Appeals of Maryland
3.6(f) Other Limitations
3.7 State Court Jurisdiction
โข Teaching tip: when looking at a decision from the highest state court for state law
issues, the only way it can be appealed to the Federal Supreme Court is if the highest
state court relied on federal law when making its decision. If they only based it on
state law, then it may not be appealed to The Supreme Court.
3.8 Constitutional Interpretation
3.8(a) Originalism
3.8(b) Modernism
3.8(c) Historical and Contemporary Literalism
3.8(d) Democratic Reinforcement
3.8(e) The Interpretation Process
3.8(f) Stare Decisis, Canons, and Practices Affecting Interpretation
3.8(g) Political Values and Judicial Decisions
3.9 Modern Challenges
LIST OF CHANGES/TRANSITION GUIDE
The Supreme Courtโs standing decisions in Hollingsworth v. Perry and Susan B. Anthony v.
Driehaus have been added
ADDITIONAL ASSIGNMENTS AND CLASS ACTIVITIES
1. Based on your state, research which district court you would file a federal case in, where
it is located in your state, and how many justices are currently serving on that court.
2. Following the first question, give a specific case that you could file directly in federal
court and describe why it would be filed there instead of in a state court.
ANSWERS TO END OF CHAPTER ASSIGNMENTS
Review Questions
1. The court is not majoritarian because it is not democratic in structure. Its members are
not elected, they are appointed. Even more, there is little review of their actions. Other
than death and retirement, impeachment is the only way to remove an Article III judge.
2. The Court is responsible for resolving disputes, administering justice, interpreting the
law, protecting civil liberties, and preserving the balance of governmental powers.
3. The Supreme Court sits at the apex of the federal judiciary. This court was created
directly by the Constitution. Under the Supreme Court are the United States Courts of
Appeals. There are thirteen Courts of Appeals. These courts were created by Congress.
Under the Courts of Appeals are the United States district courts. There is at least one
district court in each state and there are more in larger states. These courts were created
by Congress. Under the district courts are bankruptcy courts and magistrate-judges. In
addition, Congress has created several specialty courts.
4. Originalism attempts to discover what the Framerโs intended for the Constitution to mean.
Modernists view the Constitution in light of contemporary life. The Constitution is a
living document to a modernist. Literalists attempt to confine interpretation to the text of
the document. Those in the historical school use the definitions and language rules of the
time when the Constitution was formed (or amendment adopted). Contemporary
literalists use todayโs definitions and rules.
5. Let the decision stand. It is a requirement that lower courts follow precedent. A case
must be substantially similar in facts before it is binding precedent. A case that can be
distinguished on the facts is not binding, although its rationale may be persuasive.
6. If it is possible to do without disturbing the substance of a statute, the unconstitutional
portion is to be severed and the remainder left intact.
7. An order from a higher tribunal to a lower one requiring it to transmit a file for review.
The Supreme Court reviews most cases through certiorari, which is discretionary.
8. Several possible answers: limiting jurisdiction and size of the court; reversing decisions
through legislation or amendment; in rare cases, impeachment; confirmation of
judges/justices
9. Article III.
10. Through Marbury v. Madison, the Supreme Court established the power of judicial
review.
11. Diversity and federal question.
12. Some issues are more political than legal, and accordingly, are left to the political
branches of government. Federal courts will deny jurisdiction in such cases.
13. Federal courts abstain from becoming involved in state proceedings in most instances.
The Younger Doctrine provides that federal courts are not to intervene in state
proceedings, regardless of pending federal constitutional issues, unless there is a threat to
the defendant of immediate and great irreparable harm.
14. Standing refers to the right to appear in court or raise an issue within litigation.
Generally, a party must show an injury in fact and causation to have standing.
15. Under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, state and federal governments cannot be held
liable for their actions. The Eleventh Amendment enshrines this doctrine for the states. It
provides that states cannot be sued in federal court by their own citizens, citizens of other
states, or citizens of foreign nations.
16. The three categories are: unsettled principles of state law, subjects traditionally left to the
states, and when comity demands.
The student may also identify specific doctrines, such as political question.
17. Federal courts may hear only those cases allowed to them by the Constitution. State
courts have a general power to hear all cases, with few exceptions.
Constitutional Law in Action
1. The Constitution in Your Community: Answers will vary depending on the state. But
generally, students should identify the primary mechanism(s) in their stateโs constitution
for removing officials.
2. Going Federal: Answers will vary depending on the judge selected.
3. Moot Court: Answers will vary. But generally students should be able to
defend/challenge their view of interest groups taking on the role of defender of the stateโs
interests.
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