494 Chapter 14Chapter 14 || The CourtsThe Courts
statute may be unclear and the Court must interpret how to apply the law. For example,
should the protection of endangered species prevent economic development that may
destroy the species’ habitat? How does one determine if an employer is responsible
for punishing sexual harassment in the workplace? How should the voting rights of
minorities be protected? In each case, the Court must interpret the relevant statutes to
determine what Congress really meant. In addition, in the third main area of the law—
administrative law—the Court is sometimes required to assess how federal agencies
have interpreted and implemented laws passed by Congress. Often this involves the
controversial practice of consulting legislative histories—floor debates, congressional
hearings, and so on—to determine how the legislature intended for the laws to be
interpreted. But the late justice Antonin Scalia argued that such searches are inherently
subjective and that justices should only interpret the actual text of the laws in question.
Although politicians and other political actors accept judicial review as a central
part of the political system, critics are concerned about its antidemocratic nature. Why,
for example, do we give nine unelected justices such extraordinary power over our
elected representatives? Debates about the proper role for the Court will continue as
long as it is involved in controversial decisions. We will take up this question later in the
chapter when we address the concepts of judicial activism and judicial restraint.
“Why
Should
I Care?”
Judicial review may seem like “inside baseball” that doesn’t really matter for most
Americans. However, the power to strike down laws and government actions means that
the Court may act against political majorities to strike down unconstitutional actions such
as segregating schools by race and discriminating against same-sex marriage. Judicial
review may also be used, however, to frustrate popular majorities during times of political
change, such as during the New Deal of the 1930s. In the most recent term, the Court
did some of both—requiring the government to have a court order to search cell phone
records but also deciding that states must collect sales taxes on Internet sales, despite
public opposition to the practice. In either case, this is an awesome political power that puts
the Supreme Court on an equal institutional footing with Congress and the president.
The American Legal and Judicial System
Two sets of considerations are necessary to understand the overall nature of our
judicial system: the fundamentals of the legal system that apply to all courts in the
United States, and the structure of the court system within our system of federalism.
You may have a pretty good understanding of the legal system from watching Law and
Order, but a refresher on the basics never hurts.
Court Fundamentals
The general characteristics of the court system begin with the people who are in the
courtroom. The plaintiff brings the case, and the defendant is the person or party
who is being sued or charged with a crime. If the case is appealed, the petitioner is the
OUTLINE THE STRUCTURE
OF THE COURT SYSTEM
plaintiff
The person or party who brings a case
to court.
defendant
The person or party against whom a
case is brought.
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