Well...checks and balances. The Supreme Court will always look to the Executive Branch for enforcement, so local courts would probably look to their police department. However, this isn't always the case, as can be seen by Jackson's famous quote "John Marshall has made his decision, now let's see him enforce it." Be wary, the executive branch technically has the most power out of the three, so if the police decide to go against the court, there's nothing really the court can do save physical riot.
From the constitution and federal laws
from the constitution and from the president.
article 3 of the constitution gives federal courts jurisdiction.
Section 71 explicitly created the high courts, and allowed the parliament to create other courts and they then used that power to create the federal court. In legal limbo the Federal Court is called a Chapter 3 court because it is able to discharge judicial power as specified in Chapter 3 of the constitution.
it gave the federal government more power over the states
it gave the federal government more power over the states
it gave the federal government more power over the states
Congress has established a lot of courts in the federal judiciary; the Constitution gives them that power in Article I. The only court specifically mentioned in the Constitution is the US Supreme Court, which was mandated by Article III of the Constitution, but established by Congress in the Judiciary Act of 1789.
In the US, the government derives its just power from the consent of the governed.
The President derives his power from the US Constitution and the people who are sworn to defend it.
The President derives his power from the US Constitution and the people who are sworn to defend it.
supremacy clause