In 1789, they passed the judiciary act.
The lowest general level in the Federal System is the Federal District Court, which sits in a defined federal district. An example would be the "Federal district Court for the Western District of Oklahoma" This district court answers to the Circuit Court ( e.g. 10th Circuit etc.) and then to the US Supreme Court by Certiori
True (A+)
district courts
the juristice federal court hols a convention
district court
The district courts, I believe there are 94 of them
In the Federal Court System, the US District Courts ARE the lowest level of court, and have original jurisdiction (over FEDERAL offenses) within their assigned districts (of which, I believe, there are 94).
Yes they are the court where any case in the federal system begins its life.
The lowest general level in the Federal System is the Federal District Court, which sits in a defined federal district. An example would be the "Federal district Court for the Western District of Oklahoma" This district court answers to the Circuit Court ( e.g. 10th Circuit etc.) and then to the US Supreme Court by Certiori
Federal district court, e.g., United States District Court for the Central District of California (C.D. Cal).
The US District Courts (trial courts), because they handle the majority of federal cases.
federal reserve us when government failed to prevent the collapse of the bantina system doesn't seem to be a "bantina" system. Could we be talking "Banking" system? How do your typos happen?