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the were organized to test a supreme court decision.
Congress
Great Compromise
The only court specifically provided for in the US Constitution is the Supreme Court. Article 3 establishes the Supreme Court ". . .and such inferioe courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish." Further, Article 1, Section 8, Clause 9 authorizes Congress to constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court. The federal court system has several individual courts, but only the Supreme Court is mentioned in the Constitution
Theoretically in the United States, it is congress. The constitution gives congress the right to overrule any Supreme Court decision. It has never done that. It gives congress rights over decisions of the Executive branch. Congress usually defers. There is a difference between being the final authority and having common sense.
Federal Courts-Nova net- :)
13 federal district courts, 3 circuit courts, and 1 supreme court
13 federal district courts, 3 circuit courts, and 1 supreme court
13 federal district courts, 3 circuit courts, and 1 supreme court
Article III of The Constitution vests the whole judicial power of the United States in one Supreme Court, and such inferior courts as Congress shall, from time to time, ordain and establish. Congress is permitted to organize it.
The Supreme Court
the were organized to test a supreme court decision.
The KKK
No, the Supreme Court is part of the Judicial Branch. Congress is part of the legislative branch.
The Supreme court determines how laws that are passed by Congress are meant to be interpreted and applied. The Supreme Court also determines whether a law passed by Congress is unconstitutional or not.
No. Congress is part of the Legislative branch. The Supreme Court is head of the Judicial branch.
The Supreme Court is not in the Congress. The Supreme court is at the top of the judicial branch of government, a co-equal branch with Congess.