History, asked by shvnbabu5902, 10 months ago

Which factor does the Supreme Court generally consider especially important when deciding which cases to review?

Answers

Answered by poonianaresh78p3767p
9

Explanation:

In judging cases to review, the Supreme court generally considers important criteria as their basis and one of the factors that is deemed essential is whether the case deals with broad issues and whether these are applicable to several different cases.

Answered by gratefuljarette
11

The factor that supreme court usually considers critically important while deciding which cases to review is whether the lower court ruling in the case conflicts with an previous ruling in the supreme court.

Explanation:

  • The Supreme Court would only allow to permit to review a case if four out of nine judges of the court decide to grant a petition in the jury.
  • The average number of cases that the Supreme Court reviews annually is just about 100 cases only while roughly about 5000 cases are sent for review.
  • The Supreme Court is the highest and the most powerful court of any country.

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The Supreme Court

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