Final answer:
Cases are appealed to the state supreme court if the accused believes the trial was unfair. Serious criminal cases involving murder are heard in a general trial court with a judge and jury. The lower court judges study the evidence to decide if a case was tried fairly.
Step-by-step explanation:
1. An accused person appeals her case to the state supreme court because she believes that her trial was not fair.
2. A serious criminal case involving murder is heard by a judge and a jury in a general trial court.
3. The judges study the evidence to decide if a case was tried fairly in a lower court.
4. A girl of fourteen has broken the law. A hearing is scheduled in a juvenile court (a type of general trial court).
5. A dispute between two people led to a serious injury of one person. The case is brought to trial in a general trial court.
6. The judge decides how to handle the property of a person who died in probate court (a type of general trial court).
7. A worker is charged with stealing tools worth sixty dollars. His case is being heard in a lower court (a type of general trial court).