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Federal tribunals in the United States

Federal tribunals in the United States are those tribunals established by the federal government of the United States for the purpose of resolving disputes involving or arising under federal laws, including questions about the constitutionality of such laws. Such tribunals include both Article III tribunals (federal courts) as well as adjudicative entities which are classified as Article I or Article IV tribunals. Some of the latter entities are also formally denominated as courts, but they do not enjoy certain protections afforded to Article III courts. These tribunals are described in reference to the article of the United States Constitution from which the tribunal's authority stems. The use of the term "tribunal" in this context as a blanket term to encompass both courts and other adjudicative entities comes from section 8 of Article I of the Constitution, which expressly grants Congress the power to constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court of the United States.

Article III courts edit

Article III courts (also called Article III tribunals) are the U.S. Supreme Court and the inferior courts of the United States established by Congress, which currently are the 13 United States courts of appeals, the 91 United States district courts (including the districts of D.C. and Puerto Rico, but excluding three other territorial district courts), and the U.S. Court of International Trade. They constitute the judicial branch of the federal government (which is defined by Article III of the Constitution).

Pursuant to the Appointments Clause in Article II, all members of Article III tribunals are appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. These courts are protected against undue influence by the other branches of government. Judges may not have their salaries reduced during their tenure in office, and their appointment is for life—barring removal from office "on impeachment for, and conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors".[1]

Under the Constitution, Congress can vest these courts with jurisdiction to hear cases involving the Constitution or federal law and certain cases involving disputes between citizens of different states or countries. Among the matters susceptible of judicial determination, but not requiring it, are: claims against the United States, the disposal of public lands and related claims, questions concerning membership in Indian tribes, and questions arising out of the administration of customs laws and the Internal Revenue Code.[2]

Article I tribunals edit

Article I tribunals include Article I courts (also called legislative courts) set up by Congress to review agency decisions, military courts-martial appeal courts, ancillary courts with judges appointed by Article III appeals court judges, or administrative agencies and administrative law judges (ALJs). Article I judges do not enjoy the same protections as their Article III counterparts. For example, these judges do not enjoy life tenure, and Congress may reduce their salaries.

The existence of Article I tribunals has long been controversial, and their power challenged numerous times. The Supreme Court has consistently affirmed their Constitutionality, and has delineated their power on several occasions. In Murray's Lessee v. Hoboken Land & Improvement Co. (59 U.S. (18 How.) 272 (1856)) the Supreme Court ruled that some legal matters, specifically those involving public rights, are inherently judicial, and thus Article I tribunal decisions are susceptible to review by an Article III court. Later, in Ex parte Bakelite Corp. (279 U.S. 438 (1929)), the Court declared that Article I courts "may be created as special tribunals to examine and determine various matters, arising between the government and others, which from their nature do not require judicial determination and yet are susceptible of it".[2]

Article IV tribunals edit

Article IV tribunals are the United States territorial courts, established in territories of the United States by the United States Congress, pursuant to its power under Article Four of the United States Constitution, the Territorial Clause.[3] (Note that some sources consider these territorial courts to be subsumed under the category of Article I legislative courts, as they are created by Congress pursuant to its Article IV powers.)[4] Many United States territorial courts are defunct because the territories under their jurisdictions have become states or have been retroceded.

An example of a territorial court is the High Court of American Samoa, a court established pursuant to the Constitution of American Samoa. As an unincorporated territory, the Ratification Act of 1929 vested all civil, judicial and military powers in the President, who in turn delegated authority to the Secretary of the Interior in Executive Order 10264, who in turn promulgated the Constitution of American Samoa, which authorizes the court. As such, the Secretary retains ultimate authority over the courts.[5]

Other United States territorial courts still in existence are:

Article III Court for Puerto Rico edit

Before 1966, the United States District Court in Puerto Rico was an Article IV court.[6] In 1966, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 89–571, 80 Stat. 764, which transformed the Article IV federal district court in Puerto Rico into an Article III court. This Act of Congress was not enacted pursuant to Article IV of the Constitution, the Territorial Clause, but rather under Article III. This marks the only occasion in United States history in which Congress has established an Article III court in an area that is not a state other than the District of Columbia. From then on, judges appointed to serve on the Puerto Rico federal district court have been Article III judges appointed under the Constitution of the United States. Like their mainland counterparts, they are entitled to life tenure and salary protection.

