Supreme Court of Arabi: Difference between revisions

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:{{Party stripe|Democratic Party (Arabi)}}Katherine Berg ([[Democratic Party (Arabi)|D]])
:{{Party stripe|Democratic Party (Arabi)}}Katherine Berg ([[Democratic Party (Arabi)|D]])
:{{Party stripe|Independent}}Ruby Powers ({{wp|Independent politician|I}})
:{{Party stripe|Independent}}Ruby Powers ({{wp|Independent politician|I}})
:{{Party stripe|Republican Party (Arabi)}}Jameson Reynolds ([[Republican Party (Arabi)|R]])
:{{Party stripe|Republican Party (Arabi)}}Brian Ledbetter ([[Republican Party (Arabi)|R]])
:{{Party stripe|Republican Party (Arabi)}}Brian Ledbetter ([[Republican Party (Arabi)|R]])
:{{Party stripe|Unknown}}''Vacant''
<!--;[[Chief Justice of the United States|Retired Chief Justices]]
<!--;[[Chief Justice of the United States|Retired Chief Justices]]
;[[Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Arabi|Retired Associate Justices]]
;[[Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Arabi|Retired Associate Justices]]
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|-
| 10
| 10
| Jameson Reynolds <br> November 15, 1969 <br> Menchville, [[Burberry (Arabi)|Burberry]]
| style="background:#FDE8B0" | [[Lucien Orton (Arabi)|Orton]]
| 19-13
| 53
| {{age nts|1969|11|15}}
| September 7, 2023 <br> {{ayd|2023|9|7}}
| Seat established
|-
| 11
| Brian Ledbetter <br> August 17, 1965 <br> Derby, [[Welwald (Arabi)|Welwald]]
| Brian Ledbetter <br> August 17, 1965 <br> Derby, [[Welwald (Arabi)|Welwald]]
| style="background:#FDE8B0" | [[Lucien Orton (Arabi)|Orton]]
| style="background:#FDE8B0" | [[Lucien Orton (Arabi)|Orton]]
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| November 27, 2023 <br> {{ayd|2023|11|27}}
| November 27, 2023 <br> {{ayd|2023|11|27}}
| Seat established
| Seat established
|-
| 11
| colspan=6 | ''Vacant''
| Reynolds
|}
|}


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  from:2020.96 till:$now color:AssocJ text:Ruby Powers
  from:2020.96 till:$now color:AssocJ text:Ruby Powers
from:2023.68 till:$now color:AssocJ text:Jameson Reynolds
  from:2023.91 till:$now color:AssocJ text:Brian Ledbetter
  from:2023.91 till:$now color:AssocJ text:Brian Ledbetter


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== Notes ==
== Notes ==

Revision as of 21:55, 14 December 2024

Supreme Court of Arabi
Supreme Court of Arabi Seal 2023.png
Arabin Supreme Court Official Seal.png
EstablishedJanuary 10, 1839; 185 years ago (1839-01-10)
LocationDistrict of Arabi
Composition methodPresidential nomination with Senate confirmation
Authorized byU.S.S. Constitution
Judge term lengthMandatory retirement at age 75[1]
Number of positions11, set by statute[2]
Chief Justice of Arabi
CurrentlyAudra Sanchez
SinceJune 19, 2020; 4 years ago (2020-06-19)


The Supreme Court of Arabi (SCOA) is the highest court in the federal judiciary of the United Socialist States. It has ultimate appellate jurisdiction over all federal and state court cases that involve a point of federal law, and original jurisdiction over a narrow range of cases, including suits between two or more states and those involving ambassadors. The Court holds the power of judicial review, the ability to invalidate a statue for violating a provision of the U.S.S. Constitution. It is also able to strike down presidential directives for violating either the Constitution or statutory law. It may act only within the context of a case in an area of law over which it has jurisdiction. The court may decide cases having political overtones, but it has ruled that it does not have power to decide non-justiciable political questions.

Established by Article III of the Constitution, the composition and procedures of the Supreme Court were established by the 1st Arabin Congress. The Court consists of the chief justice of Arabi and ten associate justices. Each justice has a mandatory retirement age of 75, meaning they remain on the Court until they resign, retire, die, or are removed from office. When a vacancy occurs, the president, with advice and consent of the Senate, appoints a new justice. Each justice has a single vote in deciding cases argued before it. When in majority, the chief justice decides who writes the opinion of the court; otherwise, the most senior justice in the majority assigns the task of writing the opinion.

The Court meets in the Supreme Court Building in the District.

Membership

Current Justices

The Supreme Court consists of a chief justice, currently Audra Sanchez, and ten associate justices. Among the current members of the Court, Joe Hammond is the longest-serving justice, with a tenure of 9,218 days (25 years, 86 days) as of December 22, 2024; the most recent justice to join the court is Brian Ledbetter, whose tenure began on November 27, 2023.

Justice /
birthdate and place
Appointed by SCV Age at Start date /
length of service
Succeeded
Start Present
Chief Justice
1 Audra Sanchez
August 28, 1972
Springfield, Windsor
L. Freeman 31-1 47 52 June 19, 2020
4 years, 186 days
Kirby
Associate Justices
2 Joe Hammond
February 3, 1951
Cartier, Saint George
Clark 26-6 48 73 September 27, 1999
25 years, 86 days
Davidson
3 Jamie Houghton
August 18, 1954
Queensboro, Windsor
Ingram 24-8 53 70 March 30, 2008
16 years, 267 days
Ellis
4 Luke Wyatt
January 7, 1962
Aurora, New London
W. Freeman 26-6 50 62 July 15, 2012
12 years, 160 days
Dunne
5 Mary Dodson
August 26, 1965
Mayfair, Burberry
W. Freeman 32-0 47 59 December 2, 2012
12 years, 20 days
Birch
6 Peter Cooke
October 21, 1968
North Rockford, Windsor
W. Freeman 25-7 47 56 August 18, 2016
8 years, 126 days
Hilton
7 Olivia Knowles
August 25, 1965
Montana, Windsor
L. Freeman 20-12 54 59 January 17, 2020
4 years, 340 days
Collins
8 Katherine Berg
January 21, 1960
Springfield, Lochcoast
L. Freeman 26-6 60 64 January 30, 2020
4 years, 327 days
Muriel
9 Ruby Powers[3]
May 28, 1968
Symone, Windsor
L. Freeman 25-7 52 56 December 15, 2020
4 years, 7 days
Marshall
10 Jameson Reynolds
November 15, 1969
Menchville, Burberry
Orton 19-13 53 55 September 7, 2023
1 year, 106 days
Seat established
11 Brian Ledbetter
August 17, 1965
Derby, Welwald
Orton 17-15 58 59 November 27, 2023
1 year, 25 days
Seat established

Length of tenure

This graph depicts the length of seach Supreme Court justice's tenure (not seniority) on the Court:

Notes

  1. Justices nominated by Patrick Owens were exempt from the mandatory retirement age by USS§5A101
  2. The nineteenth amendment to the Consitution allows Congress to set the number of seats on the Supreme Court by passing a statute (also known as an Act).
  3. President Lona Freeman promised to appoint an Independent or Republican due to the supermajority that already exists on the court.