If you're asking about the party who files a petition for writ of certiorari with the US Supreme Court, the term is "petitioner" or "appellant." The party required to answer the appeal is the "respondent" or "appellee."
An applicant at the US Supreme Court is called a petitioner or an appellant, depending on whether they are initiating the legal action or appealing a lower court's decision.
The US Supreme Court's decisions (or verdicts) are called opinions.
US Supreme Court decisions are called "Opinions."
US Supreme Court decisions are called opinions.
It's just called the US Supreme Court Building. Clever, huh?
The US Supreme Court is the highest court in the US. Each state has its own Supreme Court, but the US Supreme Court is the end of the line.
The explanation for the US Supreme Court's decision is called the opinion.
If the US Supreme Court is the first to hear a case, the Court has original jurisdiction.
The US Supreme Court is the highest court in the US. Each state has its own Supreme Court, but the US Supreme Court is the end of the line.
Majestrate
The written explanation for the US Supreme Court's decision is called an opinion.See Related Questions for an expanded explanation.
The US Supreme Court is called the high court because it is the last court in which federal questions (questions of federal and constitutional law) can be decided. There is no forum above the Supreme Court in which to appeal a decision. In the United States, "high court" is simply a colloquialism for the US Supreme Court. In some countries, the "High Court" is part of the proper title for the court.
In the Supreme Court, the written decision and legal reasoning for a case is called an Opinion.