Delaware has six different trial courts: Superior, Chancery, Common Pleas, Family, Justice of the Peace, and Alderman's. Their jurisdiction is different, but each county has at least one of the first five, and only Kent County has no Alderman's Courts. The system is described at the related link below, which also has links to the courts' websites and related legal resources.
State Circuit Court
US District Courts are the trial courts of general jurisdiction; they are the entry level of the federal court system.
You may be asking about the municipal courts.
The State Supreme Court
No.
Questioning whether an error of law was made at the trial court level is called an "appeal." In an appeal, the higher court reviews the trial court's decision to determine if legal mistakes were made that could have affected the outcome of the case. This process focuses on the application and interpretation of the law rather than re-examining factual evidence presented during the trial.
A case can only be "heard" in one court - and that court is the trial court. It is the lowest level court to hear cases. The decision of THAT case in THAT court is final, unless it is successfully appealed. However, Appeals Court do not "hear" cases in the sense that trial couirts do. They don't conduct trials, they only rule on appelate matters.
Delaware Supreme Court was created in 1841.
Courts can be defined at the most basic level by jurisdiction. Original jurisdiction = trial court Appellate jurisdiction = appeals court
you can get a Philippine municipal trial court clearance at your Municipal Trial Court :D
The federal court system has three main levels: district courts (the trial court), circuit courts which are the first level of appeal, and the Supreme Court of the United States, the final level of appeal in the federal system.
A trial court is the court of original jurisdiction.