3 Branches of Government and Cases

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Cards In This Set

Front Back
Legislative Branch
Made up of Congress and government agencies, such as the government printing office and library of congress that provide assistance to and support services for Congress.Congress has the power to make laws.
Congress consists of....
House of Representatives and the Senate
Judicial Branch
Made up of the court system. The Supreme Court is the highest court in the land. Courts are created by Congress. Courts decide arguments about the meaning of laws, how they are applied, and whether they break the rules of the Constitution.
Executive Branch
Makes sure that the laws of the US are obeyed. The President is the head of this branch. This branch is very large so the President gets help from the VP, department heads, and heads of independent agencies.
Roe Vs. Wade
Was an unmarried and pregnant Texas resident in 1970. Texas law made it a felony to abort a fetus unless “on medical advice for the purpose of saving the life of the mother.” She filed suit against the district attorney of Dallas County, contesting the statue on the grounds that it violated the guarantee of personal liberty and the right to privacy implicitly guaranteed in the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendments. In deciding, the Supreme Court invalidated any state laws that prohibited first trimester abortions.
Marbury vs. Madison
Resulted in establishment of the concept of judicial review.

-not deliver the documents to Marbury. Marbury then sued James Madison asking the Supreme Court to issue a writ requiring him to deliver the documents necessary to officially make Marbury Justice of the Peace
Plessy vs. Ferguson
In 1890, Louisiana passed a statute called the Separate Car Act declaring that all rail companies carrying passengers in Louisiana must provide separate but equal accommodations for white and non-white passengers. The penalty for sitting in the wrong compartment was a fine of $25 or 20 days in jail. A group of black citizens joined forces with the East Louisiana Railroad Company to fight the Act. In 1892, he, who was one-eighth black, purchased a first-class ticket and sat in the white-designated railroad car. He was arrested for violating the Separate Car Act and argued in court that the Act violated the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution. After losing twice in the lower courts, he took his case to the U.S. Supreme Court, which upheld the previous decisions that racial segregation is constitutional under the separate but equal doctrine.
Miranda vs. Arizona
Man was arrested after a crime victim identified him, but police officers questioning him did not inform him of his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, or of his Sixth Amendment right to the assistance of an attorney. While he confessed to the crime, his attorney later argued that his confession should have been excluded from trial. The Supreme Court agreed, deciding that the police had not taken proper steps to inform him of his rights.
Brown vs. Board of Education
In Topeka, Kansas.Believed that the segregated school system violated the Fourteenth Amendment and took their case to court. Federal district court decided that segregation in public education was harmful to black children, but because all-black schools and all-white schools had similar buildings, transportation, curricula, and teachers, the segregation was legal. They appealed their case to Supreme Court stating that even if the facilities were similar, segregated schools could never be equal to one another. The Court decided that state laws requiring separate but equal schools violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Dred Scott vs. Sanford
As a slave, he was purchased in Missouri and then brought to Illinois, a free (non-slave) state. They later moved to present-day Minnesota where slavery had been recently prohibited, and then back to Missouri. When his owner died, he sued the widow to whom he was left, claiming he was no longer a slave because he had become free after living in a free state. At a time when the country was in deep conflict over slavery, the Supreme Court decided that he was not a “citizen of the state” so they had no jurisdiction in the matter, but the majority opinion also stated that he was not a free man.
- The court also held that theU.S. Congress had no authority to prohibit slavery in federal territories and that, because slaves were not citizens, they could not sue in court. Furthermore, the Court ruled that slaves, as chattels or private property, could not be taken away from their owners without due process.
Harriet Tubman
American abolitionist. Born a slave on a Maryland plantation, she escaped to the North in 1849 and became the most renowned conductor on the Underground Railroad, leading more than 300 slaves to freedom.