Before a federal court can hear a case, or "exercise its jurisdiction," certain conditions must be met. First, under the U.S. Constitution, federal courts may exercise only "judicial" powers. This means that federal judges may interpret the law only through the resolution of actual legal disputes, referred to in Article III of the Constitution as "Cases or Controversies." A court cannot attempt to correct a problem on its own initiative, or to answer a hypothetical legal question.
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