The Two Tribunals - Those Of The
Nation And Of The State - Are Independent And Final In Their Several
Spheres.
On a matter of State jurisprudence no appeal lies from the
supreme tribunal of New York or Massachusetts to the supreme
tribunal of the nation at Washington.
The National tribunals are of two classes. First, there is the
Supreme Court specially ordained by the Constitution. And then
there are such inferior courts as Congress may from time to time see
fit to establish. Congress has no power to abolish the Supreme
Court, or to erect another tribunal superior to it. This court sits
at Washington, and is a final court of appeal from the inferior
national courts of the Federal empire. A system of inferior courts,
inaugurated by Congress, has existed for about sixty years. Each
State for purposes of national jurisprudence is constituted as a
district; some few large States, such as New York, Pennsylvania, and
Illinois, being divided into two districts. Each district has one
district court, presided over by one judge. National causes in
general, both civil and criminal, are commenced in these district
courts, and those involving only small amounts are ended there.
Above these district courts are the National circuit courts, the
districts or States having been grouped into circuits as the
counties are grouped with us. To each of these circuits is assigned
one of the judges of the Supreme Court of Washington, who is the ex-
officio judge of that circuit, and who therefore travels as do our
common law judges.
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