A district court is only for a certain district in a state, and a state court is for the state itself. The greater the crime depends on where you go to. A small crime, such as breaking into a grocery store would go to the district court. A large crime, such as committing perjury would land you in the state court.
It really depends what kind of courts you are talking about and where the courts are. If the courts are federal, then a district court is a trial court and a circuit court is an appeals court, which may review a trial decision from a district court. For state courts, the difference between a district court and a circuit court will depend on what state the courts are in. Many states have courts called "district court" and "circuit court," but what kinds of cases these courts handle differs state to state.
In 1789, they passed the judiciary act.
Federal trial courts are the United States District Courts.
Only federal courts are established by congress.
The difference between a district representative and a senator is the pay scale. A senator would get paid more. There is also a difference in the number of constituents for each. A senator represents an entire state, and a district representative only represents a part of the state.
It really depends what kind of courts you are talking about and where the courts are. If the courts are federal, then a district court is a trial court and a circuit court is an appeals court, which may review a trial decision from a district court. For state courts, the difference between a district court and a circuit court will depend on what state the courts are in. Many states have courts called "district court" and "circuit court," but what kinds of cases these courts handle differs state to state.
If you are referring to a STATE district court - you would have broken a state law. If you are referring to a FEDERAL dIstrict court, you would have broken a federal law.
A district map is where it is in the town that you are in. A guide map is to help you to get to where you are going out of one state to another.
The answer depends on whether you're asking about United States District Courts (Federal courts) or state courts. If you're asking about US District Courts, the answer is 1, no matter where you live. Many states have more than one US District Court, but it's unlikely that the boundaries between their jurisdictions will split a county. If you're asking about a state's District Courts, then the answer depends on which state your Henderson County is in. There are 5 states with a Henderson County. If it's in Illinois or Tennessee, the answer is zero; neither state has a court named "district court" (different states use different names for their various levels of courts). If it's in Kentucky or North Carolina, the answer is 1: Henderson County District Court. If it's in Texas, the answer is 3: 3rd District Court, 173rd Distict Court, and 392nd District Court I got this info from the related link below, which has information (all free) about every state court in every state. Just select your state, then select your county.
Yes, each state has at least one US District Court and one US Bankruptcy Court. District Courts are divided into 94 federal judicial districts, each with its own district court. These are the courts where cases are tried. Every state has at least one District Court.
For state prosecuted offenses: Circuit (or District) Court > Court of Appeals > State Supreme Court (and if a Constitutional question is involved) > US District Court > US Court of Appeals > US Supreme Court.
Original jurisdiction