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E-raamat: Cases Without Controversies: Uncontested Adjudication in Article III Courts

(Owen L. Coon Professor of Law, Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Apr-2021
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780197571415
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Apr-2021
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780197571415

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This book offers a new account of the power of federal courts in the United States to hear and determine uncontested applications to assert or register a claim of right. Familiar to lawyers in civil law countries as forms of voluntary or non-contentious jurisdiction, these uncontested applications fit uneasily with the commitment to adversary legalism in the United States. Indeed, modern accounts of federal judicial power often urge that the language of the Article III of the U.S. Constitution limits federal courts to the adjudication of concrete disputes between adverse parties, thereby ruling out all forms of non-contentious jurisdiction. Said to rest on the so-called "case-or-controversy" requirement of Article III, this requirement of party contestation threatens the power of federal courts to conduct a range of familiar proceedings, such as the oversight of bankruptcy proceedings, the issuance of warrants, and the adjudication of applications for mandamus and habeas corpus relief. By recounting the tradition of naturalization and other uncontested litigation in antebellum America and coupling that tradition with an account of the important difference between cases and controversies, this book challenges the prevailing understanding of Article III. In addition to defending the power of federal courts to hear uncontested matters of federal law, the book examines the way the Constitution's meaning has changed over time and suggests a constructive interpretive methodology that would allow the Supreme Court to take account of the old and the new in defining the contours of federal judicial power.

Arvustused

Overall, Jim Pfander's book is legal history at its finest. He has done thorough research, drawn reasonable conclusions from the primary sources, fairly acknowledged possible competing interpretations, and explained complex legal and historical ideas clearly. No one has a better understanding of the historical meaning of Article III. * Robert Pushaw, Balkinization Symposium *

Foreword vii
Introduction 1(18)
PART I THESIS: UNCONTESTED ADJUDICATION IN THE EARLY FEDERAL COURTS
1 The Origins of Uncontested Adjudication
19(14)
2 Uncontested Proceedings on Federal Dockets in the Early Republic
33(28)
3 Probate and Domestic Relations Proceedings
61(12)
4 The Nineteenth-Century Perspective on Federal Judicial Power
73(14)
PART II ANTITHESIS: THE PROGRESSIVE RESTATEMENT OF AN EMERGING CASE-OR-CONTROVERSY REQUIREMENT
5 The Judicial Response to the Administrative State
87(12)
6 The Progressive Response to Lochner: Limiting Justiciability
99(8)
7 The New Adverse-Party Rule Confronts Judicial Practice
107(36)
PART III SYNTHESIS: CASES, CONTROVERSIES, AND LITIGABLE INTERESTS
8 Uncontested Adjudication and the Modern Case-or-ControversyRule
143(12)
9 Evaluating Defenses of a Requirement of Adverse Interests
155(20)
10 Uncontested Adjudication and Standing to Sue
175(16)
11 A Practical Guide to Uncontested Adjudication
191(32)
12 Toward a Constructive Constitutional History
223(14)
PART IV CONCLUSION
237(2)
Table of Authorities 239(16)
Table of Cases 255(6)
Index 261
James Pfander, author of dozens of articles and books, has served as the Owen L. Coon Professor of Law at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law for more than a decade. Pfander's scholarship explores the nature of federal judicial power, the law of government accountability in modern America, and the history of the federal judicial system. A member of the American Law Institute, Pfander recently concluded his work as reporter/consultant to the Federal-State Jurisdiction Committee of the Judicial Conference of the United States. He has served as chair of both the federal courts and civil procedure sections of the Association of American Law Schools.