The public phone numbers for the Supreme Court of the United States are:
* Public Information Office: 202-479-3211
* Visitor Information Line: 202-479-3030
The US Supreme Court is head of the Judicial Branch of government. The "inferior" courts in this branch are:US District CourtsUS Court of International TradeUS Court of Appeals Circuit Courts
No. The US Constitution vests Congress with the authority to determine the structure of the federal courts, including the US Supreme Court. Congress set the number of justices on the Court at nine in the Judiciary Act of 1869.
Three:Trial level (primarily US District Courts)Appellate level (US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts)Supreme Court (US 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).
Actually there are THREE levels of federal courts. US District Courts - US Courts of Appeal - US Supreme Court.
US District courts - US Appelate Courts - US Supreme Court
The US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts, which are intermediate courts of appeals (the courts between the US District Courts and the US Supreme Court) in the federal Judicial Branch. They help reduce the Supreme Court caseload by resolving appellate cases or dismissing those without merit.
Actually there are THREE levels of federal courts. US District Courts - US Courts of Appeal - US Supreme Court.
No. The US Federal government has three branches: The Executive branch, the Legislative branch, and the Judicial branch. The US Supreme Court is head of the Judicial branch.There are also three basic levels within the Judicial branch:Trial Courts (e.g., US District Courts)Appellate Courts (e.g., US Courts of Appeals Circuit Courts)The Supreme Court
There are nine of them..
No. The Supreme Court of the United States is head of the Judicial branch, but there are lower courts and tribunals that are also included, such as the US District Courts and the US Courts of Appeals Circuit Courts, among others.
No. The US Supreme Court hears final appeals from lower courts.