A petition for certiorari is a litigant's formal request asking the Supreme Court to use its discretionary appellate jurisdiction to review a lower federal or state court decision; the Court grants it under the "rule of four," and a denial leaves the lower-court ruling in place.
A petition for certiorari (often shortened to "cert petition") is how a case actually gets to the Supreme Court. After losing in a lower federal court or a state supreme court, a litigant files this written request asking the justices to take the case. Here's the part that surprises people. The Supreme Court doesn't have to hear almost anything. Its appellate jurisdiction is discretionary, so the justices pick their own docket, and they reject the overwhelming majority of petitions. Thousands come in each year; fewer than 100 typically get heard.
The Court decides whether to take a case using the rule of four, meaning at least four of the nine justices must vote to grant cert. The justices tend to say yes when lower courts disagree with each other (a circuit split), when a case raises a major constitutional question, or when the federal government asks them to step in. If cert is denied, that's not the Court "agreeing" with the lower court. It just means the lower-court decision stands and the Court stays silent.
This term lives in Topic 2.10, The Court in Action, inside Unit 2 (Interactions Among Branches of Government). It connects directly to learning objective 2.10.A, which asks you to explain how life tenure can lead to debate about the Supreme Court's power. The cert process is where that independence becomes visible. Because justices serve for life and choose their own cases, they can take up controversial issues (or dodge them) without worrying about the next election. That gatekeeping power is exactly what fuels debate over whether the Court has too much unchecked authority. Understanding cert also explains the Court's agenda-setting power, since deciding which questions get answered nationally is itself a form of political influence.
Keep studying AP® Gov Unit 2
Life Tenure (Unit 2)
Discretionary cert review and life tenure work together. Justices who never face voters get to choose which cases the nation's highest court will even consider, which is why the CED ties the Court's independence to debates over its power.
Judicial Precedent (Unit 2)
The Court often grants cert specifically to fix conflicting precedents. When two circuit courts read the same federal law differently, a cert grant lets the justices set one binding precedent for the whole country.
Amicus Curiae Briefs (Unit 2)
Interest groups file amicus briefs at the cert stage to convince the Court a case matters nationally. A flood of amicus filings signals high stakes and can raise the odds the justices take the case.
Brown v. Board of Education (Units 2-3)
Brown shows why the cert decision matters so much. By choosing to hear the school segregation cases, the Court put itself in position to overturn Plessy and reshape civil rights, something it could only do because it controls its own docket.
No released FRQ has used "petition for certiorari" verbatim, but the cert process is fair game in Unit 2 multiple-choice questions about how the judiciary operates. Expect stems testing whether you know the rule of four, that the Court's appellate docket is discretionary, and that a cert denial leaves the lower-court ruling intact without setting national precedent. It can also strengthen an Argument Essay or SCOTUS Comparison FRQ when you explain how the Court's control over its own docket, combined with life tenure, makes it independent of public opinion. Be precise with the mechanics. Four votes grant cert, but five votes are needed to win the case itself.
The petition is the request; the writ is the result. A litigant files a petition for certiorari asking the Court to take the case. If at least four justices agree, the Court issues a writ of certiorari, an order telling the lower court to send up the case record. On the exam, "granting cert" means the writ was issued and the Court will hear the case.
A petition for certiorari is a formal request asking the Supreme Court to review a lower-court decision, and the Court is free to say no because its appellate jurisdiction is discretionary.
Under the rule of four, at least four of the nine justices must vote to grant cert before the Court will hear a case.
Denying cert is not a ruling on the merits; it simply leaves the lower court's decision in effect for that case.
The Court is most likely to grant cert when there is a circuit split, a major constitutional question, or a request from the federal government.
Cert is the Court's agenda-setting power, and combined with life tenure it lets the justices take on controversial issues independent of the political climate, which fuels debate over judicial power (LO 2.10.A).
It's a litigant's formal request asking the Supreme Court to review a lower federal or state court decision. Because the Court's appellate docket is discretionary, the justices choose which petitions to grant, usually fewer than 100 out of thousands filed each year.
No. A cert denial says nothing about the merits of the case. It just means the lower-court ruling stands for those parties, and no national precedent is created either way.
The petition is what the losing party files to ask the Court to take the case. The writ is the order the Court issues if at least four justices vote to grant review, directing the lower court to send up the record.
Four, under the informal "rule of four." Note the gap on purpose. Four justices can force the Court to hear a case, but it takes five to actually win it.
The justices prioritize cases that resolve circuit splits, raise significant constitutional or federal-law questions, or involve the federal government. Routine disputes that lower courts handled consistently almost never make the cut.
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