The Sixth Circuit
See below link:
9th District Court of Appeals.
Appellate court
The intermediate appellate court is the US Court of Appeals Circuit Court that has jurisdiction over the US District Court where the case was tried.For example, a federal felony case in New York City would start in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York and could later be appealed to the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, the intermediate appellate court with jurisdiction over that District.
District, Supreme and appellate courts
The next highest court with appellate jurisdiction after the district court is the Court of Appeals, also known as the Circuit Court in some jurisdictions. These courts review decisions made by district courts to ensure that the law was applied correctly and that proper procedures were followed. In the federal system, there are 13 Courts of Appeals, while state systems may have varying numbers and structures of appellate courts.
Appellate courts.
No. In both State and Federal systems, appellate Court Judges alone render a decision on the merits of the appeal based on the evidence contained within the record of the trial court. There are no juries empaneled in an appellate courts.
Three:Trial level (primarily US District Courts)Appellate level (US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts)Supreme Court (US Supreme Court)
The Judicial Branch doesn't have branches, it has courts:US District Courts (trial courts)US Court of International Trade (trial court)US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts (appellate courts)Supreme Court of the United States (final appellate court)
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit (9th Cir.) is a U.S. Federal court. It has appellate jurisdiction over district courts in these districts:District of AlaskaDistrict of ArizonaCentral District of CaliforniaEastern District of CaliforniaNorthern District of CaliforniaSouthern District of CaliforniaDistrict of HawaiiDistrict of IdahoDistrict of MontanaDistrict of NevadaDistrict of OregonEastern District of WashingtonWestern District of WashingtonIt has appellate jurisdiction over these territorial courts: District of GuamDistrict of the Northern Mariana Islands
No, a district court is the lowest level in the Judicial system. A circuit court is a court of appeals, it's the next on the tier. If an attorney and client do not approve of a district courts ruling, they take their matters to a circuit court of appeals, if they do not approve of the ruling of the circuit court of appeals, they may proceed to send their claim to Supreme Court of the United StatesBasically it goes as follows:Supreme Court - Highest Appellate CourtCircuit Court - Lowest Appellate CourtDistrict Court - Lowest Criminal/Civil Court.
Appellate court.