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Bound Over.
Actually it can have two meanings. 'bound over' is a term usually referring to the court's power to hold, on bail, a person accused of a crime. HOWEVER - Definitions and procedures vary by jurisdiction. For example, another definition defines 'bound over' as meaning "the transfer of a felony case from one division of the court to another after finding probable cause that the defendant committed a felony or, after the waiver of a preliminary hearing by the accused defendant.
It means a case has been sent to the trial court. This term is generally used after a preliminary hearing in a magistrate court. It may also be used if a case is in a lower court and is bound over to the general trial court for a jury trial.
No. It is the only court in the UK hierarchy that can't. It's bound by it's prev decisions.
According to AOC Watch, Los Angeles County Superior Court has more than 550 judges.
Because that is the court that, no doubt, has what is known as 'original jurisdiction' over the offense.
The Superior Court based in the county of Solano provides rulings over all matters in Solano county. For example, the court deals with traffic claims, small claims and civil claims, etc.
In Australia, the difference between these to institutions is that the High Court of Australia. Deals with Constitutional, Discrimination, Homicide Cases, and other cases which are seemingly have a superior need to be heard in front of a court. The senate deals with democratic issues such as passing or rejecting legislation. For example, the 'Carbon Tax' issue or the 'Plain Packaging' on Cigarette Packets. In summary, the High Court is to hear issues that comply with the constitution and the Senate deals with democratic issues. Which in this case the High Court and the Senate are very similar, however, it is evident that The High Court is superior over every other court in the 'Australian Court Hierarchy' (Local Court, District Court, Supreme Court, Federal Court and The High Court). And The Senate is superior over all democratic government (House of Representatives, Federal Government, The Senate). Therefore, the Senate is not a 'Court'. Therefore to answer the question, The High Court is superior.
Arizona's trial court system includes Superior Courts, Justice Courts, Municipal Courts, and Magistrate Courts. Superior Courts have jurisdiction over all civil and criminal cases. Each county in Arizona has at least one Superior Court. Civil cases heard by Superior Courts include divorce, property cases, probate, estate, municipal ordinance legality, insolvency proceedings, and claims over $10,000. For claims of $5,001- $10,000, the Superior Courts share jurisdiction with the Justice Courts. The types of criminal cases handled by Superior Courts include felonies and some misdemeanors. Superior Courts also have a special panel, called the Tax Court, which handles cases involving the legality of a tax.
federal court
Providing that the situation in question is EXACTLY the same - an "inferior" court cannot over-rule a "superior" court's finding and rulings.
A federal court has jurisdiction over constitutional violations.