This is impossible to answer because different cases last different times.
The number of new cases an average district court judge handles in a year can vary significantly based on the jurisdiction and the specific court's caseload. However, on average, a district court judge may deal with around 300 to 600 new cases annually. In some busy jurisdictions, this number can be even higher, reflecting the demands of the court system and the types of cases being processed.
Yes they can. It happened to me over a 10 year old divorce settlement. A judge can rule and overthrow many things that you would think can't be done!
The practice of a circuit court judge was for them to ride around the countryside each year to hear cases.
According to the 2010 Year-End Report on the Federal Judiciary, there were 55,992 appeals filed with the US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts, and 8,159 petitions filed with the US Supreme Court. This is a small number compared to the 361,323 cases initiated in US District Court for the year.
no because the federals rules need to be used
no because the federals rules need to be used
no because the federals rules need to be used
Many cases and they reject many cases! In my case I was refused an appeal on clear error of law because the Chief Justice wrote MacFarlane v Rich and he did not want it overturned so he did not allow me an appeal. The judge is Brock who was impeached 2001 as he was entertaining case fixing by judge Thayer another Supreme Court judge. My case can be researched on Yahoo MacFarlane v Rich 132 NH 608 and I have declared it Legal Rubbish...
State courts, by far, hear more cases per year than all of the Federal Circuits combined.
pinkeye per year how many cases are there
10 years
approximately 13000 court cases are won each year