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  | Section 1.2 The Court System and Trial Procedures
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  | The power a court has to hear a case and make a judgment is called jurisdiction.
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  | The United States has two major court systems: the federal and the state courts.
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  | The federal court system consists of:
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  | An appellate court is not a trial court, but reviews the decision of a lower court.
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  | Most state court systems consist of:
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  | special courts, such as juvenile courts
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  | intermediate appellate courts
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  | Courts hear two types of cases:
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  | Criminal cases are brought by the government for offenses committed against the public.
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  | A criminal case begins with the arrest and arraignment of a person.
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  | An arrest is when a person is legally deprived of his or her freedom.
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  | An arraignment is when a person is read the charges and asked to plead guilty or not guilty.
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  | Civil cases are brought by one individual against another.
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  | A civil case begins with one individual suing another. The plaintiff is the person bringing the lawsuit. The defendant is the person being sued.
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  | There are several steps to a trial:
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  | arguments and evidence by the lawyers
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  | judge’s instructions to the jury
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  | If the defendant is found liable in a civil case, the plaintiff is granted a remedy, often in the form of money.
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  | If the defendant is convicted in a criminal case, the defendant is punished in the form of a fine, imprisonment, or both.
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  | In either case, if the defendant is found liable or convicted, the defendant has the right to appeal the judgment to an appellate court.
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  | Section 1.1 The Foundations of Law
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  | Morality refers to a society’s values and beliefs about right and wrong.
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  | Ethics refers to the rules used to determine the difference between right and wrong.
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  | People do not always behave morally or ethically, so we need law.
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  | Law is a system of rules established by a government according to the values of society and having legal force.
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  | Constitutional law is the set of laws created by a country’s constitution. A constitution is a formal document that lays out the basic principles that govern society.
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  | Common law is the set of laws created over time through customs and judgments by courts, which later courts must follow.
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  | Statutory law is the set of laws created by a governing body, called a legislature, whose purpose is to pass new laws.
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  | Courts make laws in three ways:
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  | Iterpretation of statutes
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  | Judicial review (conflict, unconstitutional)
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  | Administrative law is the set of laws created by government agencies. For example, the Federal Trade Commission has the power to make rules regulating business.
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  | Ch. 1: The Law and the Courts
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