As far as the Constitution is concerned, there are no educational requirements for Supreme Court justices (including the Chief Justice).
In the real world, however, the current Supreme Court justices have at least a Bachelor's degree and three years of law school, culminating in a J.D. degree. That works out to seven years of post-secondary education, minimum. There are also opportunities for post-graduate work in law, leading to an LLM or LLB, which is a legal master's degree beyond the standard Juris Doctor.
Typical post-secondary education includes four years of undergraduate college, plus three years of law school (or seven years of education after high school). An LLM or LLB degree adds an additional year of study.
In most cases, supreme courts are final appellate courts.
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
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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.
The Supreme Court decides cases that are appealed by a lower court; a lower court has made a decision and one of the parties feels strongly enough that the decision was wrong that they make an appeal to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court reviews the cases and determines which ones they will hear, they have the ability to decline to review a case. The Supreme Court doesn't hear only appeals, there are situations where it is the court of original jurisdiction. In situations where there is a disagreement between states, the Supreme Court has the authority to decide.
They are called supreme court justice
The Supreme Court - 2007 A New Kind of Justice 1-2 was released on: USA: 31 January 2007
As good as it gets. They remain on the bench until they choose to retire, or die.
I only know of Tim Tingelstad who is running for the MN Supreme Court. I know him personally, and he is a kind and honest man. I hope this helps some even though I don't know who he is running against.
In most cases, supreme courts are final appellate courts.
U.S Supreme Court.
After graduating from Harvard Law School in 1979, Chief Justice Roberts held the following positions:Law Clerk, Judge Henry J. Friendly, US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit 1979Law Clerk, Assoc. Justice William H. Rehnquist, US Supreme Court 1980Special Assistant to US Attorney General William French Smith, 1981Associate White House Counsel, President Reagan, 1982-1986Lawyer, Head of Appellate Practice, Hogan & Hartsn, LLP, 1986-1989Principle Deputy Solicitor General of the US, 1989-1992Lawyer, Hogan & Hartson, LLP, 1993-2003Judge, US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit, 2003-2005Chief Justice, Supreme Court of the United States, 2005-Present
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.
Having appellate jurisdiction means that the Supreme Court hears cases that have been in trial before. A majority of cases that the Supreme Court hear are either controversial, or some kind of trial error took place in a prior court.
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
Docket
The Supreme Court always has the last say for cases that fall under its jurisdiction. The Court no longer has mandatory jurisdiction and may exercise full discretion over which cases it hears. The decision of the Court is final, unless modified by the Court itself or by constitutional amendment.