Want this question answered?
The highest court is the Supreme Court, but not all cases can be appealed to the Supreme Court; it depends what kind of legal issues are involved. Otherwise, the case can be appealed to a Federal Appeal Court. If you can afford the legal fees, of course.
The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court who disagreed with Jefferson on many political issues was John Marshall. Marshall was appointed by President John Adams and served as Chief Justice from 1801 to 1835. He is known for significantly strengthening the powers of the federal government and establishing the principle of judicial review.
She was getting ready to summon the suspects into court! :)
Certain cases are important enough to require the authoritative decision of the nation's highest court rather than being decided by a lower court. If issues of constitutional interpretation are involved, that is the specialty of the Supreme Court.
The duration of Court of Current Issues is 1800.0 seconds.
The US Supreme Court believes "political questions" are appropriate issues for Congress, not the judiciary; however, they have ruled on certain cases regarding political redistricting (Baker v. Carr, (1962)) and racial gerrymandering (Shaw v. Reno, (1993), Miller v. Johnson, (1995)), where the legislature failed to address, or improperly addressed, issues that resulted in constitutional rights violations.
Court of Current Issues was created on 1948-02-09.
Court of Current Issues ended on 1951-06-26.
At this time in our political process it could be any issues that congress finds them from approving a judge.
At the time the Roe vs Wade decision was handed down, it was not seen as "too political." The political battles have grown up around it over the years.
The people who are involved in the local court include the judge, lawyers. courtroom deputy, and court reporter. The parties and witnesses are also involved in the civil cases brought to the local court.
The state court deal with issues of the law