Federal courts do a lot of things. They hear cases just like state courts, but operate in a different system. They are allowed to hear different kinds of cases than state courts (like if the issue is about the constitution). Also, if the parties in a case are citizens of different states (this is called "diversity") the case is started in a federal court system.
federal district court, federal court of appeals court,and the U.S. supreme court.
Federal trial courts almost always have original jurisdiction in the federal system.
There is no federal juvenile court
federal court
you use federal court as a noun. For example, The federal court kicked him out. Federal court is a subject and a subject is always a noun or pronoun.
the Federal Court.
federal court released on pta
Yes, it is a federal court.
Federal Court - Canada - was created in 2003.
The US Court of Federal Claims. It is located in Wasshington DC.
Yes, the US Court of Federal Claims has original jurisdiction over monetary claims against the federal government. While it is, technically, a "lower federal court," it is not part of the Judicial Branch, but part of the Legislative Branch.
Court of federal claims A+