Japan has an independent judicial system patterned on the American model, with trial courts at the local level, several intermediate appellate courts, and a Supreme Court.
The Japanese controlled virtually everything (including any courts) in the Philippines during their occupation of the territory.
Actually there are THREE levels of federal courts. US District Courts - US Courts of Appeal - US Supreme Court.
US District Courts ...US Courts of Appeal ...
US Territorial CourtsFederal courts that perform the function of US District Courts, but that are located in US territories outside the 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico are called US Territorial Courts. These were established as Article I tribunals, not Article III courts, like standard US District Courts.Examples of the US Territorial Courts include:US District Court for the Northern Mariana IslandsUS District Court for the District of GuamUS District Court for the US Virgin IslandsThe US Supreme Court has appellate jurisdiction over many cases heard in US Territorial Courts.US Territorial Courts.
Yes, there are 94 US District Courts and thirteen US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts.
Actually there are THREE levels of federal courts. US District Courts - US Courts of Appeal - US Supreme Court.
There are 94 district courts in the US.
The US District Courts (trial courts), because they handle the majority of federal cases.
US District Courts are the trial courts of general jurisdiction in the federal court system.
(in the U.S.) that would be a reference to the Federal Court System (e.g.: US District Courts - US Courts of Appeal - The Supreme Court of the US - etc).
The Article III inferior courts (below the US Supreme Court) of the Judicial Branch:US District Courts (trial courts)US Court of International Trade (trial)US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts (intermediate appellate courts)
US District courts - US Appelate Courts - US Supreme Court