An appellate court reviews the decisions made by lower courts to determine if any errors were made. They do not re-try the case or consider new evidence. Instead, they examine the legal arguments presented by both parties and assess whether the lower court's decision was correct based on the application of law. The appellate court can either uphold the lower court's decision or reverse it.
Appelate system means that if a person loses his case in trail court he can appeal in high court against this verdict of trail court.
Depending on the type of court case you can take your case to the appelate court sytem in your state or a federal court of appeals
No, never at the appelate level.
appelate court
appelate court
By "lost judgement" it will be assumed that you mean that you "lost" the case. If that is the case, you may appeal the case to the appelate level of the court system, but you will have to show that a clear miscarriage of justice, or incorrect finding of law, occurred for the appelate level court to even consider reviewing your appeal. Consult with an attorney with the specifics of your case for an opinion on this.
They would have both a local appelate court for the local Commonwealth court system and a federal appelate court for the federal court system.
(in the US) There is no comparison. The only alternative to a jury trial is a trial in front of a SINGLE judge. Panels of judges do not come into play unless/until a case reaches the Appelate level of court, and in appelate court no jury option exists.
appelate
District Court - Appelate Court - Supreme Court
Yes. Even if the Appelate Court agrees to review your case, it is no guarantee that their review will result in any change to the outcome of your case
the ability to say no