answersLogoWhite

0

Most cases reach the Court through the U.S. Courts of Appeals Circuit Courts, or, under rare circumstances, may be received on expedited appeal from US District Court in the federal court system. The Supreme Court also reviews cases on appeal from state supreme courts, and occasionally from state intermediate appellate courts if the state supreme court rejects the case. The US Supreme Court only has jurisdiction over cases involving a preserved federal question (a matter of federal or constitutional law, or a US treaty).

Most Supreme Court cases come from a writ of certiorari. This is the order of the Supreme court to a lower court to send up a case so they can review. Most of these reviews come from state high courts and federal appellate courts.

Origin of US Supreme Court Cases

  1. US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts
  2. State Supreme Courts (or their equivalent)
  3. US District Courts (under special circumstances, only)
  4. US Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
  5. US Court of International Trade
  6. US Court of Federal Claims
  7. Intermediate State appellate courts (if the State Supreme Court rejects the appeal)
User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What court hears import cases?

The Supreme Court hears the most important cases.


Is a Supreme Court decision permanent?

In most cases a Supreme Court decision is permanent. The current Supreme Court can change the decision of a previous Supreme Court.


The Supreme Court is mainly what kind of court?

In most cases, supreme courts are final appellate courts.


What are most of the cases the US Supreme Court hears?

Federal appellate cases


Most of the supreme courts cases come?

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.


Does the US Supreme Court get more cases from the federal or state court system?

Most cases reach the US Supreme Court via the US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts, which are part of the federal court system.


What contributes most to the workload of the supreme court?

Cases from its appellate jurisdiction.


Most supreme court cases fall under the rubric of?

not evenly distributed


How do you get in the UK Supreme Court?

In most cases, to bring an appeal to The Supreme Court, you must first apply to the court which handed down the judgment to ask for permission to appeal


Do all states have a state supreme court?

Yes (sort of). Each US State has a supreme court or an equivalent high appellate court that goes by another name.In most cases, the high court is identified as a supreme court: for example, The Supreme Court of Ohio or the Florida Supreme Court. Some states use different naming conventions. New York refers to its trial courts as "supreme courts," and its top appellate court as the New York Court of Appeals. Texas has two courts that function at the supreme court level: The Supreme Court of Texas, which hears juvenile and civil cases, and The Court of Criminal Appeals, which hears criminal cases.


What cases can the New York Supreme Court hear?

The New York Supreme Court is a state court of general jurisdiction that tries both civil and criminal cases under New York law. New York's highest appellate court (equivalent to the Supreme Court in most states) is the New York Court of Appeals.


What is the highest court in the federal government?

In the United States each state has a supreme court. The federal system has the United States Supreme Court.The highest Federal court is the Supreme Court.In most States the highest court is also called a supreme court.In the federal court system, the final court of appeal is the US Supreme Court. In the state court systems, the final court is typically the state Supreme Court, although a few states (such as New York) have a different title for the head court in that state. Some cases may be appealed from the state Supreme Court to the US Supreme Court, depending on the substantive issues of law.The Supreme Court of the United States (aka US Supreme Court) is the highest appellate court in the federal system.Each US State has a supreme court or an equivalent high appellate court that goes by another name.In most cases, the high court is identified as a supreme court: for example, The Supreme Court of Ohio or the Florida Supreme Court. Some states use different naming conventions. New York refers to its trial courts as "supreme courts," and its top appellate court as the New York Court of Appeals. Texas has two courts that function at the supreme court level: The Supreme Court of Texas, which reviews juvenile and civil cases; and The Court of Criminal Appeals, which reviews criminal cases.