When it comes to federal matters, yes, the US District Court is superior to the state court.
Three:Trial level (primarily US District Courts)Appellate level (US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts)Supreme Court (US Supreme Court)
Judges at the provincial level are appointed by the premiere
In US the lowest level of court is District Court.
#1 Superior Court #2 Superior Court #3 Superior Court #4 Superior Court ... #1 Supreme Court #2 Supreme Court #3 Supreme Court #4 Supreme Court ...
In the lowest level of your state's court system - known by different names in different states (i.e.: District Court - Circuit Court - Superior Court).
Usually the lowest level court of original jurisdiction which are known by different designations in different states (e.g.: Circuit Court - Superior Court - etc.)
US District Courts are the trial courts of general jurisdiction; they are the entry level of the federal court system.
46 Superior court districts
You can request the report from the Clerk of Court at the Superior Court in Hagatna.
No. Patent laws are administered by the Federal Government. You would have to bring suit in US District Court.
I believe the question refers to a judge who happens to sit on the bench of a Superior Court - hence a Superior Court Judge.