A Supreme Court judge hears cases that have been appealed. As the highest court in the nation, the goal is to uphold the Constitution.
the supreme court is the final judge in all cases involving laws of Congress, and the highest law of all - the Constitution
the supreme court is the final judge in all cases involving laws of Congress, and the highest law of all - the Constitution
no, the primary role of the supreme court is to judge those cases that will have a large impact on the country and can then be used as a precedent for other cases, or have been appealed up through the court system up to that level. Long unsolved cases don't automatically go to the supreme court, there would have to be some reason for it to go there.
The Supreme Court justices hear cases in the courtroom of the Supreme Court Building in Washington, DC.
The retirement age of a supreme court judge is at 65 years of age.
The presiding disciplinary judge at the Colorado Supreme Court is currently Judge William Lucero. One may find further information about Judge Lucero via the official Colorado Supreme Court.
As far as I know there is no Supreme Court judge quitting and moving.
The Supreme Court hears cases which are on final appeal. The Supreme Court also hears cases relating to national elections.
Supreme Court of the United States
There are two special cases that start trial in the United States Supreme Court. Cases involving foreign officials and cases in which a state is a party originate in the Supreme Court.
Yes. Texas has two "supreme courts," although only one carries that name. The Supreme Court of Texas is the highest appellate court for civil and juvenile cases, and the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals is the highest appellate court for criminal cases.