President Hoover nominated four candidates to the US Supreme Court; however, only three were approved. John Parker, who was nominated to replace Justice Sanford, was rejected by a Senate vote of 39-41 on May 7, 1930. The seat was subsequently filled by Owen Roberts.
Confirmed
Charles Evans Hughes, Chief Justice..........February 13, 1930
Owen Roberts.........................................May 20, 1930
Benjamin Cardozo...................................February 24, 1932
Rejected
John Parker.............................................May 7, 1930
The Supeme Court.
Best Answer no it is then confeirmed by the senate
"Equal Justice Under Law"
cases on constitutional matters
The Supeme Court of the United States, referred to as the "Roberts Court"
General Dwight David Eisenhower.
The United States Constitution is the supreme law of the land. The Constitution is constantly being interpreted by the Supreme Court and therefore it is called a living breathing document.
Example: Justice Of The Peace Court is lower than Municipal COurt. Municipal Court is lower than Circuit Court. Circuit Court is lower thatn Appeals COurt. Appeals Court is lower than Supeme Court. Etc. Etc.). Got the idea?
I think the firing order is 1-2-3-4-5-6. The coil pack connectors are o o o o o o 5 2 3 6 4 1
All 27 amendments of the U.S. Constitution are considered the "Supreme Laws".
John Marshall took a more direct role in determining the direction of the Supreme Court and made it have more power over state laws than was originally envisioned by the writers of the Constitution.
The trial phase ends at the US District Court level (or equivalent state trial court). Appeals to the federal US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts (or intermediate state appellate courts) are based on questions of process, law or constitutionality. The case is not retried; appellate courts do not render decisions about the defendants' guilt or innocence.After the intermediate appellate courts, federal cases may be petitioned to the US Supreme Court; state cases may be appealed to the state supreme court (or equivalent). If a state case involves a preserved federal question (matter or federal or constitutional law) it may be appealed to the US Supreme Court after the state supreme court hears or denies hearing on the case.Both the US Supreme Court and state supreme courts (or equivalent) have discretion over which cases they hear (although state supreme courts may have mandatory jurisdiction over certain cases, such as death penalty cases).