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The Supreme Court is one of the three branches of government. They appealed the decision to the Supreme Court.
The Supreme court is one of the 3 branches of the UNITED STATES ,so It is obviously a federal branch of the government.
One example from 1803 that affected the supreme court's decision is the case of Marbury v. Madison. Since then, the court has invalidated, or canceled, nearly 200 provisions of federal law.
The Constitution is the Supreme Law of the Land, which all government officials swear to uphold. Supreme Court decisions are subordinate to constitutional amendments, and represent one of the few ways a Supreme Court decision can be changed.
The highest authority in the judicial branch is the U.S. Supreme Court. The Supreme Court has the highest power to interpret the law and the Constitution--these decisions cannot be overturned by anyone except the Supreme Court.
A DOJ lawyer represents the government.
The guiding force in the US for US Supreme Court decisions is the US Constitution. The Supreme Court is one of the three major parts of the Federal government. Through the Congress, the Executive branch and the Court, a balance of power was created.
They have the title of Justice of the Supreme Court, apart from one who is the President of the Supreme Court, and another who is the Deputy President of the Supreme Court.
No. One of the weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation was that it made no provision for a federal court system. Article III of the US Constitution, which replaced the Articles of Confederation, required that Congress establish the Supreme Court. In other words, the Constitution said the government had to have a supreme court, but didn't directly create one. It left that task to Congress.
One famous example is Roy Orbison's "Pretty Woman," which was involved in an infringement case that went to the Supreme Court.
It has the power to approve new supreme court justices.
There are many different supreme courts - one of the US and one for each of the States. They have different numbers of judges, depending on the Constitution of each state. There are eight judges on the US Supreme Court (Nine seats for judges).