I'm not an expert, but am fairly confident that I have the basics. No, there is no inherent 'right' to have a case heard by the Supreme Court. It is basically an appeals court, and cases have to work their way up through the appeals system before they would ever be considered. If you lose a case at the lowest tier in the system, you have to appeal to the appropriate court and take it from there. If no attorneys will help you do that, it is probably because your case does not strike them as winnable. But you would have no right to bring the case straight to the Supreme Court as a result. You would have to find a way to make the appropriate appeals.
Most cases come to the Supreme Court by way of their appelate jurisdiction, their review and choice of cases under appeal in lower courts. The Supreme Court has primary jurisdiction over a small range of cases that involve things like disputes between two states, or a dispute between a state and the federal government.
The US Supreme Court has heard more than 30,000 cases since its inception in 1789 (no cases were heard for the first few years).
The Supreme Court is the highest appellate court in the United States. It does not try cases, in the standard sense of the word, but only reviews lower court decisions. Usually, cases heard by the Supreme Court involve issues of Constitutional law or federal legislation.
It will decide that the cases do not need to be heard. The Supreme Court only takes the cases that relate to the Constitution.
b. cases will be heard
Article III of the Constitution discusses what types of court cases are heard in federal courts, and which are heard under the Supreme Court's original and appellate jurisdictions.
The Supreme Court is the court of last resort. When all appeals and lower courts have heard and ruled on a case it may go to the Supreme Court, but the court doesn’t have to hear it and may let the lower ruling stand or kick it back to the lower federal court.
Centarori
The Supreme Court hears three kinds of cases. Cases appealed from lower federal courts account for two-thirds of the cases they hear. They also hear cases appealed from state's supreme courts, and sometimes hear cases that have not been previously heard by a lower court, such as between one state's government and another.
Cases between two or more states are originally heard by the United States Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court of the United States was created in 1789. Most of the cases the court hears come from lower courts. Each year, the Supreme Court receives 7,000 or more requests to hear cases from lower courts.
The US Supreme Court serves as the final court of appeal
No. Congress and Article III of the Constitution determine what types of cases the US Supreme Court may hear. The Supreme Court has complete discretion over the specific cases they review under both original and appellate jurisdiction. The President has no role in the process.