Appellate court
judge.
No. Trials in Federal District Court are heard by a single judge, and sometimes a jury.
No. Trials in Federal District Court are heard by a single judge, and sometimes a jury.
Yes, sometimes. Certain US District Court decisions can be appealed to the US Supreme Court on direct or expedited appeal, if the case involves a statute in which Congress specified initial appeals go directly to the Supreme Court, or if the nature of the case is such that it is important and will undoubtedly be appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, anyway.The normal route for US District Court cases is an appeal to the US Court of Appeals Circuit Court over the District Court's Circuit, then petitioned to the US Supreme Court if a party is dissatisfied with the Circuit Court's decision.
The court decisions for teaching religious humanism is that it can be used in schools. This goes for the district.
In brief, yes a court decision can be appealed. In some cases appeals have reached the Supreme Court level.
Federal Court OpinionsFederal Cases (F. Cas.) contains federal court decisions (1789-1879).Federal Reporter (F.) contains decisions of the U.S. District Court and the U.S. Courts of Appeals (1880-1924).Federal Reporter, 2d Series (F.2d) contains decisions of the U.S. Courts of Appeals (1924-1993) and decisions from the U.S. District court (1924-1932).Federal Reporter, 3d Series (F.3d) contains decisions of the U.S. Court of Appeals (1993-).Federal Supplement (F. Supp.) contains decisions of the U.S. District Court (1932-).
court decision reflect changing social political and economic condition
A court of appeals hears no original cases, it only reviews decisions made by lower courts. A US district court hears original cases, that are in the federal jurisdiction.
None. U. S. District Courts do not establish binding precedents.
No, that's backwards. Binding precedents are set from the top-down.US Supreme Court decisions are binding on all relevant federal (and state) courts.US Court of Appeals Circuit Court decisions are binding only on US District Courts within that Circuit.US District Court decisions are not binding on any other Courts.Non-binding precedents, including dissenting opinions, may be cited as persuasive precedents at any level, however.
U.S. courts of appealThe actual answer to your question is none. No-one repeals decision of any courts. However, decisions of courts can be reversed. The Federal Courts of Appeals can reverse decisions of federal district courts. That's it.Added: And the US Supreme Court can over-rule the decision of ANY inferior court.