appellate jurisdiction
original jurisdiction
In choosing a court, the attorney must choose which court has the authority to hear a particular case. This is referred to as Jurisdiction.
It refers to the power delegated to the state's court system, therefore ANY state court.
Trial Court
A court case can only be appealed if the Court of Appeals agrees to hear the case.
There is not a jurisdiction that allows a court to hear any type of case. Even the Supreme Court is limited in the types of cases they hear.
For a court to have jurisdiction, it means that the court has the authority or the power over the case in front of it. Court jurisdictions are limited by physical boundaries as well as by subject matter. A New York traffic court has jurisdiction over traffic incidents happening within a specific boundary. It cannot hear a case from New Jersey, nor can it hear a murder case.
Your State Court or Federal court have jurisdiction to hear the case of medical negligence.
The power or authority to hear a case is called jurisdiction; the authority to hear a case on appeal is called appellate jurisdiction.
1.The authority of a court to be the first to hear certain cases. 2. The right to hear a case for the first time in forever. "Jurisdiction" is the right, power, or authority to administer justice. "Original jurisdiction" is applicable to courts that have the right to be the first to hear the case, such as trial courts. he two most basic types of jurisdiction are original jurisdiction and appellate jurisdiction. "Appellate jurisdiction" is applicable to courts that have the right to review decisions from lower courts.
The authority of a court to hear a case is its jurisdiction.
a state sues another over water rights.