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state Supreme Court
This would be in a civil court as breach of contract.
No. If a court has jurisdiction over your case you must resolve the dispute in that court. Fleeing to another state would bring more trouble.No. If a court has jurisdiction over your case you must resolve the dispute in that court. Fleeing to another state would bring more trouble.No. If a court has jurisdiction over your case you must resolve the dispute in that court. Fleeing to another state would bring more trouble.No. If a court has jurisdiction over your case you must resolve the dispute in that court. Fleeing to another state would bring more trouble.
Depends upon what court the action originates in. If a trademark case is brought in state court, a state court of appeals would hear the appeal. If a copyright license case is in state court, same rule. If a copyright or trademark case is in federal court, then a federal circuit court of appeals would hear it. If it is a case of a trademark registration appeal, it would be taken to the Trademark Trials and Appeals Board and could end up in the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC).
The State Supreme Court
Modifications must be filed in the court where the case was adjudicated. The other state would have no docket or case file under which to file the modification. It would not have the jurisdiction to modify the order of another court.Modifications must be filed in the court where the case was adjudicated. The other state would have no docket or case file under which to file the modification. It would not have the jurisdiction to modify the order of another court.Modifications must be filed in the court where the case was adjudicated. The other state would have no docket or case file under which to file the modification. It would not have the jurisdiction to modify the order of another court.Modifications must be filed in the court where the case was adjudicated. The other state would have no docket or case file under which to file the modification. It would not have the jurisdiction to modify the order of another court.
It would be a Federal crime and would be tried in a United States District Court.
I would bring the case to state court, because if you bring the case to federal court it can't be heard again, but if you bring the case to state court then, if you lose, the case be appealed and heard again, if they chose to hear it, in supreme court then it can't be heard again if you lose again in supreme court.
It would depend on several factors; What type of case is it? Which court system is it filed in (state or federal)? In state court it would be heard in the lowest state court of original jurisdiction (usually a Circuit Court. In the federal system it would be the US DIstrict Court which included that state in its circuit.
If a state court declares a state law unconstitutional, the state will probably appeal the case to the state supreme court. If a state court declares a federal law unconstitutional, the losing party in the case will appeal the decision in the federal courts. The case could ultimately be heard by the US Supreme Court; however, if a lower court reverses the state court's decision and either the appropriate US Court of Appeals Circuit Court or US Supreme Court decline to consider the case, the decision of the lower federal court would be final. The US Supreme Court is the ultimate arbiter of constitutionality.
No it was not a supreme court case, but a state case because it was held in the local court
A civil or criminal court can handle a case like that , it would most likely be in criminal court and if they were unable to take the case it would handed up to a court like the state supreme court after it was tried in a lower court.