It depends on the state.
Circuit Court - Court of Appeals - State Supreme Court.
1)the trial court 2)the appellate court 3)the supreme court but if you go with jurdiction then; 1)original jurisdiction 2)appellate jurisdiction 3)advisory jurisdiction
Circuit Court (sometimes referred to by a different name in some states) - Appelate Court - Supreme Court.
In which state?
Most states have three levels; some have more. The exact number of levels and their names depend on the state. The most common three levels are the trial court, the appellate court, and the supreme court. The higher-level courts hear appeals of the cases decided in the trial courts. In some states, the names are different. For example, in New York, the trial courts (depending on where you are and what kind of case you have) are called Supreme Courts, Family Courts, County Courts, District Courts, City Courts, Town Courts, or Village Courts; the intermediate appellate court is the Appellate Division, and the highest appellate court is the Court of Appeals. You can check out the New York court system at the related link below - or you can go from there to check out the court court system in any state on CourtReference.
No, your next appeal would the next highest level of state court. You must exhaust all levels of appeal in the state court system beore you can go to the federal court.
The names (or existence) of particular courts will vary state by state, but generally states have a trial courts which has general jurisdiction, trial courts with specific jurisdiction over some specific type of case such as traffic offenses, appeals courts, and a state supreme court.
The American Court System came directly from English Common Law. The Jury system was created by King William the Conquerer in 1066 A.D. English Common Law was created by King Henry II. The system has been modified many times since then. Generally, each state has three levels of courts, the trial court, the appeal court, and the supreme court. Sometimes they call the levels, the trial court, the supreme court, and the appeal court. Sometimes they use different names. Then there are specialized courts for specialized purposes. Some states have a special probate court. Others do not. Not all states retained the specialized English court system. Some states created additional Courts. Still, when the United States became independent, it started with the English court system in place in all states and all using English Common Law. Each state went its own way from there.
The Congress of the United States originally established the Arizona territorial courts in the Organic Act of 1863. They organized the courts on three levels. They were justice of the peace courts, probate and district courts, and a supreme court. The district courts made up the main judicial body and tried the majority of cases. The transition from territorial to state status was smooth for the Arizona Courts. The state provided immediate judicial courts with the JP courts, superior courts, a supreme court and a federal district court.
national court system, state court system and tribal court system.
The state court system consists of: The Circuit Courts - The Courts of Appeal - The State Supreme Court.
The three levels are: • District courts (main trial courts) Hears both civil & criminal cases • Court of appeals (2nd step in the judicial process) to appeal - take a case to a higher court for rehearing • Louisiana state supreme court (hears appeals from lower-level courts) - Always reviews case in which defendant has been sentenced to death