The first level of Federal Courts is the US District Courts, which are courts of original jurisdiction and conduct both criminal and civil trials.
The second level is the Appelate Courts which do NOT conduct trials but only hear appeals of trials and verdicts of the US district Courts.
The third and highest level of the court system is the US Supreme Court which also does not conduct trials and which is the highest court in the land. It could loosely be termed the "super-appelate" court and whose decision is final in ALL rulings and/or cases having to with Constitutional interpretation.
Actually there are THREE levels of federal courts. US District Courts - US Courts of Appeal - US Supreme Court.
There are three levels of Federal courts under the Supreme Court.
There are three levels of federal courts. U.S. District Court - U.S. Courts of Appeal - The U.S. Supreme Court.
Actually there are THREE levels of federal courts. US District Courts - US Courts of Appeal - US Supreme Court.
The three levels of courts in the federal justice system are the district courts, the court of appeals, and the supreme court.
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There are three levels of federal courts. U.S. District Court - U.S. Courts of Appeal - The U.S. Supreme Court.
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.
There are three levels of federal courts. U.S. District Court - U.S. Courts of Appeal - The U.S. Supreme Court.
District Court - Appelate COurt - Supreme Court.
Washington and Congress established the Judiciary Act of 1789, which created three levels of federal courts and defined their powers and relationship to the state courts.
Supreme, Appellate, District