No, it doesn't work like that. The Supreme Court is not into that kind of law. It would go to you local court. And you can find an attorney in your area by opening the yellow pages or calling your local Bar Association.
2006-08-15 17:39:52
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answer #1
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answered by Iamstitch2U 6
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The above posters are correct.
You don't just "go" to the Supreme Court. First, there is a trial. For child support, this is almost always going to be a state issue
If the ruling is against you, can can appeal. In a state issue, that would either go to the state appellate court, or the state's supreme court, depending upon the state system hierarchy.
If the appellate court rules against you on state grounds, then it's up to the state supreme court to accept or reject further appeal. But if the issue is decided on state law grounds, that's as high as it goes.
The only way a case can get to the US Supreme Court is when it is a federal law issue that works its way through the federal system, or it's a state law case that is appealed from the State Supreme Court on federal constitutional grounds. And even then, the Supreme Court only take the case if they want to.
2006-08-16 01:12:46
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answer #2
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answered by coragryph 7
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dude ive been thinking of this for years. the whole system is f'd up. im going through a custody battle right now & it seems that they want to give the woman everything just because she has a snatch between her legs. dont these law makers ever get a divorce? it's totally unfair & im totally with u on this one
2006-08-16 00:42:06
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Your question is poorly worded. I can't even tell what issue you are trying to appeal.
2006-08-16 00:53:05
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answer #4
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answered by Carl 7
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