This important change in the federal judicial structure of the island was implemented not as a request of the Commonwealth government, but rather at the repeated request of the Judicial Conference of the United States.[7]

The District Court of Puerto Rico is part of the First Circuit, which sits in Boston.

Supreme Court rulings limiting the power of Article I and Article IV tribunals edit

The concept of a legislative court was first defined by Chief Justice John Marshall in the case of American Ins. Co. v. 356 Bales of Cotton, 26 U.S. (1 Pet.) 511 (1828),[8] which is sometimes referred to as Canter, after a claimant in the case. In this case, a court in what was then the Territory of Florida had made a ruling on the disposition of some bales of cotton that had been recovered from a sunken ship. This clearly fell into the realm of admiralty law, which is part of the federal judicial power according to Article III of the Constitution. Yet the judges of the Florida Territorial Court had four-year terms, not the lifetime appointments required by Article III of the Constitution. Marshall's solution was to declare that territorial courts were established under Article I of the constitution. As such, they could not exercise the federal judicial power, and therefore the law that placed admiralty cases in their jurisdiction was unconstitutional.

Tenure that is guaranteed by the Constitution is a badge of a judge of an Article III court. The argument that mere statutory tenure is sufficient for judges of Article III courts was authoritatively answered in Ex parte Bakelite Corp.:[9]

[T]he argument is fallacious. It mistakenly assumes that whether a court is of one class or the other depends on the intention of Congress, whereas the true test lies in the power under which the court was created and in the jurisdiction conferred. Nor has there been any settled practice on the part of Congress which gives special significance to the absence or presence of a provision respecting the tenure of judges. This may be illustrated by two citations. The same Congress that created the Court of Customs Appeals made provision for five additional circuit judges and declared that they should [370 U.S. 530, 597] hold their offices during good behavior; and yet the status of the judges was the same as it would have been had that declaration been omitted. In creating courts for some of the Territories Congress failed to include a provision fixing the tenure of the judges; but the courts became legislative courts just as if such a provision had been included.

In Glidden Co. v. Zdanok, the court made the following statement regarding courts in unincorporated territories:

Upon like considerations, Article III has been viewed as inapplicable to courts created in unincorporated territories outside the mainland, Downes v. Bidwell, 182 U.S. 244, 266-267; Balzac v. Porto Rico, 258 U.S. 298, 312-313; cf. Dorr v. United States, 195 U.S. 138, 145, 149, and to the consular courts established by concessions from foreign countries, In re Ross, 140 U.S. 453, 464-465, 480.

Ever since Canter, the federal courts have been wrestling with the division between legislative and judicial courts. The Supreme Court most thoroughly delineated the permissible scope of Article I tribunals in Northern Pipeline Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co., 458 U.S. 50 (1982), striking down the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 that created the original U.S. bankruptcy courts. The Court noted in that opinion that the framers of the Constitution had developed a scheme of separation of powers which clearly required that the judiciary be kept independent of the other two branches via the mechanism of lifetime appointments. This decision was subsequently revisited and affirmed in Stern v. Marshall, 564 U.S. 462 (2011). However, the Court noted three situations (based on historical understanding) in which Congress could give judicial power to non-Article III courts:

  1. Courts for non-state areas (U.S. territories and the District of Columbia) in which Congress is acting as both local and national government.
  2. Military courts (or courts-martial), under the historical understanding and clearly laid out exceptions in the Constitution.
  3. Legislative courts established under the premise that, where Congress could have simply given the Executive Branch the power to make a decision, it has the lesser power to create a tribunal to make that decision. This power is limited to adjudication of public rights, such as the settling of disputes between the citizens and the government.

The Court also found that Congress has the power under Article I to create adjunct tribunals, so long as the "essential attributes of judicial power" stay in Article III courts. This power derives from two sources. First, when Congress creates rights, it can require those asserting such rights to go through an Article I tribunal. Second, Congress can create non-Article III tribunals to help Article III courts deal with their workload, but only if the Article I tribunals are under the control of the Article III courts. The bankruptcy courts, as well as the tribunals of magistrate judges who decide some issues in the district courts, fall within this category of "adjunct" tribunals. All actions heard in an Article I tribunal are subject to de novo review in the supervising Article III court, which retains the exclusive power to make and enforce final judgments.

