No. The US Supreme Court is not a legislative body; they don't make laws. The President can discuss legislative ideas with Congress - the Senate and House of Representatives.
The president is required to give an annual State of the Union address to Congress, and presidents frequently use this speech as an opportunity to propose a legislative agenda for Congress.
Legislative (the House of Representatives and Senate) can propose Amendments to the Constitution. The Judicial branch's power is to declare laws unconstintutional, so if an amendment is made to the Constitution, then the law is no longer unconstitutional, thus, in a sense, overturning a decision of the Supreme Court. Congress can also deliberately write laws to circumvent Supreme Court decisions.
The Supreme Court
Comgress
vetoing a law that expands federal spending
The president must propose the declaration, but the legislative branch casts the final vote. This is because the house and senate ideally represent the American people.
Legislative branch
To get more New Deal supporters on the Court.
The Legislative Assembly could impose taxes, and propose bills, they had limited powers
the legislative :)
Legislative Branch
the legislative :)