The Chief Justice would not preside over the US Supreme Court if he (or she) recuses himself from a case; is sick or otherwise disabled; is engaged in a Presidential impeachment trial; or is on trial in the Senate himself. In the absence of the Chief Justice, the Senior Associate Justice (the justice who has served on the Supreme Court longest) would take responsibility for the Court.
This is the person better known as the Chief Justice. The Chief Justice is the leader of the court (the other justices are known as Associate Justices); the Chief Justice presides over hearings and sets the agenda for the business conducted by the Supreme Court. If there were an impeachment, the Chief Justice would preside over the trial in the Senate. The current Supreme Court Chief Justice is John Roberts.
The head of a state supreme court is called Chief Justice, just like the head of the US Supreme Court.
The US Supreme Court seats only one Chief Justice at a time; the other eight are Associate Justices.The current Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr., is only the seventeenth to serve on the US Supreme Court.
The Chief Justice is head of the Supreme Court of the United States. Judges preside over the lower federal courts.
The President selects and appoints the Chief Justice of the United States (Supreme Court) to lead the US Supreme Court. President George W. Bush appointed the current Chief Justice, John J. Roberts, Jr. to preside over the Court in 2005, following the death of late Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist.
Yes. The Chief Justice leads or "presides over" the Supreme Court.
Not exactly. "Preside" means "to be in charge of," and that responsibility falls to the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court or, in his (or her) absence, the Senior Associate Justice (justice who has served on the court longest). All Supreme Court justices are assigned one or more Circuits over which they have responsibility for emergency orders, per federal law (18 USC § 42): "The Chief Justice of the United States and the associate justices of the Supreme Court shall from time to time be allotted as circuit justices among the circuits by order of the Supreme Court. "The Chief Justice may make such allotments in vacation. A justice may be assigned to more than one circuit, and two or more justices may be assigned to the same circuit." The justices do not preside over the Circuits, however. US District Courts typically seat only one judge per case to preside over the Court; the US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts typically provide for appellate review by a three-judge panel, with one of the three presiding over the panel.
The Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court is John G. Roberts.
Who is presents Indian supreme court chief justicE
The Chief Justice presides over the US Supreme Court. At present, the Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court is John G. Roberts, Jr.
The Chief Justice of the United States (Supreme Court) presides. This position is often referred to as the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, but the latter title is formally correct.The current Chief Justice, John G. Roberts, Jr., was nominated by President George W. Bush and took office on September 29, 2005.
Associate Justice is the formal title for any US Supreme Court justice who is not the Chief Justice. There are eight Associate Justices and one Chief Justice on the Supreme Court.