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单词 solicitor general
释义

solicitor general


solicitor general

n. pl. solicitors general 1. Solicitor General An officer of the US Department of Justice who is responsible for all cases appearing before the US Supreme Court involving the federal government as a party.2. An attorney who is a public officer assisting a state attorney general in cases in which the state is a party, especially appellate and complex cases.

Solicitor General

n, pl Solicitors General1. (Law) (in Britain) the law officer of the Crown ranking next to the Attorney General (in Scotland to the Lord Advocate) and acting as his or her assistant2. (Law) (in the US) the attorney appointed to represent the federal government before the Supreme Court3. (Law) (in New Zealand) the government's chief lawyer: head of the Crown Law Office and prosecutor for the Crown

solic′itor gen′eral



n., pl. solicitors general. 1. the chief legal officer in some states, charged with representing the state in suits affecting the public interest. 2. (caps.) the law officer of the U.S. government next below the Attorney General. [1525–35]

Solicitor General

A lawyer who handles all appeals to the Supreme Court for the Department of Justice.
Thesaurus
Noun1.solicitor general - a law officer appointed to assist an attorney generallaw officer, lawman, peace officer - an officer of the law
Translations

Solicitor General


Solicitor General

1. (in Britain) the law officer of the Crown ranking next to the Attorney General (in Scotland to the Lord Advocate) and acting as his assistant 2. (in New Zealand) the government's chief lawyer: head of the Crown Law Office and prosecutor for the Crown

Solicitor General


Related to Solicitor General: Attorney General

Solicitor General

An officer of the U.S. Justice Department who represents the federal government in cases before the U.S. Supreme Court.

The solicitor general is charged with representing the Executive Branch of the U.S. government in cases before the U.S. Supreme Court. This means that the solicitor and the solicitor's staff are the chief courtroom lawyers for the government, preparing legal briefs and making oral arguments in the Supreme Court. The solicitor general also decides which cases the United States should appeal from adverse lower-court decisions.Congress established the office of solicitor general in 1870 as part of the legislation creating the Department of Justice. Although early solicitors occasionally handled federal trials, for the most part the solicitor general has concentrated on appeals to the Supreme Court. In this role the solicitor has come to serve the interests of both the executive branch and the Supreme Court.

The federal government litigates thousands of cases each year. When a government agency loses in the federal district court and the federal court of appeals, it usually seeks to file a petition for a writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court. The Court uses this writ procedure as a tool for discretionary review. The solicitor general reviews these agency requests and typically will reject most of them. This screening function reduces the workload of the Supreme Court in processing petitions, and it enhances the credibility of the solicitor general when he or she requests certiorari. The Court grants review in approximately 80 percent of the certiorari petitions filed by the solicitor general, compared with only 3 percent filed by other attorneys.

The solicitor general occasionally files Amicus Curiae (friend of the court) briefs in cases where the U.S. government is not a party but important government interests are at stake. Sometimes the Court itself will request that the solicitor file a brief where the government is not a party. The Court also allows the solicitor general to participate in oral arguments as an amicus.

Four former solicitors general later served on the Supreme Court: William Howard Taft, stanley f. reed, robert h. jackson, and Thurgood Marshall.

Further readings

Caplan, Lincoln. 1988. The Tenth Justice: The Solicitor General and the Rule of Law. New York: Vintage Books.

Pacelle, Richard L. 2003. Between Law & Politics: The Solicitor General and the Structuring of Race, Gender, and Reproductive Rights Litigation. College Station: Texas A&M Univ. Press.

Salokar, Rebecca Mae. 1992. The Solicitor General: The Politics of Law. Philadelphia: Temple Univ. Press.

U.S. Government Manual Website. Available online at <www.gpoaccess.gov/gmanual> (accessed November 10, 2003).

Solicitor General

n. the chief trial attorney in the Federal Department of Justice responsible for arguing cases before the Supreme Court, and ranking second to the Attorney General in the Department.

Solicitor General

law officer for England and Wales in the Westminster Parliament, deputy to the Attorney General. In the USA a law officer who assists an Attorney General and the official who represents the federal government in court.
AcronymsSeeshotgun

solicitor general


Related to solicitor general: Attorney General
  • noun

Words related to solicitor general

noun a law officer appointed to assist an attorney general

Related Words

  • law officer
  • lawman
  • peace officer
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更新时间:2024/11/11 18:04:50