In Federal courts
All the courts of general jurisdiction in the US Judicial Branch (US District Courts, US Courts of Appeals Circuit Courts, and the US Supreme Court) have federal question jurisdiction, or authority to hear or review cases involving constitutional and federal law.
The US District Courts have original jurisdiction (are trial courts) for most cases; appellate courts do not retry cases, but evaluate appeals in light of whatever specific issues the attorney for the losing party raises. Constitutional issues are first addressed at the trial level, in the US District Court.
While the US Supreme Court is the ultimate arbiter of constitutional law, they are able to review only 1-2% of the cases petitioned each year. Many issues are resolved at the District or Circuit Court level using precedents established in earlier cases and judicial review by the lower court judges.
The federal court system.
All the courts of general jurisdiction in the US Judicial Branch (US District Courts, US Courts of Appeals Circuit Courts, and the US Supreme Court) have federal question jurisdiction, or authority to hear or review cases involving constitutional and federal law.
The US District Courts have original jurisdiction (are trial courts) for most cases; appellate courts do not retry cases, but evaluate appeals in light of whatever specific issues the attorney for the losing party raises. Constitutional issues are first addressed at the trial level, in the US District Court.
While the US Supreme Court is the ultimate arbiter of constitutional law, they are able to review only 1-2% of the cases petitioned each year. Many issues are resolved at the District or Circuit Court level using precedents established in earlier cases and judicial review by the lower court judges.
All the courts of general jurisdiction in the US Judicial Branch (US District Courts, US Courts of Appeals Circuit Courts, and the US Supreme Court) have federal question jurisdiction, or authority to hear or review cases involving constitutional and federal law.
The US District Courts have original jurisdiction (are trial courts) for most cases; appellate courts do not retry cases, but evaluate appeals in light of whatever specific issues the attorney for the losing party raises. Constitutional issues are first addressed at the trial level, in the US District Court.
While the US Supreme Court is the ultimate arbiter of constitutional law, they are able to review only 1-2% of the cases petitioned each year. Many issues are resolved at the District or Circuit Court level using precedents established in earlier cases and judicial review by the lower court judges.
Most courts of general jurisdiction in both the state and federal court system hear cases involving constitutional rights. Federal courts are more likely to hear US constitutional issues than state courts.
The following Article III federal courts review most cases involving constitutional rights:
The Supreme Court and Court of Appeals try cases involving federal law and US Constitutional questions. They are responsible for interpreting the law and directly applying it to a given situation or case.
if you mean the Federal Constitution, depends. Any US Court can hear those cases. However, traditionally those will be brought or removed to Federal Court under 28 USC Sec. 1331.
Yes. Virtually all cases heard in the US Supreme Court involve matters of US constitutional law.
The Supreme Court hears cases which are on final appeal. The Supreme Court also hears cases relating to national elections.
The Supreme Court hears any cases that involve the interpretation of the Constitution.
The Supreme Court hears the most important cases.
The types of cases that Australia's high court hears are those cases which come to it on appeal and those cases which needed interpretation of the Constitution.
A Supreme Court judge hears cases that have been appealed. As the highest court in the nation, the goal is to uphold the Constitution.
The Supreme Court hears any cases that involve the interpretation of the Constitution.
Because it hears cases that question the 'meaning' of the constitution, the Supreme Court would be a better answer.
The Supreme Court hears the largest number of cases. They have the power to decide appeals on all cases from the other levels of court.
Federal tax cases
All courts.
judical
supreme court