No. The Chief Justice meets with the other eight Supreme Court justices for their traditional Friday Conference, at which time they take a preliminary vote on cases heard in oral argument on Wednesday.
Chief Justice of India justice S.H.kapadia
Supreme Courts
9 justices and a Chief Justice.
The chief justice not only heads up the Supreme Court, but also runs the Federal court system. For that reason his/her title is, "Chief Justice of the United States".
the president in consultation with chief justice of the supreme court
John Marshall
Laws & ruling.
Supreme Court Justices, Associate Justices of the Supreme Court -- although, the head of the courts are called:The US Supreme Court - Chief Justice of the United States (since 1866 when it was changed from Chief Justice of the Supreme Court).The various state Supreme Courts - Chief Justice of the State of (state name).But, not all states call their highest court the "Supreme Court." Some use "Court of Appeals," "Superior Court," "Supreme Judicial Court," and Texas and Oklahoma divide criminal and civil supreme courts by calling them (respectively) The Court of Criminal Appeals and The Supreme Court. Nomenclature will follow the trends in the individual states.
He or she is called the 'Chief Justice of the United States', and is in control of not only the Supreme Court, but also the various Federal courts. The position used to be called the, "Chief Justice of the Supreme Court", but not any longer.
He cites the Fourteenth Amendment and explains its purpose.
In the Supreme Court of the United States, they're referred to as justices. The US Supreme Court has one Chief Justice, who is addressed by his full title (e.g., Chief Justice Roberts) and eight Associate Justices, who are addressed simply as "Justice" (e.g., Justice Stevens).Some state supreme courts use the title Justice, while others refer to the members as Judge.For more information, see Related Questions, below.
Chief Justice John Marshall