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The American Court SystemA basic structural primer
“Jurisdiction”• State v. Federal• State – control over issues of state law• Federal – control over issues of federal law
• Original v. Appellate• Original – where a case originates, the court of origin• Appellate – power to hear legal disputes arising from courts of
original jurisdiction
Basic Structure
SCOTUS
State Court of Last Resort (usually
Supreme Court)
State Appellate Court
State Trial Courts (District Courts)
United States Courts of Appeals
(Circuit Courts)
U.S. District Courts (including special purpose courts)
Trial Courts or District Courts• MN District courts – spread out around the state• 289 judges
• United States District Courts – 94 District courts (at least one per state, and one in each territory)• 650-700 Judges
• Courts of original jurisdiction – decide facts of cases based on court testimony, apply laws to those facts
Appellate Courts• MN Court of Appeals• 3-judge panels • 19 appellate judges
• Federal Circuit Courts of Appeals• 11 geographic circuits, D.C. circuit, Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit (13 total)• 179 federal appellate judges (approximation)
• Primarily consider legal arguments – facts are established, looking for legal errors/issues
• Generally applying prior precedent
Supreme Court (page 1)• Minnesota Supreme Court• 7 Justices• Choose cases, generally most important (rule of 3)
• Based on legal issues, facts are established• In MN, MUST hear all 1st degree murder appeals
• Supreme Court of the United States• 9 Justices• Choose cases very carefully – Certiorari process (rule of 4)
• Generally only most important legal issues are accepted
Supreme Court (conclusion)• Minnesota• Attorneys submit briefs outlining legal arguments • Oral arguments – 35 minutes for appellant, 25 for respondent• Justices deliberate and decide in private, one justice writes court
opinion – usually within 3-5 months• Opinions outline legal decision and set precedent
• SCOTUS• Attorneys submit briefs• Oral argument normally lasts one hour, evenly divided• Justices deliberate and decide in private, one justice is assigned to
write opinion – can be released any time, but normally come at the end of the term ~June
• Opinions outline legal decision and set precedent