The US District Court for the District of New Mexico is in the Tenth Circuit. Appeals should be filed electronically with the US Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit in Denver, Colorado.
US DIstrict Court for the Northern DIstrict of Georgia. Also: The 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals is located in Atlanta as well.
Cases appealed from US District Courts typically go to the US Court of Appeals Circuit Court for the territorial Circuit to which that District Court belongs. Under certain circumstances, US District Court cases may go directly to the US Supreme Courtunder direct or expedited appeal, but the Circuit Courts hear the majority of appeals from District Courts.
In the Federal court system, the district courts are the "lowest" courts. Cases usually start in district court and are decided there. The circuit courts are courts of appeal. That means that you can appeal a district court's ruling to the circuit court (and then to the Supreme Court, if you still don't like the ruling). In that sense, the circuit courts are "higher" than the district courts.
The District Court for Minnesota, with appeals going to the Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit, which is located in St Louis, MO.
There are 94 US District Courts located within 12 regional circuits. A federal case will be brought to a district court located within its regional circuit.
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
United States Circuit Court of the District of Columbia was created in 1801.
United States Circuit Court of the District of Columbia ended in 1863.
It really depends what kind of courts you are talking about and where the courts are. If the courts are federal, then a district court is a trial court and a circuit court is an appeals court, which may review a trial decision from a district court. For state courts, the difference between a district court and a circuit court will depend on what state the courts are in. Many states have courts called "district court" and "circuit court," but what kinds of cases these courts handle differs state to state.
The circuit level courts. E.g., "The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals"
Just one: the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. It has territorial jurisdiction over cases heard in the US District Court for the District of Columbia.
United States District Court for the District of New Mexico was created on 1910-06-20.