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Fordham Law Review

2016

Federal Courts; introduction

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Full-Text Articles in Law

Introduction: Constraint, Authority, And The Rule Of Law In A Federal Circuit Court Of Appeals, John Fabian Witt Oct 2016

Introduction: Constraint, Authority, And The Rule Of Law In A Federal Circuit Court Of Appeals, John Fabian Witt

Fordham Law Review

Congress’ Evarts Act, signed into law in 1891, created a new Article III federal court designed almost exclusively to sit as an intermediate appellate court in between the federal trial courts and the U.S. Supreme Court. Congress created the new Evarts Act appellate courts to relieve pressure on the Supreme Court’s growing workload and to create a less arbitrary system of appeals for litigants in the federal trial courts. These twin goals of reducing the Supreme Court’s workload and establishing a meaningful right of appeal produced a set of circuit courts of appeals with a distinctively constrained new role. This, …


Introduction From The Editors Of Volume 84, Hopi Costello, Matthew Geyer, Brandon Ruben Oct 2016

Introduction From The Editors Of Volume 84, Hopi Costello, Matthew Geyer, Brandon Ruben

Fordham Law Review

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has always held special significance for the Fordham Law Review’s student members. Ennobled by the examples of Fordham Law School and Fordham Law Review alumni Judge Irving Kaufman, Judge William Mulligan, Judge Joseph McLaughlin, and, most recently, Judge Denny Chin, the student members of the Fordham Law Review strive to impact our profession at its highest levels. It is thus with great pleasure and pride that four current students on the Fordham Law Review join this intellectual lineage by contributing the notes written for this commemorative issue, eaching tackles recent …