Landmark Supreme Court cases
** page under construction **
Short list of Landmark Supreme Court cases
- cases as generally recommended for core study for the AP Gov exam
- review of additional cases will yield greater student comprehension and analysis
Case | Date | Court | Big Ideas/ Court Doctrine | Constitutional Issues | Constitutional Issues | Issues / Background / Description / Opinion | Dissent (if relevant) | Related Cases |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Baker v. Carr | 1961 | Warren | - "One person one vote" standard
- Political Question doctrine |
Equal protection | judicial review |
|
- Justice Brennan argued that redistricting is a political question and should be left up to the states
- Justice Frankfurter held that the decision was "judicial overreach" |
|
Marbury v. Madison | 1803 | Marshall | Judicial supremacy | Original jurisdiction (Article III, Section 2) | "legal remedy" concept [1] |
|
none (unanimous decision) |
|
McColluch v. Maryland | 1819 | Marshall | implied powers | Supremacy clause | Necessary and proper clause | - Maryland tried to stop the Baltimore branch of the Second National Bank by taxing it
- the Court ruled that the National Bank was legitimate and superseded (was over) state law, thus Maryland could not tax it - |
||
Brown v. Board of Education | 1954 | Warren | equal protection | Equal protection | - overturned Plessy v. Furguson | |||
Full list of Landmark Supreme Court cases
Landmark Supreme Court cases: alphabetical
Landmark Supreme Court cases: by date & historical era
Landmark Supreme Court cases: by topic
- ↑ Marshall invoked (referenced) the ancient Roman legal maxim ubi jus, ibi remedium for "where there is a legal right, there is a legal remedy"
- ↑ Note that Hamilton did not envision Judicial review, instead arguing that the Congress must avoid unconstitutional unto itself.
- ↑ In this case the Court upheld a challenge to a law's constitutionality, in that a tax on carriages did not violate the Constitution. Marbury was not decided on this precedent, however, Chief Justice Roberts cited Hylton in National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius (2012)