judge,jury,witness,lawyer,victom
No it was not a supreme court case, but a state case because it was held in the local court
University of California v. Bakke
Depending on the type of court case you can take your case to the appelate court sytem in your state or a federal court of appeals
A court case can only be appealed if the Court of Appeals agrees to hear the case.
The effect is the same with regard to the defendant, but these events take place at different parts of the process. If the state decides not to prosecute (called a nolle prosequi), the case never reaches the court. A case is dismissed by the court after someone has been charged and the court either finds there is insufficient evidence to prove the charge, or on a motion from one of the parties to the case.
A Case for the Court was created in 1960.
A Case for the Court ended in 1962.
how dose trying a case in small claims court differ from trying a case in a court of record
There are more than two possible outcomes of a US Supreme Court case, regardless of whether the case is considered a landmark decision or not, but generally, the decision of the last court to hear the case (typically one of the US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts) will be either affirmed or reversed. There are subtle, but meaningful, variations that may apply, but essentially the Supreme Court will either agree with (affirm) or disagree with (reverse) the lower court ruling.
the scopes trial
Contact the court clerk from the court that adjudicated the case.
supreme court