Pursuant to Congress' authority under Article IV, §3, of the Constitution to "make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the United States"; Congress may create territorial courts and vest them with subject-matter jurisdiction over causes arising under both federal law and local law. But "the Supreme Court long ago determined that in the 'unincorporated' territories, such as American Samoa, the guarantees of the Constitution apply only insofar as its 'fundamental limitations in favor of personal rights' express 'principles which are the basis of all free government which cannot be with impunity transcended'."[10]

The Supreme Court noted in Commodity Futures Trading Commission v. Schor, 478 U.S. 833 (1986), that parties to litigation may voluntarily waive their right to an Article III tribunal and thereby submit themselves to a binding judgment from an Article I tribunal. However, the Supreme Court later noted in Stern v. Marshall, 564 U.S. ___ (2011), that a party's right to an Article III tribunal is not always voluntarily waiveable in an Article I tribunal for suits at common law. Similarly, in Granfinanciera, S. A. v. Nordberg, 492 U.S. 33 (1989), the Court noted that a litigant's right to jury trial under the Seventh Amendment is also not generally waivable in an Article I tribunal for suits at common law. The Supreme Court further noted in Granfinanciera and Stern the parallel analysis of rights under Article III and the Seventh Amendment.

Article IV judges, in that capacity, cannot sit on the United States Courts of Appeals or decide an appeal as part of such panels.[11]

List of Article I, Article III and Article IV tribunals edit

Article I tribunals Article III tribunals Article IV tribunals

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Presser, Stephen B. "Essays on Article I: Impeachment". The Heritage Guide to the Constitution. Heritage Foundation. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  2. ^ a b "Constitution of the United States of America: Analysis, and Interpretation – Centennial Edition – Interim" (PDF). S. Doc. 112-9. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 647–648. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  3. ^ NGUYEN V. UNITED STATES (01-10873) 540 U.S. 935 (2003), The United States Supreme Court, retrieved 2010-01-06
  4. ^ Richard Fallon, John Manning, Daniel Meltzer, and David Shapiro (2015). Hart and Wechsler's The Federal Courts and The Federal System (7th ed.). St. Paul, MN: Foundation Press. p. 362.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Leibowitz, Arnold H. (1989). Defining Status: A Comprehensive Analysis of United States Territorial Relations. p. 420. ISBN 978-0-7923-0069-4. His legal position would not only permit him to investigate and overturn decisions of the judiciary in American Samoa, but the decisions of the Executive and Legislative branches as well. … The very fact that his office exists as an ombudsman, to put it kindly, or as a benevolent dictator — to put it less generously — depreciates all Samoan government institutions and makes the Samoan Constitution adopted in 1960 a giant deceit.
  6. ^ Balzac v. Porto Rico, 258 U.S. 298 (1922).
  7. ^ Senate Report No. 1504, 1966 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2786-90.
  8. ^ The name on the actual slip opinion originally handed down by the Supreme Court was American Insur. Co. v. Canter.
  9. ^ Ex parte Bakelite Corp., at 459-460.
  10. ^ Mormons v. Hodel, 830 F.2d 374 (1987), citing Dorr v. United States, 195 U.S. 138 (1904)
  11. ^ Nguyen v. United States, 539 U.S. 69 (2003).

Further reading edit

  • Killian, Johnny H.; Costello, George A., eds. (1996). The Constitution of the United States of America: Analysis and Interpretation: Annotations of Cases Decided by the Supreme Court of the United States to June 29, 1992. Government Printing Office: Washington, DC. Senate Document 103–6.
    • The section on Article III is downloadable as a 1.1 MB PDF at .
    • Page 604 of this work asserts that the concept of a legislative court first appears in Canter.
  • Doernberg, Donald L.; Wingate, C. Keith; Zeigler, Donald H., eds. (2004). Federal Courts, Federalism and Separation of Powers: Cases and Materials. West Group Publishing. ISBN 0-314-14928-7.

