Legal Concepts: Standing, Ripeness, and Venue

Konrad Lee, JD, Discussing Standing

Standing

A party may bring a suit in court only if he or she has a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy. This is known as . In other words, the party must be by some threatened or actual harm and may not file a suit in which he or she has suffered no injury. For example, Susan, John’s friend, may not file a lawsuit to enforce a contract between John and Tim, as she is not a party to the contract. There are exceptions, however. Environmental groups are granted standing to challenge harms to the environment, not on a claim of specific damage to any specific person, but on the notion of general public harm.

Ripeness

Konrad Lee, JD, Discussing Ripeness

Under the doctrine of , courts in the United States will not offer an on supposed controversies that have not yet occurred. In other words, the facts of a case must have developed into an existing controversy warranting judicial resolution before a court may hear it. The court systems of some countries allow for the “what if” lawsuit, the idea being that knowing how a court intends to rule on a matter may allow the parties to avoid conflict in the first instance. This is not the case in the U.S., as an must exist before a court will hear legal claims.

Venue

Konrad Lee, JD, Discussing Venue

The location where a trial takes place is called the . Notwithstanding forum shopping, cases usually are heard as near to the location of the parties as possible for reasons of judicial economy and common sense. However, sometimes circumstances dictate that a trial occur outside of a normal venue. For example, if a party feels a judge is biased against him or her or that no impartial jurors can be found in the community, a fair trial in the normal venue may be impossible. In such cases, a may be granted. This was the case for police officers accused of beating Rodney King in Los Angeles in 1992. The case location was shifted after the officers submitted a change of venue motion to Ventura County on the assumption that no jury in Los Angeles could be impartial to the officers because of the widespread publication of a video tape showing the beating. Interestingly, the officers’ acquittal in Ventura County sparked the now-famous riots in south central Los Angeles and prompted a debate over venue rules.

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