Question 1
What is judicial review?
Answer
Judicial review is the power of federal courts to determine whether laws or government actions violate the Constitution.
If a law conflicts with the Constitution, courts may declare it unconstitutional and unenforceable.
Question 2
How did the Supreme Court establish the power of judicial review?
Answer
The Supreme Court established judicial review in Marbury v. Madison.
The Court held that it is the judiciary’s duty to interpret the Constitution and invalidate laws that conflict with constitutional requirements.
Question 3
Why must federal courts satisfy the “case or controversy” requirement?
Answer
Article III limits federal courts to resolving actual cases or controversies.
This requirement prevents courts from issuing advisory opinions or deciding abstract legal questions.
Question 4
What is an advisory opinion?
Answer
An advisory opinion occurs when a court offers legal advice about a hypothetical dispute rather than resolving an actual case.
Federal courts are prohibited from issuing advisory opinions because they may decide only live disputes between adverse parties.
Question 5
Who has standing to bring a constitutional challenge in federal court?
Answer
A plaintiff must demonstrate standing, meaning they have suffered a concrete injury caused by the challenged action and that a favorable court decision will likely remedy that injury.
Without standing, a federal court lacks authority to hear the case.
Question 6
What three elements must a plaintiff show to establish standing?
Answer
To establish standing, the plaintiff must show injury in fact, causation, and redressability.
The injury must be concrete and particularized, fairly traceable to the defendant’s conduct, and likely to be remedied by a favorable decision.
Question 7
How does the injury-in-fact requirement limit federal jurisdiction?
Answer
The injury-in-fact requirement ensures that plaintiffs have suffered a real and personal harm rather than a generalized grievance.
Courts will not hear claims based solely on a plaintiff’s interest in having the law followed.
Question 8
When may a plaintiff raise the rights of third parties in federal court?
Answer
Generally, a plaintiff must assert their own rights rather than those of others.
However, courts sometimes allow third-party standing when the plaintiff has a close relationship with the affected party and there are obstacles preventing that party from asserting their own rights.
Question 9
When will a federal court refuse standing because the plaintiff’s claim falls outside the zone of interests protected by a statute?
Answer
A court may deny standing when the plaintiff’s claim falls outside the zone of interests that the statute or constitutional provision was designed to protect.
This prudential limitation prevents plaintiffs from bringing claims when their injury is not the type of harm the law was intended to address.
Example: If a statute protects environmental interests, a plaintiff whose claim involves purely economic competition may fall outside the statute’s protected interests.
Question 10
How does ripeness differ from mootness?
Answer
Ripeness concerns whether a case is brought too early.
Mootness concerns whether a case was once valid but has lost its controversy because the dispute has already been resolved.
Question 11
Under what circumstances can a criminal conviction remain reviewable even after the sentence has been completed?
Answer
A case may remain justiciable because of collateral consequences arising from a criminal conviction.
Even after a sentence is completed, consequences such as loss of voting rights or professional licensing restrictions may preserve a live controversy.
Question 12
Under what circumstances may courts hear a case that would otherwise be moot?
Answer
Courts may hear cases that are capable of repetition yet evading review.
This exception applies when the challenged action is too short in duration to be fully litigated but is likely to recur in the future.
Question 13
What is the political question doctrine?
Answer
The political question doctrine prevents courts from deciding issues constitutionally committed to the political branches.
Courts decline jurisdiction when there are no judicially manageable standards for resolving the dispute.
Question 14
How do courts determine whether a dispute presents a political question?
Answer
Courts examine whether the Constitution assigns the issue to another branch or whether the matter lacks judicially manageable standards.
If either condition exists, the court may dismiss the case under the political question doctrine.
Question 15
Why do courts avoid deciding political questions?
Answer
Courts avoid political questions to maintain separation of powers and respect the roles of the legislative and executive branches.
Judicial intervention in these matters could improperly intrude into political decision-making.
Question 16
How does the prohibition on generalized grievances affect standing?
Answer
Federal courts generally refuse to hear claims based on generalized grievances shared by the public at large.
Plaintiffs must demonstrate a personalized injury rather than dissatisfaction with government policy.
Question 17
Is taxpayer standing valid under Constitutional Law?
Answer
No, Taxpayer standing generally does not exist because taxpayers cannot claim a personal injury from government spending.
A narrow exception allows taxpayer standing for certain Establishment Clause challenges to congressional spending.
Question 18
When may an organization have standing to sue on behalf of its members?
Answer
An organization may assert associational standing when its members would have standing individually and the lawsuit relates to the organization’s purpose.
The claim must not require individual participation of the members.
Question 19
How does redressability affect standing?
Answer
Redressability requires that the court’s decision likely remedy the plaintiff’s injury.
If the requested relief would not meaningfully address the harm, the plaintiff lacks standing.
Question 20
What role does causation play in standing analysis?
Answer
Causation requires that the plaintiff’s injury be fairly traceable to the defendant’s conduct.
If the injury results from independent actions of third parties, standing may be denied.
Question 21
How can Congress influence standing through legislation?
Answer
Congress may create statutory rights that give individuals the ability to sue when those rights are violated.
However, plaintiffs must still show a concrete injury to satisfy constitutional standing requirements.
Question 22
When may federal courts hear pre-enforcement challenges to laws?
Answer
Courts may hear pre-enforcement challenges when a plaintiff faces a credible threat of enforcement and the dispute is sufficiently concrete.
This allows courts to address constitutional issues before penalties are imposed.
Question 23
What is the difference between facial and as-applied constitutional challenges?
Answer
A facial challenge argues that a law is unconstitutional in all of its applications.
An as-applied challenge argues that the law is unconstitutional as applied to the specific circumstances of the plaintiff.
Question 24
How does the Supreme Court review decisions from lower federal courts?
Answer
The Supreme Court typically reviews lower federal court decisions through writs of certiorari.
Granting certiorari allows the Court to decide important constitutional questions or resolve conflicts among lower courts.
Question 25
When may members of Congress have standing to challenge governmental action in federal court?
Answer
Members of Congress may assert legislative standing only when they suffer a concrete institutional injury to their legislative authority.
Courts generally reject standing when legislators merely disagree with how the law is implemented or interpreted by another branch.