Us, the voters
In North Carolina, the court system has four levels: District Court, Superior Court, Court of Appeals, and Supreme Court. District Court handles misdemeanor criminal cases and civil cases. Superior Court has jurisdiction over felony criminal cases and civil cases beyond District Court's jurisdiction. The Court of Appeals reviews decisions made by the lower courts. The Supreme Court is the highest court in the state, primarily handling appeals from the Court of Appeals.
Original jurisdiction.
The clerk of the Superior Court in Alamance County, NC is The honorable David Barber. His contact information is as follows: 201 West Elm Street, Graham NC 27253 Phone: 336-570-5200 Fax: 336-570-520 I found this information on Court Reference. That site contains all kinds of useful court links, including the contact information for court clerks across the US.
The verdict in most American courts is decided by a majority of the judges. In North Carolina, each district court is located at the county seat of each county.
If you mean case records of past cases, the only records available online are the official opinions of the NC Supreme Court and NC Court of Appeals; they are at the first related link below. If you mean case records of past cases in the trial courts (Superior Court and District Court), those records are not generally available online. The only exceptions are records of NC Business Court, and verdicts in Guilford County Superior Court; these may be found at the second related link. For all other trial court case records, you will have to visit the court clerk's office and examine the records in person. Contact information for all NC trial courts, by county, is at the third related link below. If you mean court calendars (information about future cases) in the trial courts, you can search them by county at the fourth related link below. Some individual courts have their own calendar searches, which may be found at the last related link.
JuriesWith the except of the US Supreme Court, appellate courts also lack original (trial) jurisdiction over cases. They typically review cases using panels of three judges, although some cases are heard by a single judge, and others by the full court (en banc).Because the US Supreme Court has original jurisdiction over a small class of cases (although it currently only hears disputes between the states), original jurisdiction doesn't work as the answer to this question.
Only if a NC court becomes the Court of Jurisdiction.
There are three US District Court jurisdictions in the state of NC with a total of 12 seperate courthouses. The Eastern District of NC (5 locations) The Middle DIstrict of NC (3 locations) The Western District of NC (4 locations).
Court Reference provides a page that links you to every available traffic ticket/court payment site out there. I am linking the NC page here.
no, it doesnt.
Xavier Court is the name of a street in Fayetteville, NC. Xanthacarpa Court is the name of a street in Apex, NC.