Legislative
All courts: state (Superior, Municipal and Small Claims; Appellate and State Supreme), Federal Courts (District, Circuit Courts of Appeal, Federal Supreme Courts), and Administrative Courts (Workers Compensation Appeals Board, Social Security, Etc.)
No, the Supreme Court is separate from all other courts. The president nominates judges to federal courts and Congress approves them.
There are three levels of Federal courts under the Supreme Court.
The Constitution established only one federal court, the Supreme Court. It left to Congress the job of creating the federal court system. Congress has created two types of federal courts, District and Courts of Appeals . It has also enacted laws dealing with the size and function of the Supreme Court.
Appellate courts. In the federal court system, the appellate courts are the US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts and the Supreme Court of the United States (aka US Supreme Court).
Supreme Court Courts of Appeal District Courts and Special Courts
The federal court system comprises the Supreme Court, circuit courts of appeal, and district courts. There are also specialized federal courts.
United States Appeals Courts, if by Federal you mean the Supreme Court. Otherwise, the chain goes- Local -> Appeals -> Supreme/Federal Court
supreme court and other federal courts
Supreme, Appellate, District
Actually there are THREE levels of federal courts. US District Courts - US Courts of Appeal - US Supreme Court.
The federal court system comprises the Supreme Court, circuit courts of appeal, and district courts. There are also specialized federal courts.