federal, tribunals, united, states, those, tribunals, established, federal, government, united, states, purpose, resolving, disputes, involving, arising, under, federal, laws, including, questions, about, constitutionality, such, laws, such, tribunals, include. Federal tribunals in the United States are those tribunals established by the federal government of the United States for the purpose of resolving disputes involving or arising under federal laws including questions about the constitutionality of such laws Such tribunals include both Article III tribunals federal courts as well as adjudicative entities which are classified as Article I or Article IV tribunals Some of the latter entities are also formally denominated as courts but they do not enjoy certain protections afforded to Article III courts These tribunals are described in reference to the article of the United States Constitution from which the tribunal s authority stems The use of the term tribunal in this context as a blanket term to encompass both courts and other adjudicative entities comes from section 8 of Article I of the Constitution which expressly grants Congress the power to constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court of the United States Contents 1 Article III courts 2 Article I tribunals 3 Article IV tribunals 3 1 Article III Court for Puerto Rico 4 Supreme Court rulings limiting the power of Article I and Article IV tribunals 5 List of Article I Article III and Article IV tribunals 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingArticle III courts editMain articles Federal judiciary of the United States and United States federal judge See also List of United States district and territorial courts and Article Three of the United States Constitution Article III courts also called Article III tribunals are the U S Supreme Court and the inferior courts of the United States established by Congress which currently are the 13 United States courts of appeals the 91 United States district courts including the districts of D C and Puerto Rico but excluding three other territorial district courts and the U S Court of International Trade They constitute the judicial branch of the federal government which is defined by Article III of the Constitution Pursuant to the Appointments Clause in Article II all members of Article III tribunals are appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate These courts are protected against undue influence by the other branches of government Judges may not have their salaries reduced during their tenure in office and their appointment is for life barring removal from office on impeachment for and conviction of Treason Bribery or other high crimes and misdemeanors 1 Under the Constitution Congress can vest these courts with jurisdiction to hear cases involving the Constitution or federal law and certain cases involving disputes between citizens of different states or countries Among the matters susceptible of judicial determination but not requiring it are claims against the United States the disposal of public lands and related claims questions concerning membership in Indian tribes and questions arising out of the administration of customs laws and the Internal Revenue Code 2 Article I tribunals editArticle I tribunals include Article I courts also called legislative courts set up by Congress to review agency decisions military courts martial appeal courts ancillary courts with judges appointed by Article III appeals court judges or administrative agencies and administrative law judges ALJs Article I judges do not enjoy the same protections as their Article III counterparts For example these judges do not enjoy life tenure and Congress may reduce their salaries The existence of Article I tribunals has long been controversial and their power challenged numerous times The Supreme Court has consistently affirmed their Constitutionality and has delineated their power on several occasions In Murray s Lessee v Hoboken Land amp Improvement Co 59 U S 18 How 272 1856 the Supreme Court ruled that some legal matters specifically those involving public rights are inherently judicial and thus Article I tribunal decisions are susceptible to review by an Article III court Later in Ex parte Bakelite Corp 279 U S 438 1929 the Court declared that Article I courts may be created as special tribunals to examine and determine various matters arising between the government and others which from their nature do not require judicial determination and yet are susceptible of it 2 Article IV tribunals editArticle IV tribunals are the United States territorial courts established in territories of the United States by the United States Congress pursuant to its power under Article Four of the United States Constitution the Territorial Clause 3 Note that some sources consider these territorial courts to be subsumed under the category of Article I legislative courts as they are created by Congress pursuant to its Article IV powers 4 Many United States territorial courts are defunct because the territories under their jurisdictions have become states or have been retroceded An example of a territorial court is the High Court of American Samoa a court established pursuant to the Constitution of American Samoa As an unincorporated territory the Ratification Act of 1929 vested all civil judicial and military powers in the President who in turn delegated authority to the Secretary of the Interior in Executive Order 10264 who in turn promulgated the Constitution of American Samoa which authorizes the court As such the Secretary retains ultimate authority over the courts 5 Other United States territorial courts still in existence are District Court for the Northern Mariana Islands District Court of Guam District Court of the Virgin Islands Article III Court for Puerto Rico edit Before 1966 the United States District Court in Puerto Rico was an Article IV court 6 In 1966 President Lyndon B Johnson