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Yes. The original ruling applies until the appeal process is complete.
If you disagree with the facts of the case, and a ruling is contrary to established law, you can appeal the ruling to a higher court.
The disposition of an appeal is the judge's final ruling in the case, or what he decides to do to it. The three most common dispositions are: Affirmed, in which the judge agrees with the lower court and the original ruling stands, Reversed, in which the judge disagrees with the lower court and invalidates that opinion, and Remanded, in which the judge sends the case down to a lower court for further action. Cases are often both reversed and remanded.
Yes
Any ruling or court case can be appealed. During their review the Court of Appeals will either accept the appeal for consideration, or deny it or, possibly, send it (remand it) back to the original trial court.
a case comes to a court if they have a final ruling then they can. If the person in the case is not happy with the results they can get an appeal and go to a higher case but its rare that people get an appeal.
An attentat is something brought as a ruling by the judge of a lower court in a matter appending an appeal.
In the Federal court system, the district courts are the "lowest" courts. Cases usually start in district court and are decided there. The circuit courts are courts of appeal. That means that you can appeal a district court's ruling to the circuit court (and then to the Supreme Court, if you still don't like the ruling). In that sense, the circuit courts are "higher" than the district courts.
In every court there are rules and procedures set out by the law to appeal on the particular case, within certain time limits. A lawyer would provide a better advice in how you can appeal on a case and where you can appeal.
Supreme Court does not dismiss cases. It will either affirm or reverse the lower court, or it will decline to grant the appeal.
Typically, a judge in family court does not have the authority to reverse a ruling made in civil court. Family court has its own jurisdiction over specific family-related matters such as divorce, child custody, and support. If a ruling has been made in civil court, it would generally have to be appealed to a higher court rather than being reversed by a judge in family court.
Appeal WHAT? A court ruling? If so - you file a motion of appeal with the next higher level court, setting forth your LEGAL reason(s) for appealing your verdict. It must be more than the fact that you just "don't like" the verdict.