racial segregation was permitted for nearly 60 years
it intensified segregation.
What was the effect of the Supreme Court's decision in Loving v. Virginia
he planned to reorganize the courts
he planned to reorganize the courts
As the highest court in the US, a ruling by the Supreme Court can not be challanged legally.In effect lower courts must make rulings on cases in line with any historic, relavent Supreme Court decisions (or their rulings will be overturned by higher courts).This means that a ruling by the Supreme Court sets the US legal standard - sets a precedent."precedent" means coming before another or others in time, place, rank, or sequence.
The US Supreme Court is not located in New York. New York does have a trial court system which is called the Supreme Court, even though it is not truly supreme in the sense that the US Supreme Court is. It is not an appellate court like the US supreme Court is. They named it that because in early days, New York had a fractured system of trial courts, some with limited subject matter jurisdiction, some with limited regional jurisdiction. The New York Supreme Court became the unified statewide trial court, in effect supreme over all the little courts. It is not a good choice of names.
The President has the power to pardon people from federal crimes. He also nominates judges for federal courts, including the Supreme Court. These nominations have to be ratified by the US Senate in order to take effect. (Federal courts belong to the judicial department which is independent of the President.)
Made racial segregation legal. Also, it improved the black community buildings, by saying that the conditions of the black's community buildings have to be the same as the white's community buildings.
Contracts are sacred and courts must uphold them.
Ralph Holmes Ferguson has written: 'The effect of alkali and temperature on the permanganate manganate reaction' -- subject(s): Manganates, Permanganates
The President has the power to pardon people from federal crimes. He also nominates judges for federal courts, including the Supreme Court. These nominations have to be ratified by the US Senate in order to take effect. (Federal courts belong to the judicial department which is independent of the President.)
The Supreme Court gained the power of judicial review.