signed Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 89 571 80 Stat 764 which transformed the Article IV federal district court in Puerto Rico into an Article III court This Act of Congress was not enacted pursuant to Article IV of the Constitution the Territorial Clause but rather under Article III This marks the only occasion in United States history in which Congress has established an Article III court in an area that is not a state other than the District of Columbia From then on judges appointed to serve on the Puerto Rico federal district court have been Article III judges appointed under the Constitution of the United States Like their mainland counterparts they are entitled to life tenure and salary protection This important change in the federal judicial structure of the island was implemented not as a request of the Commonwealth government but rather at the repeated request of the Judicial Conference of the United States 7 The District Court of Puerto Rico is part of the First Circuit which sits in Boston Supreme Court rulings limiting the power of Article I and Article IV tribunals editThe concept of a legislative court was first defined by Chief Justice John Marshall in the case of American Ins Co v 356 Bales of Cotton 26 U S 1 Pet 511 1828 8 which is sometimes referred to as Canter after a claimant in the case In this case a court in what was then the Territory of Florida had made a ruling on the disposition of some bales of cotton that had been recovered from a sunken ship This clearly fell into the realm of admiralty law which is part of the federal judicial power according to Article III of the Constitution Yet the judges of the Florida Territorial Court had four year terms not the lifetime appointments required by Article III of the Constitution Marshall s solution was to declare that territorial courts were established under Article I of the constitution As such they could not exercise the federal judicial power and therefore the law that placed admiralty cases in their jurisdiction was unconstitutional Tenure that is guaranteed by the Constitution is a badge of a judge of an Article III court The argument that mere statutory tenure is sufficient for judges of Article III courts was authoritatively answered in Ex parte Bakelite Corp 9 T he argument is fallacious It mistakenly assumes that whether a court is of one class or the other depends on the intention of Congress whereas the true test lies in the power under which the court was created and in the jurisdiction conferred Nor has there been any settled practice on the part of Congress which gives special significance to the absence or presence of a provision respecting the tenure of judges This may be illustrated by two citations The same Congress that created the Court of Customs Appeals made provision for five additional circuit judges and declared that they should 370 U S 530 597 hold their offices during good behavior and yet the status of the judges was the same as it would have been had that declaration been omitted In creating courts for some of the Territories Congress failed to include a provision fixing the tenure of the judges but the courts became legislative courts just as if such a provision had been included In Glidden Co v Zdanok the court made the following statement regarding courts in unincorporated territories Upon like considerations Article III has been viewed as inapplicable to courts created in unincorporated territories outside the mainland Downes v Bidwell 182 U S 244 266 267 Balzac v Porto Rico 258 U S 298 312 313 cf Dorr v United States 195 U S 138 145 149 and to the consular courts established by concessions from foreign countries In re Ross 140 U S 453 464 465 480 Ever since Canter the federal courts have been wrestling with the division between legislative and judicial courts The Supreme Court most thoroughly delineated the permissible scope of Article I tribunals in Northern Pipeline Co v Marathon Pipe Line Co 458 U S 50 1982 striking down the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 that created the original U S bankruptcy courts The Court noted in that opinion that the framers of the Constitution had developed a scheme of separation of powers which clearly required that the judiciary be kept independent of the other two branches via the mechanism of lifetime appointments This decision was subsequently revisited and affirmed in Stern v Marshall 564 U S 462 2011 However the Court noted three situations based on historical understanding in which Congress could give judicial power to non Article III courts Courts for non state areas U S territories and the District of Columbia in which Congress is acting as both local and national government Military courts or courts martial under the historical understanding and clearly laid out exceptions in the Constitution Legislative courts established under the premise that where Congress could have simply given the Executive Branch the power to make a decision it has the lesser power to create a tribunal to make that decision This power is limited to adjudication of public rights such as the settling of disputes between the citizens and the government The Court also found that Congress has the power under Article I to create adjunct tribunals so long as the essential attributes of judicial power stay in Article III courts This power derives from two sources First when Congress creates rights it can require those asserting such rights to go through an Article I tribunal Second Congress can create non Article III tribunals to help Article III courts deal with their workload but only if the Article I tribunals are under the control of the Article III courts The bankruptcy courts as well as the tribunals of magistrate judges who decide some issues in the district courts fall within this category of adjunct tribunals All actions heard in an Article I tribunal are subject to de novo review in the supervising Article III court which retains the