Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. Article III, section 2 of the United States Constitution makes this principle clear by the statement that judicial Power shall extend to all Cases . . arising under this Constitution, the Laws of the United States, and Treaties . . . and . . . to all controversies . . . between Citizens of different States . . . \u27 One might argue that judicial power under Article III is not the same thing as jurisdiction. But the exercise of jurisdiction in situations in which a federal court does not have judicial power would not be likely to yield any conclusive results between the parties. At the heart of the idea of limited jurisdiction is the concept of cases and controversies. The followin...
MODERN reform in judicial procedure is characterized by extreme liberality in permitting parties to ...
Although the Constitution vests the Judicial Power of the United States in the Supreme Court and i...
Scholars have long debated Congress’s power to curb federal jurisdiction and have consistently assum...
Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. Article III, section 2 of the United States Const...
The Supreme Court has paid a significant amount of attention to federal subject matter jurisdiction ...
Standing doctrine is supposed to ensure the separation of powers and an adversary process of adjudic...
Over the past half-century, federal courts scholarship concerning congressional control over the aut...
The very substantial literature on the scope of congressional power to strip courts of jurisdiction ...
This Article draws on my legislative and judicial background to focus both on the tendency of the co...
Federal laws that regulate state institutions give rise to what the Supreme Court has described as t...
Does the Supreme Court have jurisdiction to hear controversies between a state and the United States...
The division of the American legal process into two complete and distinct judicial systems, state an...
Although Article III of the Constitution vests the federal judicial power in the Article III courts,...
The federal courts have long struggled with the conflict be- tween the limits of their constitutiona...
Article III of the United States Constitution sets limits on the ability of the legislature to expan...
MODERN reform in judicial procedure is characterized by extreme liberality in permitting parties to ...
Although the Constitution vests the Judicial Power of the United States in the Supreme Court and i...
Scholars have long debated Congress’s power to curb federal jurisdiction and have consistently assum...
Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. Article III, section 2 of the United States Const...
The Supreme Court has paid a significant amount of attention to federal subject matter jurisdiction ...
Standing doctrine is supposed to ensure the separation of powers and an adversary process of adjudic...
Over the past half-century, federal courts scholarship concerning congressional control over the aut...
The very substantial literature on the scope of congressional power to strip courts of jurisdiction ...
This Article draws on my legislative and judicial background to focus both on the tendency of the co...
Federal laws that regulate state institutions give rise to what the Supreme Court has described as t...
Does the Supreme Court have jurisdiction to hear controversies between a state and the United States...
The division of the American legal process into two complete and distinct judicial systems, state an...
Although Article III of the Constitution vests the federal judicial power in the Article III courts,...
The federal courts have long struggled with the conflict be- tween the limits of their constitutiona...
Article III of the United States Constitution sets limits on the ability of the legislature to expan...
MODERN reform in judicial procedure is characterized by extreme liberality in permitting parties to ...
Although the Constitution vests the Judicial Power of the United States in the Supreme Court and i...
Scholars have long debated Congress’s power to curb federal jurisdiction and have consistently assum...