By these acts, the legislature assumes to exercise a judicial power.
Without express provision in the Constitution, therefore, Sir, this whole question is necessarily decided by those provisions which create a legislative power and a judicial power.
Controversies between States respecting jurisdiction or territory, and controversies concerning lands claimed under grants of different States, were to be tried by the Senate, and were consequently excluded from the judicial power.
Judicial Power of United States, to settle disputes between State and nation, II.
It partakes of judicial power in the trial of certain political offences, and sometimes also in the decision of certain civil cases.
How can Senators, discharging a political function only, expect that the voice of the people will be more tender for them than for a Chief Justice pronouncing judgment from the bench of the Supreme Court, in the exercise of judicial power?
The legislation thus proposed invades the judicial power of the State.
I need not say to the representatives of the American people that their Constitution forbids the exercise of judicial power in any way but one--that is, by the ordained and established courts.
Here it appears, first, who are the judges constituting the judicial power of the United States, and, secondly, what is the extent of this power.
There is, however, no difficulty in understanding why those who framed the Constitution and controlled its interpretation exhausted the arsenal of logic in trying to prove that it was a judicial power.
That it is in reality a legislative and not a judicial power is amply confirmed by the uniform and time-honored practice of all other nations, even including England, whose institutions until a century and a quarter ago were our own.
The resolution of the 28th of March was not an exercise of judicial power, either in form, in substance, or in intent.
They fixed the county rate of taxation and exercised all local legislative and executive as well as judicial power.
Judicial power is never exercised for the purpose of giving effect to the will of the judge; always for the purpose of giving effect to the will of the legislature.
Judicial power, as contradistinguished from the power of the laws, has no existence.
Hence your commissioners are, in the strictest sense, judges, exercising "judicial power" delegated by the Constitution.
And the whole object of it is to give color for the exercise of a judicial power, by the king, or his judges, which is nowhere given them.
New York originally not only gave her legislature a share in judicial power, but her judges a share in that of legislation.
At first they kept in their own hands a large share of judicial power.
The exercise ofjudicial power by colonial legislatures was steadily contracting throughout the century preceding the Revolution.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "judicial power" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.