exclusive power to make and enforce final judgments Pursuant to Congress authority under Article IV 3 of the Constitution to make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the United States Congress may create territorial courts and vest them with subject matter jurisdiction over causes arising under both federal law and local law But the Supreme Court long ago determined that in the unincorporated territories such as American Samoa the guarantees of the Constitution apply only insofar as its fundamental limitations in favor of personal rights express principles which are the basis of all free government which cannot be with impunity transcended 10 The Supreme Court noted in Commodity Futures Trading Commission v Schor 478 U S 833 1986 that parties to litigation may voluntarily waive their right to an Article III tribunal and thereby submit themselves to a binding judgment from an Article I tribunal However the Supreme Court later noted in Stern v Marshall 564 U S 2011 that a party s right to an Article III tribunal is not always voluntarily waiveable in an Article I tribunal for suits at common law Similarly in Granfinanciera S A v Nordberg 492 U S 33 1989 the Court noted that a litigant s right to jury trial under the Seventh Amendment is also not generally waivable in an Article I tribunal for suits at common law The Supreme Court further noted in Granfinanciera and Stern the parallel analysis of rights under Article III and the Seventh Amendment Article IV judges in that capacity cannot sit on the United States Courts of Appeals or decide an appeal as part of such panels 11 List of Article I Article III and Article IV tribunals editArticle I tribunals Article III tribunals Article IV tribunals D C Court of Appeals Superior Court of the District of Columbia United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces Army Court of Criminal Appeals Navy Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals Coast Guard Court of Criminal Appeals United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims Board of Veterans Appeals Court of Indian Offenses Patent Trial and Appeal Board Trademark Trial and Appeal Board United States International Trade Commission United States Court of Federal Claims Boards of contract appeals Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals Civilian Board of Contract Appeals Office of Dispute Resolution for Acquisition Postal Service Board of Contract Appeals Tennessee Valley Authority Board of Contract Appeals United States Tax Court United States bankruptcy courts United States magistrate judges Social Security Administration s Office of Hearings Operations United States Merit Systems Protection Board United States courts martial United States Court of Military Commission Review Guantanamo military commissions USDA Office of Hearings and Appeals USDA National Appeals Division USDA Office of Administrative Law Judges USDA Office of the Judicial Officer Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission Supreme Court of the United States United States courts of appeals United States district courts United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court United States Court of International Trade United States Alien Terrorist Removal Court Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation United States territorial courtsSee also edit nbsp Law portal Chapter III Court analogous concept in Australian law State court United States Tribunals in the United KingdomReferences edit Presser Stephen B Essays on Article I Impeachment The Heritage Guide to the Constitution Heritage Foundation Retrieved September 1 2018 a b Constitution of the United States of America Analysis and Interpretation Centennial Edition Interim PDF S Doc 112 9 Washington D C U S Government Printing Office pp 647 648 Retrieved September 1 2018 NGUYEN V UNITED STATES 01 10873 540 U S 935 2003 The United States Supreme Court retrieved 2010 01 06 Richard Fallon John Manning Daniel Meltzer and David Shapiro 2015 Hart and Wechsler s The Federal Courts and The Federal System 7th ed St Paul MN Foundation Press p 362 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Leibowitz Arnold H 1989 Defining Status A Comprehensive Analysis of United States Territorial Relations p 420 ISBN 978 0 7923 0069 4 His legal position would not only permit him to investigate and overturn decisions of the judiciary in American Samoa but the decisions of the Executive and Legislative branches as well The very fact that his office exists as an ombudsman to put it kindly or as a benevolent dictator to put it less generously depreciates all Samoan government institutions and makes the Samoan Constitution adopted in 1960 a giant deceit Balzac v Porto Rico 258 U S 298 1922 Senate Report No 1504 1966 U S C C A N 2786 90 The name on the actual slip opinion originally handed down by the Supreme Court was American Insur Co v Canter Ex parte Bakelite Corp at 459 460 Mormons v Hodel 830 F 2d 374 1987 citing Dorr v United States 195 U S 138 1904 Nguyen v United States 539 U S 69 2003 Further reading editKillian Johnny H Costello George A eds 1996 The Constitution of the United States of America Analysis and Interpretation Annotations of Cases Decided by the Supreme Court of the United States to June 29 1992 Government Printing Office Washington DC Senate Document 103 6 The section on Article III is downloadable as a 1 1 MB PDF at https web archive org web 20051002211859 http www gpoaccess gov constitution pdf con006 pdf Page 604 of this work asserts that the concept of a legislative court first appears in Canter Doernberg Donald L Wingate C Keith Zeigler Donald H eds 2004 Federal Courts Federalism and Separation of Powers Cases and Materials West Group Publishing ISBN 0 314 14928 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Federal tribunals in the United States amp oldid 1177660536, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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