The US Supreme Court: The US Constitution Article III Section 2 states in pertinent part: In all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, and those in which a State shall be Party, the supreme Court shall have originalJurisdiction. In all the other Cases before mentioned, the supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make
There is only one court in the United States that has jurisdiction when one state sues another. The court that has jurisdiction in this process is the United States Supreme Court.
The term "extradition" applies only to situations where a person is in one state and wanted for a criminal offense in another state. Within the same state, people can be transported from one county to another to face charges with no court intervention. The only obstacle is that the jurisdiction that wants the prisoner has to be willing to fetch them from wherever they are. Some areas have private transportation services that move prisoners from one jail to another on a regular route and schedule.
Legally you may only possess one drivers license and that has to be issued by your state of residence. It won't make any difference anyway, all states share their DMV databases with one another and honor each other's court findings.
Yes, it is possible to be on probation in one state and live in another. However, you would need to obtain permission from the court and probation officer in the state where you are on probation to transfer your probation to another state.
Maine
Maine.
YES! Article 4 section 1 of the constitution
No. State are sovereign governments under the constitution, and one state cannot enter another state to retrieve a prisoner without permission from the state holding the prisoner. Counties are only political subdivisions within a state, and there are no such protections. A prisoner may be moved from one county to another within the same state with no court intervention or violation of rights.
In the 1810 decision of the Marshall Court, Fletcher v. Peck, the Supreme Court ruled that a state law was unconstitutional. This established the Supreme Court's right to act in matters that concerned one state alone, and not one state versus another state or states.
Not unless you petition the court system of the County or State in which you were convicted. Only the court system that convicted you has that prerogative.
No. They vary from state to state, and even from one state court to another. Federal courts use different procedures, as well. There are similarities between all of them that preserve all constitutional requirements, but one still needs to know the court rules where they intend to appear or practice.
When one state decides to sue another state, it can pursue legal recourse through the United States Supreme Court. This is because the Constitution grants the Supreme Court original jurisdiction in cases where states are parties. The Court can hear the case and make a decision on the matter.