Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts...

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Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts

Transcript of Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts...

Page 1: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Chapter Seventeen:Appellate Courts

Page 2: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Courts of Last Resort

Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law;

questions of fact are not appealable.

Appellate courts hear no new testimony and consider no new evidence.

Decisions in intermediate appellate courts are typically made by three-judge rotating panels. But when cases are important, all judges

participate (en banc).

Page 3: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Question

What are “questions of law?”

How do disagreements over a

point of law originate?

Page 4: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Discretionary Review

The losing party is not required to seek appellate court review; appeals are discretionary.*

If the first appeal is affirmed, any further review is discretionary; the higher court does not have to

hear the appeal.

* (Except in capital offense cases to which an appeals is mandatory)

Page 5: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Principles of Appeal(Criminal)

Right to one appeal.

No right to bail.

Only the losing party can file an appeal.

After an acquittal, the prosecutor cannot file an appeal (double jeopardy).

Prosecutors can file an appeal through an interlocutory order.

Generally, appeals are limited to findings of guilt, not the type or harshness of the sentence.

Page 6: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Functions of Courts of Last Resort

Error Correction

Appellate courts are concerned with individual litigants and the lower court’s interpretation of the law.

Policy Formulation

Appellate court decisions shape the existing law, extend precedent to new situations, and overrule previous

decisions. In other words, their decisions impact both existing and future cases.

Page 7: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Steps in the Criminal Appellate Process

Appeal: mandatory or discretionary.

Notice of Appeal: the appellant (convicted offender) files against the respondent (the state).

Appellate Court Record: transcripts, papers, and exhibits.

Briefing the Case: briefs or written arguments; both sides file a brief.

Page 8: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Steps in the Criminal Appellate Process

(cont’d)

Oral Argument: both attorneys are allowed to provide an oral argument. Judges also ask attorneys questions.

Written Opinion (only appellate court opinions are

considered precedent) and the Dissenting Opinion (judges who disagree).

Disposition: affirm, modify, reverse, reverse and remand – reversible error or harmless error.

Page 9: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Questions

Are civil or criminal cases more likely to be appealed? Why?

Is expense an obstacle to criminal appeals?

What type of criminal defendant is most likely to win on appeal?

Page 10: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Post-Conviction Review

Collateral attacks filed by prisoners against the prison warden. Although they are filed by

prisoners who have been convicted of a criminal offense, these challenges are civil matters.

Page 11: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Post-Conviction Remedies

May only be filed by those in prison.

May raise only constitutional questions.

May be broader than appeals, i.e., confront issues not raised during trial, pursue constitutional protections that have developed since the original trial, and contest conditions of confinement.

Unlimited in number (state courts).

Page 12: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Questions:

What is a “writ of habeas corpus?”

Should federal habeas corpus actions be broadened to offer more than one federal review

(unless the case presents an extraordinary issue)?(1996 Antiterrorism & Effective Death Penalty Act)

What about those on death row?(physical evidence and DNA)

Page 13: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

New Judicial Federalism

State constitutions are sources of individual rights over and above the rights granted by

the federal constitution.

The federal constitution establishes minimum guarantees of individual rights rather than

maximum protections.

Page 14: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Questions

How do state courts perform as “policymakers?” Give an example.

In states that do not have intermediate courts of appeals, who has the responsibility for appellate review?

What are some areas of law in which state courts have not always complied with federal decisions?

Page 15: Chapter Seventeen: Appellate Courts. Courts of Last Resort Appellate courts oversee the lower courts and are restricted to questions of law; questions.

Discussion

Discuss the differences between

the “Warren Court,” the “Burger Court,”

and the “Rehnquist Court.”