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PLEASE HELP!!!

1. which federal courts usually have original jurisdiction?

2. when can a case be appealed?

3. What does it mean when judges in an appeals court remand a case?

4. how do federal judges obtain their offices?

5. which court official prosecutes people accused of breaking federal law?

1 Answer

2 votes
1.
Article III, section 2, of the Constitution distributes the federal judicial power between the Supreme Court’s appellate and original jurisdiction, providing that the Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction in “all cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls,” and in cases to which a state is a party. In the Judiciary Act of 1789, Congress made the Supreme Court’s original jurisdiction exclusive in suits between two or more states, between a state and a foreign government, and in suits against ambassadors and other public ministers. The Supreme Court’s jurisdiction over the remainder of suits to which a state was a party was to be concurrent, presumably with state courts since the statute did not expressly confer these cases upon the inferior federal courts.
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